“My job was to make sure the house remained really personally designed for that family while maintaining the crazy requests of the producers because, after all, it was a television show and they wanted to make sure they were gonna have their ratings, that things were gonna be crazy enough for people to tune in. This often meant balancing acts: “A lot of time, we were building something for a family that had medical needs or a veteran, so we always made it really personal,” Lewis says. Her role involved working on both the architecture and interior design, drawing floor plans for local architects to draft up and managing a team to style the entire home. Lewis, who currently runs her own namesake firm based in Austin, Texas, worked behind the scenes on EMHE for six years-creating more than 120 homes across 43 states. We tapped EMHE’s lead designer, Kim Lewis, to answer all of our lingering, burning questions about the show. With a popular HGTV reboot in 2020, the show has capitalized on the ever-growing appeal of before-and-after home reveals. Although the final episode aired in 2012, the show’s nine-season run cemented it as an iconic home makeover production (that you can currently stream seasons two through nine of on Hulu). Is your home or someone you know’s home in need of an extreme renovation You or they may qualify to be on the show To apply, or to nominate someone, go to Click on 'CASTING', then on the ' APPLY NOW ' button to fill out the application form. For nearly a decade, millions of viewers tuned into ABC’s Extreme Makeover: Home Edition with host Ty Pennington.
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