Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Drawings





While the house is still a pile of timbers in front of the shop, I have finally chosen the windows, which for me feels like a big step forward. After looking into various options for wood interior and exterior windows, we are going to go with Marvin Integrity windows. The interiors of the Integrity windows are wood, while the outsides are pultruded fiberglass. While I still like the idea of stained wood on the exterior, the price point is a little high and I think fully wood windows could be a negative for a future owner of the house due to the upkeep wood requires. We looked closely at a Canadian window manufacturer called Norwood, but while I really liked them, it seems prudent to go with a clad window.
I would like to de-emphasize the non-glazing parts of the window so I think going with the dark brownish exterior finish called "bronze" will blend well with the stained pine clapboards.



Saturday, March 6, 2010

A Few Ramblings

We recently spent the weekend at a friend's family's ski house in New Hampshire that looked like this:

I really like the simplicity of the shed roofs composed in an interesting way and it made me wish we had designed a slightly less typical house. As previously discussed there are a number of reasons we went with basically a gabled rectangle (mostly cost, time, and appeal to the greatest number of potential future owners). As plans stand now this won't be the last house we design and build for ourselves and we will have opportunities in the future to go outside the box and experiment with other building methods and styles.

And in the more immediate future I am working on a little project that will give me the chance to experiment a bit. More on that as it progresses...

On a separate topic, we recently put a timber frame porch on a house near the coast that made me very excited about porches on timber frames. Without a timbered porch or some kind of timbered overhangs there is often no way that the internal structure of the timber frame shows on the exterior of the building. Here's the Brunswick entryway:






Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Mod Farmhouse

Here are some pictures of a house that was just built in VT that I'm a fan of. They have a house building blog as well- www.greenhousevt.blogspot.com. The house has a small footprint and in my opinion good use of space. It also has visual interest both inside and outside without anything particularly wacky or wasteful going on. These are both characteristics I would like to achieve in our house. The spartan white kitchen and subway tiled bathroom are probably not things I could get Jence to agree to (or that I would choose in the end perhaps), but it's fun to appreciate other people's choices and the work that went into making them.












Sunday, January 31, 2010

Monday, January 18, 2010

A Foundation






On Christmas Eve we had a crane at the site and were madly scurrying to get our timbered floor system installed. The day after Christmas we busted out to get the first floor decking down and then cover everything with some bomber plastic to be snow-proof for the foreseeable future.
Interestingly it was a struggle to get the concrete guys to form up the concrete the way we planned. Since the site is sloping they felt the best choice was to have a taller front wall (i.e. more wood siding, less concrete on the south side). Their opinion was that this approach would be building with the site. Our plan was to use the large quantity of rock from the site clearing to build rough retaining walls in front of the south wall so that there would essentially be a level site and could then have a two story wall, rather than a three story wall. It is my opinion that building with the site also has to do with the overall aesthetic of the building and that on this site a three story wall as you approach would not fit in with the cozy forested setting. We also had to argue to have the house oriented to solar south. The people building the forms for the concrete are used to just making them fit the hole. Since the hole is larger than the actual foundation, there is some wiggle room for laying out the foundation.
While in general we are trying to make economically minded decisions (no dormers, minimal corners, wood heat) it is also important to us to make decisions that reflect our aesthetic preferences. This experience with the concrete subs was another argument for having a well thought out plan in advance that you can stand behind in critical moments.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Inspiration

Here are a few examples of designs I find inspirational for our house project. Each is fairly simple in form with inviting entrances, generous overhangs and interesting windows. They are not particularly edgy designs, but each house looks like a place I would want to live.


















And this is what I do not want the house to look like. (With apologies to the owner, it's not horrible, just not what I would choose to create.)



Sunday, November 29, 2009

Timbered Floor System

This will sit on top of the concrete basement walls and become the first floor of the house. In the basement looking up you will see the 6x8 joists and 8x12 girts that make up the floor system-- so the burliness of the structure will be visible even in the utilitarian space of the basement.

We took some time out on Thursday to make and enjoy a Thanksgiving feast, but then worked through the weekend cutting the timbers for the floor system. While creating something for myself is so fulfilling that I don't mind stepping up the work pace, I am starting to look ahead to a mid-winter ski trip once the roof is on.