Moving Across the Country to Portland
The Bakers’ Detached ADU with Garage, 804 SQFT, 2 Bed , 1 Bath, in Portland, ME
Photo Credit: Tom Bell
A Long-Term Vision for Family Closeness
For years, Mark and Lynn Baker’s daughter, Christie, and son-in-law, Samuel, had a clear dream: they wanted Mark and Lynn to live close by, especially as a grandchild entered the picture. When Mark was teaching at a seminary in Fresno, California, moving to their family’s previous city of Seattle felt financially out of reach. But the family kept planning. When Christie and Samuel bought their house in Portland, Maine, they intentionally picked a property with a lot that could accommodate an Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU).
When Mark retired in May of 2024, the stars finally aligned. Samuel reached out to Backyard ADUs to design a space where the family could share a backyard, look after their grandchild, and build a lasting support system while preserving everyone's independent space.
"Our daughter and her husband were quite intent on her desire for us to live near them, especially as they headed into having kids. Even when they bought this house, they made sure there would be a lot that an ADU could fit on." — Mark Baker
The Challenges
Trading California sunshine for the coast of Maine meant maximizing comfort while navigating strict city limitations. The project came with real constraints:
Budget Realities: The main funding for the build came from selling their home in Fresno. When initial cost estimates came back higher than anticipated, the Bakers needed an honest partner to help them economize without stripping away the features that made it feel like home.
Wrestling with Inches: To maximize space, the design had to be built right up against three of the four property setbacks. Every inch inside the floor plan had to count.
The Site Footprint: To make room for the new build, the team had to completely demolish an old, failing attached garage and mudroom on the primary house.
"The first estimate that came in on the contract was higher than we had been expecting... I appreciated that we did not feel pressure. I felt like Backyard ADUs entered in with us to figure out how we can lower the price." — Mark Baker
The Process
The final build emerged as a spacious 804-square-foot, two-bedroom, one-bathroom detached ADU with a highly requested addition: a garage. Because the main house lost its garage during demolition, the new garage became a shared asset; the car space and rear storage belong to Mark and Lynn, while the side walls keep the grandkids' and Samuel's bicycles organized.
Collaborative Co-Design: The layout evolved significantly through the planning phase. Jeff and the design team worked through multiple iterations, experimenting with door placement and shifting windows to ensure key furniture like desks and dressers would fit perfectly.
Smart Small-Space Choices: To unlock valuable square footage in the main living space, the design incorporated a clever 18-inch-wide dishwasher instead of a standard unit.
Splurging on Light: While the Bakers looked for ways to cut costs, they chose to invest a few hundred dollars more into a large, gorgeous picture window looking out onto the woods behind the lot, a decision they celebrate daily.
Surprise City Infrastructure: During the build, Portland permitting threw a hurdle our way, requiring an unexpected, costly sewer manhole and an entirely new sewer encasement. This happened after the Bakers had signed their contract and locked in pricing.
Set Day Transformation: Utilizing off-site modular construction, the core structures were built in a climate-controlled factory. On Set Day, neighbors watched as the crane hoisted the new home high over the primary house, locking it securely onto its new foundation.
“I feel like it (the sewer manhole and new sewer encasement) was more of a curveball for you all, not for us. Backyard didn’t raise the price. Perhaps it delayed things a bit, but we did not feel that. Backyard shielded us from things like that that came up because of the way their contract works.” — Mark Baker
The Result
Moving across the country has completely transformed daily life. Mark and Lynn share a beautiful, light-filled backyard with their family, working on joint gardening projects, and enjoying chalk art drawn by their grandson that literally connects the front doors of the two homes.
Lynn’s dedicated front office space keeps her client site visits completely independent from the main living quarters, while the central bathroom serves double duty, housing the laundry units cleanly out of sight. When the city-mandated sewer work required tearing up the yard, Backyard ADUs rolled with the punches and left the family with an entirely new, cleanly paved driveway.
What we learned for next time: Hardwoods are not all created equal! The Bakers chose a visually stunning Yellow Birch flooring, but its natural softness means it shows dings and dents from daily life more easily than expected. Jeff and the team now use this feedback to ensure future clients are deeply educated on the hardness scales of wood finishes before choosing their floors.
"Everybody we worked with at Backyard ADU from top to bottom was helpful, pleasant, courteous... they all seemed like they were pleased to have that job, and it just had great energy." — Mark Baker
Key Takeaways
The Goal: Relocate parents from California to Maine to enjoy retirement alongside family in a functional, multigenerational setup.
The Build: A custom 804 sq. ft., 2-bed, 1-bath detached modular ADU featuring a shared garage, custom office space, and an integrated paved driveway in Portland, ME.
The Best Part: Crafting an ultra-tight layout that respects local zoning rules while maintaining an airy, light-filled connection to nature.