I love the look and added dimension of open ceilings with timber trusses. They aren’t typically used for structure in California due to strict earthquake structure requirements, but they look great and we can still use them.
Here you see a set of heavy timber trusses – Douglas Fir in this case – being installed in a ICF or insulated concrete form house.
The first step in figuring out how to remodel is to understand what you have! A remodel, by definition, means you already have a house, unlike new construction where you have a blank canvas.
So, I always create the “as built” plans myself (many architects have others do this for them.) One reason is that this way I can really get the feel for the home. How is it built? What kind of framing is used, where are the important structural areas, how has it been improved or added on to over the years, etc. Also every house has its own personality and I feel you need to experience it to understand the flow. All of this information helps inform ways that the house might be altered, added to or changed to suit the scope of the owner’s requirements.
So I go around the entire exterior – photograph everything – measure everything – note the siding, roofing, overhangs, foundation, driveways, hardscape, trees. Then with the outline of the building created, I go inside and figure out how the house is split up with interior wall.
The result is a 36 x 24 inch freehand drawing of the plan of the house.
Then, everything is entered into CAD (computer aided design) which I started using when it first came out in the 90’s. Originally CAD only did two dimensional drawings. Now when I input a house into CAD, I actually build a virtual model of the house in 3d. I can show you the inside and outside “virtually” and we can create various designs that you can actually experience before you start to build.
This is a complete game changer in helping you get the design you want.
Cabinets – always an important, significant and detail filled area of home building. An architect friend of mine once did 12 pages – full size 24 x 36 inch old school hand drawn – on cabinets for one project. Some designers only supply the simplest line drawings with almost no detail – other provide a great deal. Furthermore, the cabinet maker should provide detailed drawings prior to construction.