A House for the Coast of Nova Scotia...
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I second Bob's comment, the use of colour is very effective.
Beautiful presentation, very simple.
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you the man, Ross.
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It's going to be beautiful-and the images are too (except for the too wide camera angles, my pet peeve).
No chimney on the sauna? Here in the "homeland" of sauna a separate sauna like that would generally be wood-heated, or equipped with both a wood and an electric stove. The extreme thing is a "smoke" sauna that has a wood stove without a chimney, but as it poses some fire hazard it is generally built more apart. The sauna roof form is also somewhat problematic, the high part will gather all the steam. A flat or less steep insulated inner ceiling would perhaps be better. Overall the sauna appears too high, of course I cannot be sure.
Anssi
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Ross Boss,
Color choice, and gradations... I'm Jack bird into that action.
Killer.
Do the dance of nice.
I'll support your choice of sandwiches -- a warm love bun with a pickle, special sauce soon to be delivered.
Add a few scribbles and I'm popping a socket.
Durant "clean is in" Hapke
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ross,
great design and thoughtful draftsmanship. please keep your work coming.
best wishes.
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Very nice work Ross - thank you for sharing it.
Excellent presentation.cheers
john -
Ross
This is excellent work. Great design, simple and elegant.
A beautiful presentation. So good I think I'll post it again!
Lawrence -
100% Ross
The building plot reminds me of the West Coast of
Ireland. Then again ! Where they joined up at
some point in the distant past ?I'm interested to know the proposed construction
methods ?Mike
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Really lovely Ross. I'm curious about the exterior materials and colour? what will it be?
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Like you need to hear someone else telling you how talented you are, but here I go.... Simply, gorgeous, mmm....
I'm curious about the exterior as well. Will you do a final rendering?
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Love it, looks great!
one question though... will you be able to get away with those horizontal bits on the handrail? I'm no master of building code, but I've heard you can't do that...
I, too am also curious about the exterior treatment!
keep it up and post the updates!
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My clients currently live a few thousand miles away from the site. They have rented a house across the street for the month of August so they can spend some time soaking up some of the nuances of the site to help make final decisions. I plan on visiting them and helping stake out the footprint so they can get a better sense of it. In the fall we will do the construction documents as they plan to build next year.
The sidings, colours etc have not been decided. What I'm thinking is that the primary siding be panels of ship-lapped boards. The owner has expressed an interest in using recycled barn boards. Most of what is available here would have been board sheathing that on a barn would have had wood shingles. The boards typically would have been fairly low quality with lots of knot holes and bits of bark etc. I think I can come up with a nice way of using such materials by creating modular panels that get hung of the building as rain-screen panels.
The roof is likely to be metal. Perhaps zinc or maybe just inexpensive barn roofing. There has been talk of doing the main floor as polished concrete. The large bank of storage along the main floor bedroom will likely have traditional shoji screens.
It is likely that we can get away with a horizontally structured railing system. The site is in a very rural area. To get a building permit we likely just need to submit a drawing showing the footprint, location of septic, the well, and the driveway. I spoke with the development officer and was surprised to learn that there are almost no regulations regarding what we can or can't do on the site. We could for instance cantilever a building out over a cliff if we wanted -- there is no applicable setback from the top of an oceanfront bank. There are some modest setback requirements from the property boundaries, road, and high-water mark but little else in regards to regulations (other than septic & water related ones). During construction it is likely the only inspections we'll have will be by the local power utility who won't power you up if things aren't to their standards. Its so easy-going here I sometimes feel like we are the wild west. Oh, but if you want to put up a windmill here you'll be buried in regulations & approvals.
Technically things like railings are required to be to our national building code but in a rural area there is zero enforcement. I would never do anything that would recklessly endanger a client -- in the case of this client they do not have young children so the climbing hazard of a horizontal railing system is not a very serious risk. I also add that unlike most people building houses here, this client has professional help including a structural engineer.
One other interesting thing, my client has a source for windows that are handmade using wood re-milled from old utility poles that have retired from service. If they are used that will be cool. Only once have I done a job that handmade windows --- they were beautiful.
Regards, Ross
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Hey Ross - I just came across this post. It looks great. You've done a terrific job running with the design. I love the variations you've brought to the table here and I can't wait to see this one come together.
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Greg, we've missed you. Don't be such a stranger.
Ross, my respect for your work and you grows daily.
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I have to say that I'm completely confused about the Sketchup web forums. This one is Coen's, right? What happened to the @Last/Google messageboard? Where is that now?
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greg -
Here, Greg:
http://groups.google.com/group/sketchup-Pro-Groups/topics?start=It went to GGroups.
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Ahh - thank you for the link. But yet another SU messageboard...
Susan, thank you - I've not had much time to spend on the messageboard, the one that is gone that is. I'm afraid I'll not have much time here either, but I do want to watch this thread as Ross works through the project.
I have to say its a really interesting and compelling for me to see the variation introduced to the house by another designer. I see Ross's design and he's really got a grasp on the character of the house, and he's working the design themes and integrating them into the revised organization of the new version of the house. Fascinating!
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greg -
Who needs Kerkythea when you can just imitate Ross!!
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Ross - we've lost touch. Has this house gone ahead? I'd love to see photos.
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