May 19

We are all very different in so many small ways. Yes, there are overlaps and areas of interest that frequently come into play. Still, if careful attention is given to the needs and desires of the owner when designing the plans, no two homes will be a alike. The land where the house will rest should have a huge influence on design. So does budget, taste, climate, mobility, and others.

A good architect is a listener who hears and includes everything you request, or explains a better way.

Your retirement home will probably have the master bedroom and the laundry on the main, first floor. The doors, kitchen and bathroom will allow wheelchair mobility. The exterior walls and roof will be well insulated to reduce fuel consumption. There may be solar panels or a woodstove. A two car garage. Everything can be smaller than when we had a big family at home all the time. You may want the sun to shine into the kitchen and dining area in the morning, and witness the sunset every evening from your livingroom, or perhaps the reverse.

You might have a growing family of grand-folks who like to visit. If so, you might want more bedrooms upstairs under the roof, and a second bathroom.

Finally, your retirement home will probably include some of the furniture, books, lamps, and artwork that you already own. Your achitect will want to have a photo or list of these items to remind him that there must be a place for everything in your new home.

Can anyone add more typical requests for a “home for the rest of your life?”

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May 16

The answer is not simple. If there is a greenhouse sunroom on the house, is it a solar home? What if it has skylights and an entire wall of windows facing south? What if it has a massive stone chimney and two woodstoves?

To me, a solar home means reducing energy consumption to the lowest affordable level and making the smallest impact possible on the environment in every way.

All three houses above fail that test. Glass sunrooms are an huge heat loss and too hot to use in the summer. Skylights lose more heat than they provide. An entire wall of glass on the south is too much glass, and not enough wall. Wood burning is an inefficient and wasteful use of a material that is in short supply for more important applications.

Designing a Solar Home is a state of mind in which we “try” to be as green as we can. Green is a philosophy, not a science. Example: Which is more green? 1. Asphalt roofing made of oil, or; 2. Metal roofing that lasts five times longer and is made of metal that burned coal to smelt it. When you don’t know, you go with your preference. Green is generally more expensive to buy, but often cheaper to own.

Manufacturers want to latch on to that new buzzword “green” and will make claims that sound smart. Trace your product choices back to their source. If you buy an endangered wood, you contribute to extinction. If you buy 20 square feet of PV Solar Panels, that doesn’t mean you have a solar house. When every decision you made in the assembly of your home went through some examination based upon a sincere assessment of environmental impact and economic feasability, you then employ those decisions in construction, then you have a Green Solar Home.

Every green decision you make helps us all in an important way, if it turns out to be truly a green decision. Keep trying to figure it out, and I will too. More on this topic in future posts.

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May 14

Welcome to everyone. This blog is designed as a free reference for PencilJazz clients and everyone seeking help trying to build a new home. My goal is to make an entry every couple of days educating about everything to do with designing and building a home, including illustrations and charts of my own, links to websites that do a great job of illustrating details, and well presented catalogs of respectable product lines.

To locate one topic in particular, type the phrase into the search field at the top right, then click the glass button. I encourage you to click the “Contact” page and ask questions. Please enjoy. My blog name is pencilman.

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