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Posts Tagged ‘bright colors’

I am finally getting around to sharing the photos of this recent 440 SF Accessory Dwelling Unit. It is an unusual shape due to many constraints including preserving the bay views from the main house, and preserving as much garden as possible. It is also located on an active landslide and in a wildland -urban interface with strict wild fire safety provisions.

Warm sandy limeplaster walls below and painted fibercement & Boral above. Heavy timber raftertails, no roof venting
a nice window to garden with cheerful green coral trim (photo by Willa McBride)
view through kitchen to entry
celebrating completion (photo by Willa McBride)
celebrating completion (Photo by Willa McBride)
dining area (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)
Fir beam and post and guardrail with cute light (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)
Loft bedroom (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)

compact sink with mirror and window above (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)
Bathroom (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)
custom bathroom shelving & fir and copper towel bars (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)
South window (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)

East window (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)

Entry & Ships Ladder (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)
Exposed fir floorjoists and fir plywood with square LED lights (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)

small kitchen – cabinets by Andrew Franklin (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)

Living room/ Dining room view to south patio (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)

Ships ladder to loft (photo by Lenny Gonzalez)
East side
Entry door – with architect reflected and builder inside

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We have been busy with all sorts of great projects the last few months. Here are a few snapshots.

Mudroom Bench – Very similar to one we did 10 years ago, but customized to perfectly fit the new space: narrower on one wall than the other. The lid is solid ash and the rest is painted. I need to get some photos of the blue interior. Thanks to Kelly Best and McBride Construction for the excellent craftsmanship.

Copper induction range with battery and walnut knobs (Berkeley company!)
SANCO₂ heat pump hot water heater (tank inside, heatpump outside) that doubles as house heating system (Harvest System)
ADU slab..getting ready for the concrete pour

The slab was poured and beautiful saw cut control joints added. Now the structural framing is underway. The tolerances are very tight in these small living spaces. Every inch matters. I was delighted to discover that the concrete work and framing has resulted in walls that match my drawings to the 1/16 inch.

Framing Underway (Oscar of McBride Construction hard at work)
A small addition at the back of a small Berkeley house (we moved the storage, laundry and water heater to the middle and put the kitchen, dining nook, half bath, and reading nook at the back of the house by the yard. I like the deep eave over the door and windows and the pretty fir rafter tails
We added a skylight in the middle of the house…a lot of bang for the skylight buck. To right of skylight is laundry, pantry, and mechanical space and to the left is the kitchen and then the back yard.

Finally did a photoshoot at a recently finished Accessory Dwelling Unit in the Berkeley Hills. Below you will see the photographer, Lenny Gonzalez, and the photoshoot models Eowyn & John.

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The architectural highlights of my visit to the south rim of the Grand Canyon were a study in contrasts.

Mary Coulter’s Lookout studio, perched right on the rim is built of the canyon limestone and meant to blend right into the backdrop.

Lookout Studio from afar

She is successful in this goal.  Up close, once you realize there is a building,  the rustic charm is clear.

Lookout Studio: 1914, Designer Mary Colter, rough cut limestone to blend with the surroundings

On the other end of the spectrum, there are many buildings and parts of buildings  painted vibrant colors.  These sorts of color schemes are best in the bright clear sunlight of the desert or tropics.

The bright desert sun on some bold color choices

Bright painted doors

I included a photo of the curving metal railing that follows the rim just because it is simple and elegant without being institutional.

elegant curving railings at the edge of the canyon

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