Tag Archives: design

Less for More

It started with SoHo lofts then grew to “soft lofts” that said, hey, it’s OK to show the HVAC and put everything out there, like stained concrete floors.

We don’t have to pay to cover it up! And they’ll pay more for it!!! Wow. Less work for more money. It’s sad to say that it didn’t only play in NY City, people have tried it across the country to varying degrees of success, depending on the real estate and stock markets over the past few years.

I am a fan of “open concept” design especially when the dishes are hidden from the dining table. That means a granite or other (non-marble) countertop with chairs that block that view.

On marble. For kitchens or bathrooms it is a mistake because it stains. Marble floors in a bathroom are very cold as well.

I can’t wait to design a home. I’d have a great kitchen and gas top, outdoor wood stove (indoor double convection ovens) and wood floors that are heated underneath, throughout the home. Otherwise it would be designed to the climate. Just hopin’ and wishin’. Dee

Living

My favorite home as a child was a custom home the owners could not finish. So we did. I was eight years old. As I see these custom homes on the house tour sometimes it tells me a bit about a family. It would never be my design but at least it’s theirs. I’ve never had a chance to do that.

My in-laws designed and built their first home in their early twenties and have lived in it for over thirty years. Their sons grew up there and they built with such confidence because that was expected of a farm family. Now most of the property is going to be flooded to provide water to a large city and their house may stay, but they’ll build elsewhere and have already bought the land to do so.

I’m so afraid of designing a house we may retire in. There are so many mistakes to be made. I know what I like but not specific kitchen dimensions. It bugs me when people buying homes say the kitchen isn’t big enough, when all a kitchen has to be is efficient and as open as its owners want it to be. And now I find out a ranch home is not what my husband wants because he grew up with that and looked out on a sea of cows. I loved this one house with a barn-like structure (recreated in the horse barn, which Val would love) with light pine trusses and clerestory windows, 48 of them.

In my husband’s mind I was re-creating a farm, in mine I was looking at the custom home we once had with improvements. Like granite countertops and better appliances, a high ceiling with air flow. And they still had problems with how to do the bedroom wing! It’s something to think about for the next ten years and use new ideas to get what each of us wants in a home. That’s what marriage is about – compromise.

When I was 16 I met a man through his daughter, on vacation at the beach. She wanted to learn gymnastics and I helped her with a few basics. Dad asked me what I wanted to be and I didn’t know, being a sophomore in high school. He told me that for the most part doctors and lawyers deal with peoples’ problems, and architects deal with peoples’ dreams. That has resonated for many years.

No, I didn’t become an architect but if Jim and I go to a few more home tours over the years, know what we like and where we want to live, we may create our dream living space. It’s always good to have something to look forward to. Cheers, Dee