Saturday, July 15, 2006

Insulation


The insulation is in. Aside from the space between 1st and 2nd floor, all of the insulation used is fiberglass blown into a netting. The four exterior walls are being covered with a layer of plywall inbetween the insulation and drywall. This is both to add structural strength to the building, act as a water seal, and to increase the effectiveness of the insulation. The ceiling will simply have drywall.

The shape of things to come



At this point in the process, the construction work is happening faster and more is happening at once. In the last weeks a number of dramatic changes have taken place. Steadily, the building looks more and more like a home every day. (Above left:... the upstairs hall from the study. Above left: the study from the hall.)


At this point in the process, the construction work is happening faster and more is happening at once. In the last weeks a number of dramatic changes have taken place. Steadily, the building looks more and more like a home every day. (Right: master bedroom from the study. Below: first floor bedroom)

You can now walk through the house and really feel the shapes and sizes of the different rooms. Of course the drywall is yet to come, but a lot less is 'left to the imagination.'
Or, looking at it another way, walking through the house allows your imagination to run wild now. Seeing where the closets are, the way light falls into the space, the slant of the roof, feeling the size of rooms from various directions... you can begin to imagine people and things filling the space. Where will the bookshelves go? What use of this little study area - better to have pillows on the floor, or a desk? Whose bedroom will this be? Where will the bed go?

And already you can take in the view from different directions, seeing the beauty of the house unfold... (Left: second floor bedroom)

Staircase

Looking from the living room...














Looking Down...



















Looking Up...

Plumbing




(Top right: upstairs bathroom viewed from the study. Top left: upstairs shower/tub. Bottom left: installing the drains on the first floor. Bottom right: the view of the drains from the second floor to the first)

The plumbing infrastructure is almost set

The second floor bathtub is in, and the major portion of the piping is installed.

The plumbing requires a vent through the roof and another pipe to the for the garden hose: two breaks in the exterior wall. On the roof vent, an S tube was installed just below the roof to make sure that air doesn't come into the house. The garden hose pipe is run through another PVC pipe, so that if there is any leak or freezing of the copper pipe the insulation won't get ruined.

Note that there won't be any 'bathroom fan' as the ventilation for the whole house is centralized, moving air from the outside through the living room and bedrooms and then through the kitchen and bathrooms, then out. This is an important part of the passive design, further explained on the e-colab site.

Also, you can see in the photo above the view of the bathroom from the 2nd floor study down the hall. This upstairs hallway/study area is really beautiful, flowing all the down to the kitchen.




This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?