Can't buy, so going to build a house.
- Mobius
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Can't buy, so going to build a house.
Been looking for a house to buy now, for 9 months, and making zero progress. So, we've decided to buy a section and build a house.
Here's a plan from the house, it's not the latest iteration, but is close.
It is loosely based on Frank Lloyd Wright's very first "Usonian" home: that of Herbert Jacobs, of Madison, Wisconsin. Built in 1937. Here's the official web site: http://www.usonia1.com
That house is generally held to be one of the pivotal house designs of the 20th century. FLW made several innovations with this home:
1) World's first "Carport". He invented the word, and described it thus, "An automobile is not a horse, and does not require a barn." You can imagine that back in 1937, the car industry was just starting to be able to make cars which didn't leak like crazy when left in the rain.
2) First domestic dwelling to ever have underfloor heating of the concrete floor slab by way of steam pipes. Several banks refused to fund the building of the house because of the "radical" heating solution. FLW called it "Gravity Heat" - and it did work, but nearly so well as he claimed it did. The pipes were buired in sand, totally below the floor slab, when they should have been inside the concrete. Instead of pumping hot water through the pipes, he pumped steam - and at that time no one knew that steam (unlike water) follows the hottest pipe. So, it took many many days of constant heating before the floor was an even temperature.
3) It was one of the first house designs where food did not "magically appear" from some hidden kitchen: the housewife was treated to a kitchen which was the central hub of the house. Unheard of in the day.
Anyway - Emma and I are looking forward to the building process, and only hope we can afford all the features of the home! Wish us luck.
Here's a plan from the house, it's not the latest iteration, but is close.
It is loosely based on Frank Lloyd Wright's very first "Usonian" home: that of Herbert Jacobs, of Madison, Wisconsin. Built in 1937. Here's the official web site: http://www.usonia1.com
That house is generally held to be one of the pivotal house designs of the 20th century. FLW made several innovations with this home:
1) World's first "Carport". He invented the word, and described it thus, "An automobile is not a horse, and does not require a barn." You can imagine that back in 1937, the car industry was just starting to be able to make cars which didn't leak like crazy when left in the rain.
2) First domestic dwelling to ever have underfloor heating of the concrete floor slab by way of steam pipes. Several banks refused to fund the building of the house because of the "radical" heating solution. FLW called it "Gravity Heat" - and it did work, but nearly so well as he claimed it did. The pipes were buired in sand, totally below the floor slab, when they should have been inside the concrete. Instead of pumping hot water through the pipes, he pumped steam - and at that time no one knew that steam (unlike water) follows the hottest pipe. So, it took many many days of constant heating before the floor was an even temperature.
3) It was one of the first house designs where food did not "magically appear" from some hidden kitchen: the housewife was treated to a kitchen which was the central hub of the house. Unheard of in the day.
Anyway - Emma and I are looking forward to the building process, and only hope we can afford all the features of the home! Wish us luck.
- Vindicator
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Re: Can't buy, so going to build a house.
but, what would i know... i am lazy and use ...'s too much and have bad grammer and make run on sentences and things like that and such...Mobius should have written something more like this: wrote:My wife and I have been looking for a house to buy for the last 9 months, but we haven't made any progress. So instead, we have decided to buy a parcel and build a house.
This is the plan for the house, although it isn't the latest iteration, it is close:
It is loosely based on Frank Lloyd Wright's very first "Usonian" home, that of Herbert Jacobs, of Madison, Wisconsin, which was built in 1937. Here's the URL of the official web site: http://www.usonia1.com
That home is generally considered to be one of the most pivotal house designs of the 20th century because F.L.W. made several innovations such as:
1) The world's first "Carport". He invented the word, and described it thusly, "An automobile is not a horse, and does not require a barn." You can imagine that back in 1937, the car industry was just begining to build cars which didn't leak like heavily when left in the rain.
2) It was the first domestic dwelling to ever have underfloor heating of the concrete floor slab by way of steam pipes. Several banks refused to fund the building of the house because of the "radical" heating solution. F.L.W. called it "Gravity Heat"; it did work, but not nearly so well as he claimed. The pipes were buried in sand, below the floor slab, when they should have been inside the concrete. Instead of pumping hot water through the pipes, he pumped steam; at that time no one knew that steam (unlike water) follows the hottest pipe. It took many many days of constant heating before the floor was an even temperature.
3) It was one of the first house designed where food did not "magically appear" from some hidden kitchen. The owner was treated to a kitchen which was the central hub of the house. Unheard of in the day.
Anyway, Emma and I are looking forward to the building process, and only hope we can afford all the features of the home! Wish us luck.
- Vertigo 99
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X2. Carport? That's probably a trend he started that eliminated a possibility of a bottom-floor with an opening under the car so you can easily do repairs and change the oil without jacking up the car. Not unlike some garages in Europe. Besides you will always need storage space.ccb056 wrote:carports suck, get a garage
- Phoenix Red
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This house has got some serious tiny going on. Not only is the amount of actual floorspace small, all the twists and turns will make it FEEL cramped. Not cozy, just plain cramped.
Trichord's right about the lack of storage area. I also notice your kitchen is going to have room for pots OR pans, and certainly none for counters.
You sure you have to make it so small?
Trichord's right about the lack of storage area. I also notice your kitchen is going to have room for pots OR pans, and certainly none for counters.
You sure you have to make it so small?
1) You have more roof area to cover (trusses, plywood, shingles). Also more attic insulation in a long ranch style.Hahnenkam wrote:The heating makes sense to me, but why is it more expensive to build than a two story?woodchip wrote:a long ranch style house is more expensive to build (and to heat)than a two story.
2) You have more footing to dig and pour and if there is a basement, more basement walls. a wood floor over a first floor is much cheaper to build.
I like the basic layout. Everything would be lit really nice with this layout. I like the way the master BR is away from the main activity areas of the house. This would be a nice house for a couple with no or one kid.
I'd change some things. The fron door slams you right into a wall. I'd try to open it up a bit in that area. Also, yeah, you really need to add some closets and storage. The dining area seems cramped as well and somewhat of an afterthought. How about a fireplace on the far east wall of the great room?
I'd change some things. The fron door slams you right into a wall. I'd try to open it up a bit in that area. Also, yeah, you really need to add some closets and storage. The dining area seems cramped as well and somewhat of an afterthought. How about a fireplace on the far east wall of the great room?
- Phoenix Red
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Good eye on the front door Pun, that could use a little work. More space for eating is also a good call. That little table will be overfull with any large meal set out on it, and sitting on the wall side of the table will be a hassle getting in and out.
Mobi if you're dead set on 1 story, how about expanding the bedroom wing to be 4 feet wider, and setting some closets in the "west" wall?
Mobi if you're dead set on 1 story, how about expanding the bedroom wing to be 4 feet wider, and setting some closets in the "west" wall?
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I have to agree, you have too many internal walls which makes for precicely jack for storage. Alot of builders are doing the exact same thing around here. Theres so many big houses that have so many frelling rooms that you can't store anything! I *really* suggest you take a look at some older houses and see how they're laid out.
Personally, I like domehomes better than ranch - there are lots of advantages to them.
These are some decent examples of floor plans:
http://www.domehome.com/newplan.htm
These are some decent examples of floor plans:
http://www.domehome.com/newplan.htm
Well for one, they're more energy efficient, 2 better wind-load characteristics (snow load also)What's so great about 'em?
The structure is physicly stronger because of the design itself, not just because its round.
If you look through pictures of hurricane wreckage - often the only homes that survive are dome or round style homes - often with only superficial damage.
thats just for starters...
Rubbish! Most people dont have to worry about wind and snow loads. I don't see dome houses as being more practical at all. Why would the fact that it's round make it more energy efficient? Wouldn't all the heat concentrate in the top of the dome? I think you could build a conventionally designed house that's plenty strong, energy efficient, more aesthetically pleasing, easier to furnish and much more practical than living in a bubble.Capm wrote:Well for one, they're more energy efficient, 2 better wind-load characteristics (snow load also)What's so great about 'em?
The structure is physicly stronger because of the design itself, not just because its round.
If you look through pictures of hurricane wreckage - often the only homes that survive are dome or round style homes - often with only superficial damage.
thats just for starters...
Actually, alot of the "hippies" were highly educated folk from white-collar families. The long-hair, drugs and free love was all a part of there rebellion against mainstream society. You may not believe it, but, the "accidental" discovery, was by no means an accident. It was actually the result of some good acid.Lothar wrote:Geodesics are cool... a lot of hippies built them in the 60s with no clue what great designs they'd stumbled upon.
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Actually Pun, he has a point. There was a special on the Weather Channel that aired not too long before Katrina hit about some dude building such a house. When Charlie (or whatever hurricane it was that hit), his house took very little damage. The rest of the houses nearby were demolished. But yes, like you mentioned, there are trade-offs.
- Lothar
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Well, yes, I know... even so, most of them didn't realize just how cool the geometric system they stumbled upon was.will_kill wrote:Actually, alot of the "hippies" were highly educated folk from white-collar families.Lothar wrote:Geodesics are cool... a lot of hippies built them in the 60s with no clue what great designs they'd stumbled upon.
If we're talking about hippys, i doubt that. As far as demographics go, hippys rarely make uninformed choices. Everything has to have a greater meaning to them.Lothar wrote:Well, yes, I know... even so, most of them didn't realize just how cool the geometric system they stumbled upon was.will_kill wrote:Actually, alot of the "hippies" were highly educated folk from white-collar families.Lothar wrote:Geodesics are cool... a lot of hippies built them in the 60s with no clue what great designs they'd stumbled upon.
Likely these white-collar hippys decided to be trend-setters and build these weird geodesic houses. Since the design had easily demonstratable advantages, other hippys - being cultural creatives - were eager and willing to go against the social grain for the sake of a good idea once they were clued in.
i like hippys
hey you're all into maths and those geo-build sticks things hey! i bet you have some interesting things to say about geometry
- Lothar
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Yes... specifically, about this particular type of geometry.roid wrote:hey you're all into maths and those geo-build sticks things hey! i bet you have some interesting things to say about geometry :)
Two of the principle designers of the geo-build-stick-thingies were Steve Baer and Clark Richert, who lived in Drop City. Steve Baer is one of the best-known builders of geodesic structures, and he also founded Zomeworks, which later became Zometool Inc. He wrote the first advanced mathematical analysis of the geometric system, but even he only really saw the tip of the iceberg back then.
There's still quite a bit of research being done on the geometry right now. The architecture hasn't really been touched in a while, though.
- Phoenix Red
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