Suggestion on this front elevation (designing for fun). Feel the roof needs to be pitched lower. How do you like the color selections? Shared inspiration photos as well. How's the windows/proportions?
Why would you pitch the roof down? With a building that proportion having a low pitch roof is going to make it a sliver on a mass, and you’re adding a nice metal standing seam roof....
I really don’t like the pattern/way that contrast material is applied, it just breaks up the form of the building.
Some of the issues you think you may have with the roof is that in the photo above, the design of your front elevation is orthographic while the photo you are overlaying is in "perspective" view. This makes your roof and elevation look taller, causing you to feel you need to lower the pitch. You need to do a full 3d model of the house, both the proposed alterations and the existing building as is. I think you skipped a vital step of doing a proper "As-is" drawings / 3d model, first, then making your proposed changes... to see how it looks in perspective view.
Once you do that, you can better assess the front elevation.
One thing I have done is 3d model a historic building to a reasonable approximation in Sketchup (you could use other software) and look at the building using both orthographic and perspective views and studied my alteration proposals. This gave me a much better or more accurate sense of what I am proposing but it is a lot of work.
I'm guessing that the first and last images are the ones you're asking us to compare and the middle two are your inspiration images. They all look the same to me--Texas Hill Country Bourgeoise.
Wait.... is the third image a different project... it's just a rip off of that one. why even ask...
Jul 20, 23 6:48 pm ·
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Wood Guy
Yeah. I mean, every other contemporary Texas Hill Country house looks like that so the third image wasn't breaking any new ground. But flipping a plan doesn't make it yours.
I think the second image is the house as it is as photographed. The first and last photo is the proposed change where the OP had photoshopped overlay the changes so it looks weird because the modification is in ortho but the photo is in perspective view as it would be. I also see evidence of some other awkward photoshopping as well. Not worth conversing much about.
Suggestion on this front elevation (designing for fun). Feel the roof needs to be pitched lower. How do you like the color selections? Shared inspiration photos as well. How's the windows/proportions?
I feel the mass is too big on the right? I know the roof needs to be sloped way down so not sure if that's throwing's things off.
Why would you pitch the roof down? With a building that proportion having a low pitch roof is going to make it a sliver on a mass, and you’re adding a nice metal standing seam roof....
I really don’t like the pattern/way that contrast material is applied, it just breaks up the form of the building.
Some of the issues you think you may have with the roof is that in the photo above, the design of your front elevation is orthographic while the photo you are overlaying is in "perspective" view. This makes your roof and elevation look taller, causing you to feel you need to lower the pitch. You need to do a full 3d model of the house, both the proposed alterations and the existing building as is. I think you skipped a vital step of doing a proper "As-is" drawings / 3d model, first, then making your proposed changes... to see how it looks in perspective view.
Once you do that, you can better assess the front elevation.
One thing I have done is 3d model a historic building to a reasonable approximation in Sketchup (you could use other software) and look at the building using both orthographic and perspective views and studied my alteration proposals. This gave me a much better or more accurate sense of what I am proposing but it is a lot of work.
I'd hire an architect to help you with this. ;)
I'm guessing that the first and last images are the ones you're asking us to compare and the middle two are your inspiration images. They all look the same to me--Texas Hill Country Bourgeoise.
Wait.... is the third image a different project... it's just a rip off of that one. why even ask...
Yeah. I mean, every other contemporary Texas Hill Country house looks like that so the third image wasn't breaking any new ground. But flipping a plan doesn't make it yours.
I actually like the second image....
I think the second image is the house as it is as photographed. The first and last photo is the proposed change where the OP had photoshopped overlay the changes so it looks weird because the modification is in ortho but the photo is in perspective view as it would be. I also see evidence of some other awkward photoshopping as well. Not worth conversing much about.
I can’t get past the title of this post.
Literally! I've been reading for like an hour.
This is just me, but I think you should just go all gables everywhere. I’m talking gables on gables on gables. Make Anne of Green Gables jealous.
.
That is a lot of Gables . . .
It looks pretty fine to me. Nothing exceptional, but decent.
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