Archive for the 'House Plans & Blueprints' Category

Dec 26 2009

Country House Plans Make Everyday Feel Like a Day in the Country

Country homes have a warm, welcoming feeling. While the concept of these homes originated in the rural countryside, today country homes are located in all types of neighborhoods. From beautiful bungalows to elegant French country homes, there is a rustic nest to suit your preferences.

Bungalow homes have been around for centuries to accommodate families of all sizes and backgrounds. Modern American bungalow house plans usually have 1 or 1 ½ stories. Some bungalows are spacious while others are quite small. Basic bungalows are affordable and adorable. Many bungalows have an enclosed front porch or sunroom. The bungalow’s low-roofed, single-story design makes it an ideal home for handicapped people, elders and folks with small children. For those shopping around for the perfect second home, a bungalow is a perfect vacation getaway. Some waterfront communities feature several streets lined with small bungalows as a private, comfortable retreat for vacationers.

Country homes are a unique combination of elements from different American home styles. During the 18th and 19th centuries, country homes were predominantly built in the south. Most country homes have a roof that flares out to cover the porch to encourage pleasurable outdoor living. The front porch is often the focal point of country homes, featured in countless paintings with occupants in rocking chairs or swings. Other elements often found in country house plans include symmetrical windows and dormers used in colonial style homes. Today gracious country homes can be found all across the country.

In the late 19th century, French country homes became popular in the United States. Much like the allure of fashions from Paris, Americans were enchanted by the romantic design of homes modeled after those built in the French rural countryside. French country homes can be darling cottage or sprawling estates. The exterior of these homes is usually brick, stucco or stone with hip roof lines. Interiors include rustic wood beams on the ceilings and entries topped with arched openings. Some country homes include double French doors leading out to a deck or patio.

Other accents frequently found in French country house plans are trimmed painted timbers, shuttered windows and decorative window boxes filled with colorful flowers. The windows are typically tall and thin. French country homes may also have multiple gables and arches over the windows and garage openings. Wrought iron railings are used on porches with brick or stucco accents around the doors and windows.

Country homes offer casual charm with understood elegance. Unique indoor and outdoor furnishings complete their appeal. Place a wrought iron bench under a tree on your front lawn. Include wrought iron accent inside your home, such as a decorative towel rack in the bathroom. Hang sheer, flowing curtains from all the windows that allow light in while still offering some level of privacy.

Everyday is a day in the country when you build your dream home from country house plans offering a variety of comfortable, cozy features. Whether you dream of an estate residence based on French country house plans or you want a darling vacation home based on bungalow house plans, online resources make it easier to find exactly what you need.

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Dec 25 2009

Start Your Home Design Using These Home Design Tools

You’ve decided you want to build a new home. Where do you start? First, we suggest you purchase your land, as this will surely impact the design of your home. Second, start putting your ideas together before visiting your architect.

Start with a vision of your new home. Is there a certain architectural style you prefer? Colonial? Cape? Saltbox? Farmhouse? From there, start with the basics in home design. How many bedrooms will you need? Do you want a Master Bedroom with or without a Master Bathroom suite? Will it be located on the first or second floor? If this is a vacation home which will become your retirement home, you may prefer to have the main rooms located on the first floor for easy access in later years. Do you want a large, eat-in kitchen or a separate dining room?

Are you planning to entertain small or large groups of people in your home? Is a cathedral Great Room on your list of priorities? Will you need a living room or media room separate from your Great Room? Do you have a specific hobby or interest that requires a separate room or area?

Compare all of these areas with your current home. Does the space you have now fit your needs? Write down the measurements of your space and then mark whether or not the space is adequate. Wherever possible, look for areas to reduce the living space. For instance, if you have a large laundry room now and you only really use half of the space, mark it as a potential space saver. Anytime you reduce the square footage of your new home you will save money in initial material costs, but in energy costs over the life of the home as well.

A home fulfills many purposes, but it can also satisfy numerous personal, aesthetic, and emotional requirements that can be difficult to describe in words. In starting to imagine your home design, it will help your architect if you identify and communicate how you want each space to feel. How?

You may find it a challenge to explain how you want a room to feel. Start by doing some simple exercises. Pick up a home magazine or imagine a home you are familiar with. Find a room you like. What do you like about it? The way the afternoon sunlight casts shadows within the room? The room’s intimacy or its abundant space?

Think about other spaces you enjoy – the park, the library, your friend’s home. How does the space make you feel? What creates that feeling? Be specific, and write down what you like about it. For instance, you might write, “I like how the room’s color tones change as the sun sets” or “I love how the outdoors is brought inside”. These small realizations will help the home design to evolve from a floor plan to a custom home that is an extension of your life philosophy.

Do this for each room in your home design. It is also helpful to describe what you don’t like about certain floor plans, rooms, or space. For instance, if you are not fond of having to walk through your closet to enter your Master Bedroom, document this. Perhaps you like the great room in a magazine photo but you don’t like the television being the center of attention. Or, you may like the space but find it lacks the intimacy you’re looking for in your home – a cozy corner where you can chat with another couple, a well-lit reading area, or a secluded spot for your cell phone chargers, mail and telephone. Keep all of your notes together. Cut out full pages or small photos that describe your likes and dislikes. As you go through this process, you can update your thoughts with text and photos. Eventually, you will come to a good understanding of what you want your custom home to look and feel like. Bring your notebook to your first meeting with your architect. Starting with your vision in hand will expedite the design process while guaranteeing success.

Your custom home architect will spend time with you to guide you through this process and will translate your ideas into a preliminary design for your consideration and review. The result will be much more than a home with a standard floor plan – you will have a custom home design that matches your philosophy and lifestyle, a reflection of who you are, your dreams and aspirations.

About the Author: Jeremy Bonin, a principal partner of Bonin Architects & Associates, is an award-winning green architect and the author of TIMBER FRAMES: Designing Your Custom Home. With a special interest in sustainable design and green homes, structural insulated panels (SIPs), as well as timber frame construction, Jeremy incorporates renewable energy practices where possible, including geo-thermal, solar, radiant heat, and energy-efficient foundation systems.

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Dec 24 2009

Custom House Plans – Finding a Good Designer

The field of drawing custom house plans is a crowded and competitive one. There are many architectural and design firms out there vying for a “piece of the pie.” However, if you look closely at examples of their finished product, you will find huge differences among them. The better ones offer quality designs and highly detailed plans.

Drawing a good set of custom home plans involves integrating many different concepts and ideas into a solid and usable working plan. Many designers are able to come up with a unique or interesting preliminary design, but fail to deliver when its time to detail the house structure. They draw a pretty picture but have little or no understanding of how to translate that nice design into a working plan which the builder can understand.

Having been in the business for more than 30 years, we have seen a large number of house plans which looked good at first glance. However, upon closer examination, many of these plans were found to be lacking large amounts of needed information. If a house plan is not easy to navigate or is not thoroughly detailed, then the builder is left to guess at the designer’s intentions. This often means that he will “pad” his bid to make sure that he covers any unknown construction costs that may arise.

One item to look for when evaluating a house plans’ quality level is the number of structural sections which are shown on the plan. Highly detailed sets of plans will always cut lots of sectional views through the house to show every different roof framing situation. This might mean that 10 or 12 (or even more) sections need to be drawn for a large house plan. And even a small house plan should include 3 or 4 sections minimum. However, many home plans available today (especially plans purchased through inexpensive plan directories) cut corners in this department and only show one or two house section views. This means that the builder will have to guess at the rest of the house framing.

Another item which is often missing or lacking in a set of house plans is comprehensive and accurate dimensions. We have always strived to provide more than the minimum amount of house dimensions so that it is easy for the owner and builder to layout a home on its building site. We will even calculate point to point dimensions (using trigonometry) for homes which have lots of odd angles to them (as opposed to a simple rectangle layout). Not all architects or designers will go this “extra mile,” so it pays to check these things out beforehand.

Every set of custom house plans includes several items which need to be blown up and detailed for further clarification. If a set of plans does not provide additional close-up drawings (for things such as beam connections, deck railings, stairway construction, etc.), then it is not a complete set. It is very easy to cut corners during the planning process. But the end result will be higher costs for the home owner – and lots of frustration for the building contractor.

There are some architects and designers who seem to think that its the responsibility of the building department to check and catch any omissions. But the best of the breed takes it as a matter of pride to produce the very best plan and design they can. It is the only way to build up a loyal clientele and to get referrals for future work. And that vote of confidence from former clients makes all the difference in the world.

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