This warmmodern living original design recently appeared on dwell.com. Read on to see an innovative solution to a difficult site that thrilled the client…
Read moreA House at the End of the World
When the project was first described to me, I thought it was a little whacky: a site on a private island in Puget Sound with no roads and no other houses in view. Accessible only by private craft at high tide (unless you go to shore in a row boat). And then a half-mile trek through salt marsh with weekend supplies in wheelbarrows. Electricity, but no well water or toilets.
The project is to replace the termite-eaten rodent-sheltering log home on the site, a 600 square-foot cabin that has housed family weekends and vacations for nearly forty years.
The day of my site visit was sunny. The trip across the Sound in my client’s 23 foot landing craft warmed my bones, until it was time to climb into the row boat for a short trip to the shore. The footing on the wet rocky beach was unsteady, and I think my client was enjoying this city slicker’s awkwardness.
Read moreJoyful houses completed in 2019 and a look ahead to 2020
The annual solar cycle nears its completion as do several Warmmodern Living projects, varied in site – from breathtaking shorelines to rugged woods, and varied in size — from 1000 to 4000 square feet.
All are the products of collaborations with wonderful clients of varied persuasions and ages, who welcomed me into their lives and shared their personal aspirations as we wove the details of their daily lives into their Lindal designs. Each trusted me with long-held visions, and without exception their finished homes exceed their expectations.
A varied group of clients and projects. all sharing the same goals.
Read on and enjoy the slideshow of newly completed Lindal projects…
Read moreUp on the Roof
It used to be that escaping to the night sky up on the roof was an urban phenomenon, but no more. The increasing popularity of flat roofed modern architecture to the suburbs and the wilds of North America has created new opportunities to address new needs.
How do modern consumers make important and productive use of their roofs, and what are some of the design considerations for these uses? In this post we provide a little insight (outsight?) into:
Roof Decks: Your best backyard
Photovoltaic fields: Toward energy independence
Catchment Systems: When nothing else can do
Green Roofs: Are they worth the added expense and risk?
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Why Small Houses Don’t Have Small Price Tags
A first home for young marrieds. A 1000 square foot ADU, sharing architectural features with the main house, seen through the main house breezeway.
We need to talk
Hardly a day goes by when I don’t speak to people like you: consumers planning to build a new home - or considering planning to build- and exploring the cost of building. They are trying to understand how to forecast and control cost.
In these calls, one of the most common miscomputation is that cost is directly proportional to house size; that a 1000 square foot house will cost a third of what a 3000 square house costs.
Actually, that’s not the case. The average cost of a 3000 square foot house today is closer to $275 per square foot. The 1000 square foot home will likely cost $325 per square foot or $300,000.
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