The big trees at last!

The big center trees were the very first feature that we started work on as we built the house. The top portions of the trees could not be welded until the soffits were in place. The soffits had to wait until the roof was on. The roof had to wait for evertying else under it to be built. And so the huge root systems sat ready and waiting since the concrete walls were poured. The roofers finally got to the the north west side of the house this past week. As soon as the Penfold crew cleared that area the carpenters moved in to work on the soffits. The minute they were done our crew finished attaching the lath.

This morning Peter and I fired up the cement mixer and we began applying the fiberglass reinforced concrete and then sculpted a good portion of the first tree. I've been waiting for this day since I did the first sketch of the trees flanking the big round window so very long ago. The wait was worth it! Although it will take another day to complete the mud work, the tree already looks to be everything I imagined! Once the concrete has cured we'll begin painting from the top down. As we work our way down with the finishes, we'll cut off the temporary scaffold supports that are welded back into the structure, patch the holes and then finish off the trees.

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-grampa dan

Details and more details

The thing about detail is that it takes a lot of time and effort. This is not the easy or fast way to build a house. But all that extra planning and effort makes for a COOL project that is challenging and fun to work on!

Work continues all around the house. The electrician From C and S Electric is starting to pull wiring to the lights, plugs and switches. The prewire for the entertainment center is in place. Most of the lighting will be LED's in potlights which I am fastening into place myself. The house will also feature indirect LED up-lighting on all of the curved ceilings in the lower area. LED lighting will also be featured just under the handrail in the tree trunk staircase to the upstairs. One of the things Peter is working on of late is to prepare this area for the lighting, handrail and welding up the framework that will become the inside of a sculpted fiberglass reinforced concrete tree. 

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Outside we are concentrating on the upper area of the center of the house. The facia and soffits in this area are now painted. The large truss has the base coats finished and we will do the glazing tomorrow.The wall above the window will also get it's paint to finish off the top area. This means we will be finished with the snorkel lift.

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The roof is looking fabulous as the PenFold's Roofing crew has done a wonderful job thus far. Our choice of the recycled rubber roofing was definitely the right one for this project. The rubber roofing shingles conform perfectly to the curved eyebrows and the thick profile makes for nice shadow lines that accent the curves and angles no matter what the position of the sun.

On the east side of the house, the top portion of the wall is now painted. The rock work base coat is a bright shade of blue. We will begin painting the final blended colors on the rocks in the nextfew days. It won't be long until the painting is done on this side of the house.

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The CNC router is working night and day churning out the detailed trim for the outside of the house.

In the next few days we will be starting in on the sculpting of the big center trees. I can hardly wait!

-grampa dan

How green?

When we were planning our house and all through construction we continually weighed the benefits of building green. We are concerned about the environment of course but also about many other factors including cost and practicality. It all has to make sense. Building green costs more than not doing so, sometimes by a lot!

I read a green house blog recently where the owner spent more than 50 hours gathering nails and screws the builders had dropped. This person gathered just over 50 lbs of nails from the ground on that project in the interest of being green. This house owner quickly discovered the builders didn't like to use dirty rusty or bent nails. The scrap value of the used nails was almost worthless. I would argue that while perhaps very green, the whole excercise didn't make much sense. fifty pounds of nails fetch about $24 and that is brand new from the hardware store. I do pick up any nails I find in the driveway in the hopes of not getting a flat tire down the road. The rest I let lie or take out with the trash when I sweep.

We looked at every green option possible in planning our house. It all has to make sense - for us. The new house will hopefully be our home for many years to come. This meant we could amortize the extra cost of being green over a longer period. Certain things were easy to choose. We went with ICF Insulated Concrete Forms right up to the roofline as a way of saving engergy and money on our heating and cooling costs. A typical house built with wood frame is rated as R20. The reality is that it is actually about 1/3 of that amount because of thermal breaks in the insulation because of studs, plugs, potlights and other breaks in the insulation or vapour barrier. The LOGIX Platinum ICF provides a true R29. I'm told the extra cost will be paid back in as little as four years.

For our windows we went with Innotech Windows and Doors, tilt and turn windows. These quality windows and exterior doors are triple sealed and much more efficient than the norm. Because they are built extremely well they will last. Both of these factors will pay back our increased investment over the long term. These windows carry a thirty five year trasferrable warrantee for peace of mind.

For the roof we opted to go as green as we could but with added benefit. A recycled rubber roof made largely from recycled tires and installed by a top quality roofer, PenFold's Roofing. It carries a 50 year transferrable warrantee and should last far longer than that. We should never have to put another roof on this house. 

The roof insulation is being be done by the crew at ELEMENT Spray Foam. Spray foam was a practical way to go for our complicated roof. The vaulted ceilings and eyebrows begged for a better system than fiberglass batt insulation and conventional vapour barrier could possibly provide. We will encapsulate the bottom of the roofing sheeting and the framing lumber with foam to a depth of at least seven inches, meaning we have a true R28 in the roof. The attic will be considered inside space that is heated/cooled with the house. This means we loose far less energy in our ductwork than a conventionally insulated attic. 

A high end HVAC system will keep our house supplied with fresh air in an efficeient manner. The heating system will be a high efficiency hot water/infloor system provided and installed by Richard's Heating and plumbing. We considered geothermal but with a hogh efficient and super insulated house it would never have provided a payback in the lifetime of the system. We felt the same about rooftop solar heat and solar panels to generate electricity. Green has to be practical and make sense in our book.

We will use LED lighting throughout our house. The initial cost is certainly much higher but the savings should greatly offset the exta money we spend up front.

The house will have ceramic tile floors throughout. The tile floors will far outlast carpet or other options and will be easy to care for in the long term.

The outside of the house is sculpted fiberglass reinforced concrete painted with long lasting acrylic paint. These materials offer us the most creative approach we know and also have been proven to last a long time in hard use environments. Concrete decks and walkways are cost effective and long wearing.

In short, our house will be one of the greenest around but each component was carefully considered with the pros and cons weighed, and the costs and benefits analyzed. We went with contractors, suppliers and installers with hard earned quality reputations over the cheapest price every time. The result was contractors and tradespeople who we enjoyed working with. We felt they were genuinely in our corner and that they worked on our house as if it were their own.

While not as green a we possibly could have been, our house makes the right amount of financial and common sense.

-grampa dan