Am I misreading, or are the above commenters (Chris and Marc) misreading?
The house in the magazine is an architect-designed cottage. The house with the clapboard siding is one that some dude built after seeing the architect's design in a magazine.
They are both cool little houses, but this is a good example of how very subtle individual choices make a *universe* of difference in the overall final product.
The magazine spread is architect Robert Burley’s work (Incidentally, he was the designer in charge of the St. Louis Gateway Arch.) The photos that follow are of our family cottage.
Originally (before us) our cottage had the cedar shingles & a franklin stove in the alcove (see 1970’s photo). The cedar shingles were difficult to maintain according to a previous owner who said they had trouble keeping up to the moss that would grow on them. I’m not sure the reason for removing the franklin stove and going with the pellet stove in the corner.
I love cedar shakes. My next door neighbor recently replaced cedar shake cladding on their house - they looked a little ratty, but they were over 50 years old, so $ well spent, IMO.
The original railing on this cottage looks cool (visible though the sliding glass door on the "before" picture above).
It seems the 1969 version is missing the two-story space above the dining room that the 1965 version had.
Nov 25, 17 9:22 am ·
·
chrisdecouto
Yes, the plan was modified by the original owner to allow for 4 bedrooms up, instead of 3.
Unique cottage design
1 Featured Comment
Put the cedar back on...moss is great.
All 8 Comments
Am I misreading, or are the above commenters (Chris and Marc) misreading?
The house in the magazine is an architect-designed cottage. The house with the clapboard siding is one that some dude built after seeing the architect's design in a magazine.
They are both cool little houses, but this is a good example of how very subtle individual choices make a *universe* of difference in the overall final product.
As pee magazine? Chris you and I are reading very different periodicals.... ;-)
Good catch. Thanks, Donna.
The magazine spread is architect Robert Burley’s work (Incidentally, he was the designer in charge of the St. Louis Gateway Arch.) The photos that follow are of our family cottage.
Originally (before us) our cottage had the cedar shingles & a franklin stove in the alcove (see 1970’s photo). The cedar shingles were difficult to maintain according to a previous owner who said they had trouble keeping up to the moss that would grow on them. I’m not sure the reason for removing the franklin stove and going with the pellet stove in the corner.
I love cedar shakes. My next door neighbor recently replaced cedar shake cladding on their house - they looked a little ratty, but they were over 50 years old, so $ well spent, IMO.
The original railing on this cottage looks cool (visible though the sliding glass door on the "before" picture above).
It seems the 1969 version is missing the two-story space above the dining room that the 1965 version had.
Yes, the plan was modified by the original owner to allow for 4 bedrooms up, instead of 3.
contemporary home with shingle siding. Different, and it works.
Painted / stained, high maintenance.
That's a lovely house.
copper
Corrugated corten sheet.
https://www.archdaily.com/11099/copper-house-2-smiljan-radic
It starts red-orange, then black-ish, then green, you can stop it at any point.
sometimes I wish I could understand everything you write, but then I keep working.
ah that pile, looks like sawdust but it could be just dirt.
Put the cedar back on...moss is great.
wood shingles banned even in roofs here, too much uv makes it perfect kindling.
That will most likely be the way we go. The cedar that was removed by a previous owner had been on there for 30+ years, it may have been it's time.
To clarify $6000 per side.
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