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    • KrisidiousK Offline
      Krisidious
      last edited by

      watching...

      By: Kristoff Rand
      Home DesignerUnique House Plans

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      • B Offline
        billbell52
        last edited by

        Sounds like you are thinking ahead on this. I am not an expert on this. I don't think you need to go crazy on it. However, there are lots of things that can be done that add almost no cost and don't look unsightly. The main ones I did wrong are:

        1. Make closet doors 30" or 36". I have 24" doors that could easily be larger at no real cost difference.
        2. Make hallways wider to make turning around easier. I can turn around today but just barely.
        3. Make switches/controls accessible. I have some pool controls that are hard to reach. I moved water heater from tank in attic to tankless in garage.
        4. Biggest mistake was toilet access. I could easily have added more room and changed layout.

        Other possible items

        1. Plan for grab bar attachment.
        2. Role under bathroom sink

        Things I accidentally did right.

        1. Easy ramp access to front and rear door.
        2. Bedroom is large enough to easily navigate.
        3. Pavestone walkways around house are flat and wide enough.

        I was able to put in a vertical platform lift to get between floors. It is a tight fit but it does work.

        I use to think I would move to a new house when my needs changed. In this market selling a house is difficult. So I am leaning more towards planning ahead. My mother broke her hip a few years ago and came to live with us a few months while she recuperated. My mother-in-law has problems with stairs and she visits from time to time.

        Wishing you the best on your project.

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        • Mike LuceyM Offline
          Mike Lucey
          last edited by

          Coming along nicely Dale 👍

          As regards disabled access goes over here, we have to provide quite a number of considerations as standard. While these items may not make a lot of sense to able body house holders, I remind them that they may appreciate the extra access provisions in time AND that some day they may grow old and be glad of them

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          • Dave RD Offline
            Dave R
            last edited by

            Some of those ideas just make sense even for the able bodied. Wider doors and straight runs into rooms make sense for moving furniture around. I've been in some newer homes that look great but you can't move a couch or a bed in without damaging the walls. What kind of sense does that make? The house we had designed a few years ago (but have yet to build) was, at our request, designed with 36" wide doors and other features that would make the house accessible to wheelchair users but it was more to make the house easier to live in for anyone.

            Etaoin Shrdlu

            %

            (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

            G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

            M30

            %

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            • Mike LuceyM Offline
              Mike Lucey
              last edited by

              Just wondering how progress in going? 😄

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              • daleD Offline
                dale
                last edited by

                Mike, I apologize for the delay in updates, but it has been dawn to dusk, then fall into bed hectic around here for the past month.
                Just a couple more days of madness, and I will do a big update.
                Winter strikes hard and fast here, and I am really pushing to not get caught.
                Thanks so much for your interest.

                Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                • pbacotP Offline
                  pbacot
                  last edited by

                  @dale said:

                  Mike, I apologize for the delay in updates, but it has been dawn to dusk, then fall into bed hectic around here for the past month.
                  Just a couple more days of madness, and I will do a big update.
                  Winter strikes hard and fast here, and I am really pushing to not get caught.
                  Thanks so much for your interest.

                  Well that's plenty of an update. How blessed to be thus engaged. Looking forward to hearing the details.

                  MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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                  • daleD Offline
                    dale
                    last edited by

                    The past month has been so hectic, that as I noted previously, I just haven't had the time for proper posting.
                    Aside from managing to get my fascia and roof on, I have been acting as the gopher for the stone mason.
                    Introducing, "he who cannot be named" himself, in "The Chronicles of a full masonry fireplace".Herb.png
                    Don't let those sad eyes fool you, this 73 year old German trained mason is a taskmaster, but master is the operative part of this statement as well.
                    This is the 3rd fireplace he has built for us, and if you have ever had one, they are hard to live without. In the end the 40,000 lb (18,200 kg) monster will keep the entire house warm in the case of power failures.
                    But it has to start somewhere: Judy shoveling in one of the 15 or so truckloads of sand.Judy and the sand.png
                    Starting at the base of the rough in, and following through with the Hearth, which cantilevers into the building.The Base rough in.pngRough in 2.png


                    Rough in 3.png


                    Hearth rough in.png

                    Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                    • daleD Offline
                      dale
                      last edited by

                      Continuing on to the fire box, which, if you are familiar with fireplaces, is similar to a Rumford with it's sloping back and sides, but much deeper. This is done to make the smoke shelf more effective. In the real world it means the front of the fireplace doesn't get blackened, as it virtually never smokes unless there is extreme downdraft conditions.Firebox 1.png
                      Notice the firebricks are set with there 9" depth perpendicular to the fire box. It takes more firebricks this way, but is less likely to crack, and way more efficient at maintaining heat.firebox 2.png
                      Apologies over the quality of some photos, as they were quick iphone shots.
                      Next is the firebox with the steel damper in place.Firebox and damper.png
                      Interior rough in complete.Interior rough in complete.png
                      Then it was putting the flagstone onto the hearth. The hearth is about 18"(45 cm) off the floor. This is so when you sit in front of the fire, you are looking right at it, and the heat is reflecting off those sloped sides and back, right at your body.Hearth flagstone.pngHearth 2.png

                      Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                      • daleD Offline
                        dale
                        last edited by

                        With the weather holding, we moved outside to take advantage of this.
                        Chimney flue through the roof.
                        He angles the first part of his flues, as he says it causes the smoke to be pulled faster up the chimney.Cimney flue sm.png and reaching above the roof.Chimney above roof.png

                        To be continued.
                        Cheers
                        Dale

                        Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                        • daleD Offline
                          dale
                          last edited by

                          Next we started the actual stone work with river stone that we had gathered.Start exterior stone.png
                          And continued to the soffit.[attachment=3:2ipzng5w]<!-- ia3 -->ExTerior stone to soffit.png<!-- ia3 -->[/attachment:2ipzng5w]
                          Stone above roof.[attachment=1:2ipzng5w]<!-- ia1 -->Screen shot 2011-10-16 at 7.36.11 AM.png<!-- ia1 -->[/attachment:2ipzng5w][attachment=2:2ipzng5w]<!-- ia2 -->stone above roof.png<!-- ia2 -->[/attachment:2ipzng5w]
                          And pouring the cap.[attachment=0:2ipzng5w]<!-- ia0 -->Screen shot 2011-10-16 at 7.38.12 AM.png<!-- ia0 -->[/attachment:2ipzng5w]


                          EXTerior stone to soffit.png


                          stone above roof.png


                          Screen shot 2011-10-16 at 7.36.11 AM.png


                          Screen shot 2011-10-16 at 7.38.12 AM.png

                          Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                          • daleD Offline
                            dale
                            last edited by

                            Then the interior stone work. This shows the arch form with beginning of stone placement for the arch.arch.png
                            I laminated 4" Douglas fir for the mantle.Building the mantle.png
                            A shot showing the quarter sawn grain of the Fir.Edge grain of d-fir.png
                            Mounting the mantle.Screen shot 2011-10-16 at 7.49.55 AM.png

                            Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                            • J Offline
                              JuanV.Soler
                              last edited by

                              German trained mason, a taskmaster,...
                              ...73 year old 👍
                              you will be fine inside your home in those stormy and cold days Dale 😉

                              ,))),

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                              • ely862meE Offline
                                ely862me
                                last edited by

                                👍 WOW

                                Got to say this is really impressive !! I love how clean the work is ! Good luck with finishing it and living in it!

                                How are the outer rocks of the chimney held in place ? I have the impression they are not only held by concrete .

                                Cheers!

                                Elisei (sketchupper)


                                Before no life was done on Earth it was THE LIFE ITSELF...GOD
                                Come and See EliseiDesign

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                                • jarynzlesaJ Offline
                                  jarynzlesa
                                  last edited by

                                  where is the stonehenge? I don't know, but I know that somebody can create a lot of beautiful things with stones.
                                  keep up dale thumb up 👍 .

                                  http://www.vizualizaceschodiste.mypage.cz/

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                                  • daleD Offline
                                    dale
                                    last edited by

                                    Juan, Elisel, Jaryn
                                    Thanks for the encouragement.
                                    Amongst the moments of excitement, there are moments when I question my sanity.
                                    But on a piece like this, there is so much personal involvement when you have shovelled the sand and collected the stone, everything has a story.
                                    Anyway, for the final on the fireplace, the exterior stone completed.Screen shot 2011-10-17 at 7.09.47 AM.png
                                    And the first fire, a tribute to the mason and accompanied with a nice glass of red wine.Screen shot 2011-10-17 at 7.12.58 AM.png

                                    Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                                    • AnssiA Offline
                                      Anssi
                                      last edited by

                                      In Finland, it has also been customary to have a little "first fire" celebration. Traditionally all the smoke from the fireplace comes in until the master mason has been given his vodka. Then he goes up on the roof and drops a little stone in the chimney to break the thin glass he has placed there.

                                      Good luck to your project

                                      Anssi

                                      securi adversus homines, securi adversus deos rem difficillimam adsecuti sunt, ut illis ne voto quidem opus esset

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                                      • daleD Offline
                                        dale
                                        last edited by

                                        Anssi
                                        Our mason told us this exact ritual, although apparently the schnapps in Germany had to be accompanied by the monies owing, or the glass remained.

                                        Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                                        • daleD Offline
                                          dale
                                          last edited by

                                          We got a spell of great weather at the end of the fireplace construction, so we managed to get the steel roofing on as well.
                                          Unloading the pallets. Screen shot 2011-10-19 at 6.49.26 AM.png
                                          Flashing detail.Screen shot 2011-10-19 at 6.49.56 AM.png
                                          Laying the steel.Screen shot 2011-10-19 at 6.47.16 AM.png

                                          Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                                          • daleD Offline
                                            dale
                                            last edited by

                                            Yesterday was a big day, as with the main floor hydronic pipes in place we poured the upper floor.Screen shot 2011-10-19 at 7.02.38 AM.pngScreen shot 2011-10-19 at 7.02.55 AM.png


                                            Screen shot 2011-10-19 at 7.03.17 AM.png

                                            Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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