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It’s Last Call for This $2.25 Million Pink Party House in Downtown Savannah

The owner spent roughly $1.25 million turning the home into a place where she could host friends and neighbors around Ardsley Park. Now she’s moving on to her next renovation project.

Click HERE to view Staci’s listing for 102 E. 45th Street in Ardsley Park.

By Sarah Paynter

June 29, 2024

On a warm morning in June 2023, a bartender served Bloody Marys on the lawn behind a pink stucco Modernist-style home in Savannah, Ga. Guests devoured fried chicken and salads under dusty pink umbrellas, said their hostess Rebecca Gardner. Her guests chatted while their children ran around the roughly one-third acre property in Ardsley Park, about 2 miles south of downtown Savannah.

“To hell with an Hermès Birkin. The ultimate luxury is a nap. I like to start summer parties early with festive day drinks,” said Gardner, who is in her early 40s. “Then you can hit the hay.”

Gardner frequently hired a bartender to serve drinks from the outdoor wrought-iron bar.PHOTOS: ADAM KUEHL

Gardner, the Corpus Christi, Texas-born founder of House & Parties, a party, interior design and retail business, has hosted countless soirees for her friends and neighbors at the circa-1947 house with curved bay windows. Since buying the home for $500,000 in 2018, she spent about $1.25 million on its renovation, equipping it to host large parties at a moment’s notice. Now, Gardner is looking for her next renovation project, so she’s listing the four-bedroom, roughly 4,200-square-foot house for $2.25 million with Staci Donegan of Seabolt Real Estate.

Gardner restored the house and equipped it to host parties. PHOTO: ADAM KUEHL

Gardner, who lives with her French bulldog, Percy, converted the home’s two-car garage into a high-end storage closet lined with built-in cabinets to store dishes and tablecloths. Its independent air conditioning unit creates chilly temperatures necessary to prepare floral arrangements on stainless-steel tables. Its refrigerator serves as a stockpile for ready-to-serve Cosmos frozen in plastic bags. And after “shopping” in her supplies closet, Gardner carts selected napkins and cups inside on a red trolley, powder coated to match her kitchen’s bold red cabinets, she said.

Gardner can cart party supplies from her high-end storage closet into her kitchen.PHOTOS: ADAM KUEHL

The party-ready home has four separate bars, strategically positioned to encourage guests to spread out throughout the house. The pink-plaster living room has a small rattan bar, and the sunken dining room has a bar covered in a pink taffeta tablecloth. Gardner gave the card room a 1960s reeded bar, and she put a 1970s wrought-iron bar outside to serve guests in her backyard, she said. 

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Gardner, who lives with her French bulldog, Percy, keeps three indoor bars in the 4,200-square-foot home.PHOTOS: ADAM KUEHL

“There’s nothing worse than having everyone end up in one room, or even worse, if they end up in your damn kitchen, that is the kiss of death,” said Gardner, explaining that “bars act as a party siren beckoning guests to the room where you want them to be.”

For her renovation, Gardner filled the home with colorful, nostalgic decor, using pastels, bright colors and playful sculptures. She preserved its original wood floors, repaired its curved plaster walls, reglazed the original steel casement windows and regrouted the old Vitrolite glass bathroom tile.

The pastel living room has large, curved bay windows.

The library has a corner window.

The wood floors are original.

The home has four bedrooms.

PHOTOS: ADAM KUEHL

Gardner said she spent countless hours searching through old receipts and letters from the home’s original construction in the 1940s that are in the Georgia Historical Society archives in Savannah. She identified missing fixtures and finishes and spent years acquiring roughly 75-year-old features including pink porcelain sinks with chrome legs and matching toilets. “I felt like the Pink Panther” tracking down antiques dealers selling the old fixtures, she said. 

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Gardner replaced original bathroom fixtures, restored antique tile and added playful, colorful touches throughout the house.PHOTOS: ADAM KUEHL

Surrounded by Diet Cokes and architectural records in the archives, Gardner said she began to feel a connection to the home’s original owner, Harry Reiner, whom she calls “the snappy Mr. Reiner.” Reiner, who founded a women’s clothing store, raised his blended family there with his second wife, Nora Reiner. They liked to play cards in a high-tech room with a music player built into the wall, said Reiner’s daughter Susan Reiner Lourie. Reiner sold the house following his wife’s death in 1965, and in the following decades, it had several owners and a few renters, trading hands for $65,000 in 1978 and for $325,000 in 2004, according to property records. 

The roughly one-third acre lot has a large patio for entertaining. PHOTO: ADAM KUEHL

Gardner learned that prominent Savannah architect Cletus Bergen’s design for the house was inspired by a “Home of Tomorrow” illustration clipped out of a magazine, still on file in Bergen’s records. Though it wasn’t stuccoed pink until decades later, longtime neighbors say the once-brick house always stood out among Neoclassical and other revival-style homes in the historic Ardsley Park neighborhood, said Gardner.

“I like the idea that he had the confidence to build what was then a pretty wild house right after the second World War,” said Gardner. “I’ve always thought that Harry Reiner could have been my man had I been born a little earlier.”

Write to Sarah Paynter at Sarah.paynter@wsj.com

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