It's been a little while since I posted any pictures, but there's been a lot going on! I had hoped to be able to put some more photos up of the interior of the office/studio building that we're moving into in a few weeks' time, but the painters were up there today and everything had been shrouded in protective plastic so it didn't look very photogenic... the upside to that is when we're next up there the shrouds will have come down and the paint will be dry! Meanwhile, we've been busy chosing LED light fittings and thinking about the kitchen in the main house.
Tomorrow we'll be up at the block all morning: Michael will be supervising the sewerage people as they dig the trenches (and the big hole) for our Biolytix system which is being connected, and after I've dropped darling daughter off at school I'll be joining him to meet a local kitchens company to talk about interiors and measure-up.
This view is slightly out-of-date as the support timbers for the front verandah have now gone up, as you'll see in subsequent photographs. But it gives you an idea of what the completed house will look like from the office/studio!
This photograph is taken from the top of the slope in front of the front door (which you can just see on the very left hand edge of the shot, draped in plastic to protect it). The verandah shades the huge stacking glass doors of the main living area. The large 'planter box' made of besa bricks on the left side of the verandah as you look at it here will be lined and turned into a pond. The smaller one you can see on the right side of the verandah, just in the shot, will be planted up with culinary herbs.
The 'pond' will be over 3m long! We'll be putting native fish in it to eat the mosquito larvae.
Under the special render on what will be darling daughter's bedroom is a special foam block insulation: easy to construct, very well insulated, and coated with a solar-proofed paint... once we decide on colours!
Remember our comments about the outline foundations in a previous post making the place feel small...? Not any more! This is a view down on the roof of the main house with 74,000 litres of water tank at the back of the house. It's huge.
I took this photo half way up one of the drainage benches at the rear of the property because I wanted to see the effect of the 'pop-up' roof. The clerestory windows are louvred to allow a free flow of air through the house as we won't have air-conditioning.
The solar panels are going up on the arrays, as well as on the shed roof.
This is what the house looks like from the bottom of the block, next to the arrays. Although the benches in the hillside appear quite stark against the green I don't think the house intrudes too much into the landscape.
And this is what both buildings look like from the bottom of the driveway. In a couple of years' time, when we've planted around the house, they will almost disappear...
Monday, December 14, 2009
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3 comments:
This will be such a beautiful and sensitive house. Congratulations on all your choices which will make your buildings just float - and blend - in their environment.
Looking good!Sometimes, I think I'd like to build again...(don't let The Man see this!)
I didn't realise the studio was so far from the house. That will be lovely to walk to and from.
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