The roof went on in just 1 week! Last week they delivered crates and crates of metal for the roofing. This is a standing seam metal roof (careful to leave flat valleys in the corners of the gables so that sliding snow doesn't take out the standing metal!), metal being a great nonflammable choice for a house in the woods. (James was lobbying for red but I though it would look like Pizza Hut. We went with dark green)
They started working on the dormers, then the porch roof (which is a mild 3/12 pitch), then the garage (which has no dormers at all), then finished the main house. The pitch on the roof is 12/12, to look like an old style farm house. We have a bid for gutters which will go in soon.
The last 2 photos show what it looks like now as you come up the driveway, and looking downhill from behind the garage.
Sunday, June 27, 2010
Finished Framing!
It finally looks like a house! We're looking at the front door and front porch, with the roof sheathed and ready to put the roof on. It'll be nice to seal up the house; it has been so wet this spring that the main floor of the house has mold growing on it (on the OSB) from being exposed to so much wet and rain.
The garage was dubbed "Flying Nun's Hat" by Dean the framer. It has 2 bays, and the carport on either side will cover trailers etc; it's supposed to look like a simple barn.
I threw in some people pictures. First is one of James (on the right) with Dean Plummer the framer (center), and Dan Rayburn who is our building consultant from UBuildIt, doing one of his site visits. Dan is important to us to keep us from making stupid mistakes!
There's a picture of Patrick, rolling some primer on the back of the siding before it goes on. We are siding the house with cement siding (like Hardy Plank, but this is a different brand). The house will be less of a fire hazard if it's covered in nonflamable siding (both hazard from forest fires burning us down, or a house fire igniting the forest around us).
The last picture is Katie and I (Becky), standing on a small island surrounded by the everpresent puddles. Patrick climbed up the hill behind the garage to take that one.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Masonry Heater
One of the features of the house we are very excited about is the masonry heater. This is a fireplace with a large amount of stone surrounding it, which releases heat back to the home for hours after the fire is burnt. We designed the center of the house to have this fireplace central between the kitchen and dining room and living room and foyer, really as a central feature of the house. Here are some photos of the construction of the fireplace.
Here is Stan and his crew building the innards of the masonry heater. The inner layers are standard firebricks, the outer layer will be veneer rock that we got on an awesome sale!!
Here is Stan and his crew building the innards of the masonry heater. The inner layers are standard firebricks, the outer layer will be veneer rock that we got on an awesome sale!!
The principle of masonry heathers (also called Russian heater, best known company who makes them is probably Tulikivi; ours was custom made and designed) is that they burn a very hot fire, and the smoke and heat is directed through lengthy channels in the brick so that essentially all the heat is absorbed into the mass of the stone, to radiate back into the room for hours (one arm-load of wood, burned in a 30-minute quick burn, can provide enough heat to radiate for 12-24 hours). It is a very clean burn, with almost no ash left (because of the high heat). And since we are sitting in the middle of 20 acres of sustainable forest, our fuel source is literally right out our front door. It provides a very comfortable heat, similar to radiant heating in the floor, except this is in the center of the house.
Framing the garage
Finally, the house is framed, and it's time to frame the garage. The weather did not cooperate, we have had a long stretch of WET weather. I got a panic phone call one weekend because one of the framers didn't have a raincoat, so I brought up a poncho from a Florida trip, and we set up a bonfire to keep everyone warm...
The framers did a wonderful job on the garage, but had to wade through 3 inch deep mud to do it. I have pictures of them standing in ankle-deep water.
The framers did a wonderful job on the garage, but had to wade through 3 inch deep mud to do it. I have pictures of them standing in ankle-deep water.
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Sheathing the roof
These are photos from the 3rd week of May, when the framers were putting up the rafters for the roof (as opposed to trusses, which provide lots of support but don't leave room to move around in the attic). Luke and Ryan are perched on the corner of the porch roof adding fascia board. They really can't be afraid of heights to do that job.
On a side note, you can see the soffit vents in these pictures (2 foot lenght of wood with 3 holes covered with screen, for ventilation under the eaves of the roof). To save some money, James cut them all and made them at home. (We had mounds of sawdust after that project!)
The roof over the living space is a 12-12 pitch roof (in other words a 45 degree angle), and the porch roof is 3-12.
Since we are acting as out own general contractor, one of our tasks is job-site cleanup. We spent a Saturday in May doing that (the whole family, including Keeper the dog, leaving Tobi dog, the 13 year old, at home). We loaded up 2 trailer loads of scrap OSB board and assorted trash bags of plastic, wrapping, wire, and empty soda bottles, for a grand total of 2010 pounds of trash. We're told that is quite low for a house this size, largely because most of the walls are straight without a lot of cutouts and inserts.
By the week before Memorial Day this is what the house looked like: the roof at least is covered by wood (actually OSB), most of the rafters and trusses over the dormer windows are up, and the porch roof is covered. This shot is taken uphill from where the garage will be (the garage footings are in the foreground, that's the next step for the framers)
On a side note, you can see the soffit vents in these pictures (2 foot lenght of wood with 3 holes covered with screen, for ventilation under the eaves of the roof). To save some money, James cut them all and made them at home. (We had mounds of sawdust after that project!)
The roof over the living space is a 12-12 pitch roof (in other words a 45 degree angle), and the porch roof is 3-12.
Since we are acting as out own general contractor, one of our tasks is job-site cleanup. We spent a Saturday in May doing that (the whole family, including Keeper the dog, leaving Tobi dog, the 13 year old, at home). We loaded up 2 trailer loads of scrap OSB board and assorted trash bags of plastic, wrapping, wire, and empty soda bottles, for a grand total of 2010 pounds of trash. We're told that is quite low for a house this size, largely because most of the walls are straight without a lot of cutouts and inserts.
By the week before Memorial Day this is what the house looked like: the roof at least is covered by wood (actually OSB), most of the rafters and trusses over the dormer windows are up, and the porch roof is covered. This shot is taken uphill from where the garage will be (the garage footings are in the foreground, that's the next step for the framers)
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