Our new house project, August 2000 to December 2005
Pictures
- Here are more pictures of the house, which we've declared fully decorated, added on December 21, 2005.
- Here are more interior pictures of the house, now mostly decorated, added on December 15, 2002
- Here are some interior pictures of the house approaching fully decorated, added on October 15, 2002
- Here are some interior decorating pictures of the house, added on June 28, 2002
- Here are some more interior pictures of the completed house, added on March 23, 2002
- Finally, here are some interior pictures of the completed house, from September to December 2001
- And here are some exterior pictures of the completed house
- The old house as it was, and the tail end of tearing it down
- Tearing down the old house, part 1
- Tearing down the old house, part 2
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Try looking at the GIFs first, then if you want a more detailed image, see this about viewing the PDFs and WMFs.
NOTE: I think downloading of the WMF and DXF and 3D Home Architect formats is working correctly in Netscape now, as of 11/26/2000. Please tell me if you have any problems with them.
QUESTION: Does anyone know of Mac software that can view WMFs? If so, please tell me.
Plans after talking with the builder, and with tweaks to lighting plan, February 4, 2001
We met with the builder on 1/31/2001 and thrashed out all the remaining changes except for the home automation/lighting control/security system. The main changes are the living room bay window was deleted and some of the doors got changed back to be more like the original plans. We have done yet more researching of lighting and kitchen appliances. These are some tweaks to the lighting layout, mainly in the kitchen. Here is the current plan for the LiteTouch controlled lights. The outside storage room door and shape are modified to match the poured concrete. (Yes, the lighting circuit labels on the GIFs are 2 different sizes, for mysterious reasons known only to ACDSee.) I am adding PDF format plans, which will display if you have Adobe® Acrobat® Reader installed, on a Mac or Windows. (Except Acrobat Writer stubbornly refuses to make a legal PDF of the basement for me. Grrrrrr.)
Plans with mostly final kitchen layout, and with lighting plan, January 14, 2001
Over the last month, we have been busy researching and selecting kitchen cabinets, appliances, and lighting. These plans contain an all-but-final kitchen layout, and a mostly final lighting layout. 3D Home Architect colors the lighting plan in red, and the green labels ('L' and 3 digits) next to the lights are the circuit numbers for our LiteTouch lighting control system, which is being designed and installed by the excellent people at Total Home Control. Circuits with switches (the red dollar signs) and without circuit numbers are not LiteTouch controlled. 3D Home Architect has a rather small set of lighting symbols - the plain circles are recessed ceiling ("can") lights, the stylized double floodlights are just that, the fans are just that, the circles with infinity signs are bathroom fans and fan/lights, the double slashed circles are electrical outlets, and the circles with 4 lines sticking out represent every other kind of light - overhead, sconce, bathroom vanity, undercounter, and exterior. You can mostly guess which is which from their location. The lighting plan detail is a bit too small to read fully in the GIFs, but it's quite readable when you zoom in on the WMFs. Only the LiteTouch controlled outlets are on these plans - the regular outlets are not. And I left the furniture out this time, because it just gets too cluttered with that AND the lighting plan. Oh, and I added dashpicpagedired rectangles showing the locations of the skylights in the breakfast area and sitting room.
'Pictures' of the mostly final kitchen layout, January 14, 2001
Here are my first attempts at showing some 'pictures' from 3D Home Architect. The colors are not very accurate, especially the cabinet color - 3D Home Architect has the worst color picker widget that I have EVER used, and it took over an hour to get it even halfway close. And, no, those are not the real trim and wall colors - those haven't been chosen yet. The protruding box above the stove is the closest I could get to showing an exhaust hood. The empty space in the upper cabinet next to the refrigerator will hold a microwave. The double doors right on the counter at the base of the peninsula are an appliance garage, but done with swinging doors instead of a tambour (vertical sliding) door, because the tambour doors on our current appliance garages don't work well enough. The gray cabinet doors above the appliance garage will be glass, but the appliance garage doors will NOT be glass, despite being gray. The actual cabinet doors will have a raised center panel with a roman arch at the top, and will be in a medium tone maple with a ginger glaze. I expect that the pillars will not actually be as large as shown here, and will not be 12 sided. The odd looking lines on the surface and back of the peninsula are just bugs in 3D Home Architect's rendering logic.
- Kitchen as seen from the sliding door in the breakfast area, in GIF and WMF.
- Kitchen as seen from standing next to the kitchen closet, in GIF and WMF.
- Looking out of the kitchen, over the peninsula towards the family room fireplace, in GIF and WMF.
- Looking from the far corner of the breakfast area towards the foyer, in GIF and WMF. You can see a number of rooms from here, from left: the kitchen; through the dining room to the powder room door; the kitchen closet doors; the foyer, with a bit of the stairs going up and then the door to the basement stairs; the pillars and the future double sided bookcases between the kitchen and family room; and the living room with a bit of a fireplace.
- Kitchen as seen from the far corner of the family room, in GIF and WMF.
- Kitchen as seen from the living room, in GIF and WMF.
Plans for the kitchen, first pass
First Floor, in GIF and WMF and DXF and 3D Home Architect.
Enlarged kitchen, in GIF and WMF.
Plans with elevator OK'ed by builder and elevator installer, December 4, 2000
I met with our builder and elevator installer on 12/1/2000, and they OK'ed the elevator location, and the alternate elevator door location for the basement. The elevator machinery will be in the attic, along with the heat pump that serves the second floor. The elevator shaft has to be 4 inches larger front to back, so the adjoining closet now protrudes another 4 inches into the sitting room on the second floor. The elevator car size will be 3' x 4'7".
We met with our home automation installer on 12/2/2000, and he asked that the back part of the utility room be wider, to allow placing equipment on both walls, so I resized the adjacent bedroom closet a bit. The basement bathroom door moved back into the bedroom, as that just seems more convenient for someone living there. I'm not happy with the kitchenette layout in the basement yet, so that will almost certainly change.
Plans with tweaked doors and alternate basement elevator opening, November 27, 2000
I tweaked the door to bedroom 3 and the removed the door directly from the basement bedroom to bathroom. We would like to have the alternate elevator opening, but that remains to be seen. Also note the possible larger outdoor storage room, in the alternate elevator plan.
Plans tweaked to match the blueprints, with outside dimensions, without furniture, November 26, 2000
No functional changes this time, but I spent hours adjusting my plans to match the blueprints exactly, so the outside dimensions included here are correct to the inch. This including setting the proper wall thicknesses, so you'll see lots of 8 and 12 inch thick walls in the basement now. This produced minor inside dimension reductions in some basement rooms. Note that the storage rooms and the far right wall of the utility room have unfinished foundation walls, which is why they're thinner than elsewhere.
I was pleasently suprised that I could get 3D Home Architect® Deluxe 3.0 to do all the necessary wall thickness tricks in the basement, though I had to turn off dimension snapping and zoom way in and try it a few different ways to make some of them work. It just will not put 2 parallel walls right next to each other, so I had to combine the 8" foundation walls and 4" stud walls together into 12" walls. I gave up on adding the 2" stud walls the blueprints show around the basement stairwell, though I'm sure I could have made that work eventually.
It looks too tight between the kitchenette's range and the microwave cart across from it. And I'm not happy with that range being where it is, right on the end. Any ideas?
Plans after talking with the builder, November 25, 2000
I figured out a way to squeeze the powder room, coat closet, and door to the garage all in, while keeping the garage door in the foyer. We met with the builder, who is OK with the more central elevator location and the consequent rearranging of bathrooms and closets and such on the first and second floors. He pointed out that there is a steel beam just forward of the elevator in the basement, and the elevator machinery (It'll be a winding drum, by the way) should best go right next to it, in the utility room. That means we need a 2 door elevator, so it will open from the end on the basement and first floors, and to the side on the second floor. Now to talk to the elevator vendor (Area Access) to see if they can get the configuration we want. And the builder says he CAN fit those 5 foot double doors for the Sitting Room in the 5 foor 2 inch hallway.
After that meeting, I fiddled with door locations and swings some more, then started figuring out how to fit a kitchenette into the Recreation Room now that the elevator has taken out the corner I was expecting to use for that. The kitchenette will just be roughed in for later. The door swings in the basement bathroom and elevator area are still a bit awkward. The Foyer sure is traffic central, with 6 doors, 3 archways and a stairway opening into it.
I shifted the door to Bedroom #3 back about a foot, so that from the hallway you now tend to see the windows more than the television, which we plan to exile in there.
Plans with a different elevator placement, version 2, November 24, 2000
This plan switches the elevator door 90 degrees, to the long side of the elevator, which puts the door in a much better place on the second floor, in a slightly better place in the basement, and in a slightly worse place on the first floor. Also, the Study (Yea!) and coat closet are returned to their original configurations, at the expense of moving the garage door into the dining room. And the large linen closet is back, using some space taken from the laundry room and the Bedroom #2 and #3 closets. The hallway into the Sitting Room still isn't quite wide enough to fit that double door.
Plans with a different elevator placement, version 1, November 23, 2000
This plan moves the elevator to the middle of the house, forcing the second floor laundry room and the first floor powder room to get squeezed in elsewhere, which causes further changes to the garage door, coat closet, etc. The elevator gets out of Bedroom #2, and the impact on the Study is reduced. The big linen closet disappears, because we didn't try hard enough yet to wedge it in, Unfortunately, the hallway into the Sitting Room really isn't quite wide enough to fit that double door, and the interaction with the elevator door there is pretty awkward.
Plans with the original elevator placement, as of November 23, 2000
I was wrong before about how to read the door and window dimensions. I now understand it correctly - see the first item under Notes. A number of the door sizes have been reduced slightly because of this.
This plan adds built-in bookcases between Kitchen and Family Room, enlarges the living room bay window slightly, rearranges the powder room fixtures, moves the big linen closet, moves the bathroom door from Bedroom #2 to the hall, enlarges the Sitting Room doors, and adds some furniture placements we're thinking about.
Plans as of November 12, 2000
The elevator really hacks up the study. Anyone have a better idea where to put it? (No, not in the midddle of the stairs.) Expanding the existing first-floor outside house walls probably isn't an option, for several reasons, so we can't stick the elevator on the outside.
The original Plans, before we started changing them
Notes
- Those 4 to 6 digit numbers next to the doors and windows in the plans are Opening Size codes - a 2 or 3 digit width followed by a 2 or 3 digit height. Each dimension is composed of one digit of feet followed by 1 or 2 digits of inches. For example, 2868 means 2 feet 8 inches wide by 6 feet 8 inches high, or 32 inches wide by 80 inches high. 21052 means 2 feet 10 inches wide by 5 feet 2 inches high, or 34 inches wide by 62 inches high.
- The GIF format will display in a web browser, and is what most people should look at.
- The PDF (Portable Document Format) is a scalable format, and therefore much better for zooming in for close examination than the GIF format. To view a PDF, you need to have the free Adobe® Acrobat® Reader installed, version 2.1 or later. It is available for Macintosh and Windows.
- The WMF (Windows Meta-File) format is a scalable vector format, and therefore much better for zooming in for close examination than the GIF format. To view a WMF, you will probably need to download it and view it in something other than a web browser. I like ACDSee a lot as a general purpose graphics viewer - it handles WMFs in the Windows version, but not in the Mac versions. (Does anyone know of Mac software that can view WMFs?) Go to www.acdsystems.com/english/products/acdsee/ to get it (and please pay the shareware fee). The "Quick View" built into Windows 98 can open WMF files, but it cannot zoom in on them, making it mostly useless.
- The DXF (Drawing Exchange Format) format is for professional level Computer Aided Design software, such as AutoCAD and IntelliCAD. I'm only going to put DXFs up when I have a reason to.
- In Internet Explorer. the WMF and DXF links will probably download if you just click on them. If not, then right click on the link, and choose "Save Target As..." (on a Mac, either option-click, or click and hold and when the menu pops up choose "Download Link to Disk"). AOL browsers will usually act like Internet Explorer. Netscape browsers will usually download the WMF and DXFs OK, but you might instead get a web page that looks like noise. If so, then right click on the link, and choose "Save Link As..." (on a Mac, either option-click, or click and hold and when the menu pops up choose "Save this link as...").
- I created these plans using 3D Home Architect® Deluxe 3.0, which is copyrighted by The Learning Company and sold by Broderbund, who have now become part of Mattel Interactive. It's pretty good software, about as easy to use as I could have hoped for. I found Sierra Home's competing Sierra Home Architect product to be harder to use, and to be seriously unstable when I tried to do something complex, like these plans. 3D Home Architect® Deluxe 3.0 requires DirectX 6 or later, so it only runs under Windows 95/98 (and maybe Windows 2000).
- It turns out that 3D Home Architect® Deluxe 3.0 is a partial version of Chief Architect, which has a very similar User Interface and is almost as user friendly, but has a whole bunch more features, the one I most want being user defined fractional wall thicknesses. (Stud walls are really about 4.5" thick, but 3D Home Architect® Deluxe 3.0 only allows 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, or 12".) However, the highest volume seller of 3D Home Architect® Deluxe 3.0, Quality Plans & Software, Inc., wants $862.00 and up for it. It's just not worth that much to me to get a relatively minor improvement in accuracy, since the plans I'm doing are not the construction documents. NOTE: Well, my plans DID end up being the construction documents for parts of the house, which is kinda scarey, but given the chaos rampant in our construction, I can't see how any additional accuracy would have made a whisker of difference.
Comments on plans
- Yes, we're really going to get the elevator. "Decadent", Kathleen says. I bet she just wants to do gravity experiments while riding in it. ;-)
- The thing on the master bedroom wall, to the left as you enter, is a NuTone built-in ironing board.
- The basement is walkout, at the double doors on the back left (It's actually 1 door and 1 fixed glass panel).
- The family room is one step down (8") from the rest of the first floor (kitchen, breakfast, living room, etc.).
- The wall section between the kitchen and family room (the solid lines between the dashed lines), represents nothing but a step down, with pillars to the ceiling at both ends (the back pillar is structural). The ideas of a railing or built-in bookcases both seem to have faded away for now. Just mentally subtract the built-in bookcases I added to the plans starting with November 23.
- The dashed line between the breakfast area and kitchen doesn't represent anything physical, just a separator for room naming and sizing purposes. Ditto for the dashed lines around various staircases (well, the stairs do have railings).
- There will someday be a deck outside in back of the breakfast area, which is where the 2 exterior doors back there go.
- The garage is 2 steps down (16") from the rest of the first floor.
- Those are direct-venting gas fireplaces in the living room and family room, so didn't have to be any chimneys, but we ran the flues up the chimneys anyway, and even bricked the side chimney for better looks.
- There are slightly vaulted (cathedral) ceilings in the Study, Family Room, and Master Bedroom. The Study is only vaulted where the back wall is straight across, not all the way to the side walls.
- Yes, showing the roof and some exterior elevations here would be nice. So see these exterior pictures.
Schedule
- Old house demolished 9/24/2000.
- Building Permit was issued around 11/27/2000.
- Started construction on Friday, 12/8/2000! - digging the foundation hole.
- Foundation walls were poured between 12/26/2000 and 1/3/2001.
- Foundation floor was poured between 1/31/2001 and 2/1/2001.
- Original projected completion date on contract - March 31, 2001.
- The builder descends into chaos - June-August 2001.
- We close, chaos and all - September 7 2001.
- We start living there - late October 2001.
- Serious interior decorating begins - January 2002.
- Crestron audio system installed, to power built in speakers in 9 rooms - October 2002.
- Initial interior decorating phase approaching completion - October 2002.
Last changed 10/15/2002
One way to contact us is at: zenroom@toad.net