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Entries in design snapshot (36)

Design snapshot: Cable guardrails

dsscablerail.jpgIn the past decade or so, cable guardrail systems have grown in popularity. This is a good example why. With a flush-framed, cedar, top rail and posts, it’s a clean, fresh look. Many opt for cable when they seek an unobstructed view. Aesthetically, it’s a nod toward marine hardware and industrial minimalism. Together with a spare, painted, wood bracket and simple, painted fascia, this deck and rail carve an elegant silhouette. The arrangement of the white corner board flanked by courses of side-wall, cedar shingles, and a lower-level, cedar-slatted partition complements the assemblage of horizontals intersecting periodic verticals in the guardrail design. If you’re interested in creating a cable system for your deck, check out Cable Rail for components.

by Katie Hutchison for the House Enthusiast

Posted on Saturday, July 19, 2008 at 10:48AM by Registered CommenterKatie Hutchison in | Comments Off

Design snapshot:Esprit d'espalier

dssespalier.jpgTraining trees to grow in one plane, as an espalier, appeals to me. I am likewise enamored of topiaries. I was married in a topiary garden, and I periodically bring home a miniature, potted myrtle or rosemary topiary that I simply can’t resist. The art of shaping natural material to achieve a desired form is, in many ways, akin to architecture. This espaliered dwarf pear tree beautifully enhances the pale, blue-green backdrop of what I assume is an infilled, barn-door opening. It’s but one of many captivating garden features that I discovered at a Gloucester property last weekend during the North Shore Open Day, a program organized by The Garden Conservancy. Visit their website to find the Open Days Program schedule in your neck of the woods. I was glad I did.

by Katie Hutchison for the House Enthusiast

Posted on Saturday, June 21, 2008 at 12:40PM by Registered CommenterKatie Hutchison in | Comments Off

Design snapshot: Pleasing pavers and plantings

dsspavers.jpgWeaving a variety of materials, textures, and colors together, this patio pattern is a delight. The regular geometry of the flat bricks beautifully contrasts the rounded, irregular stones that infill in between. The layout cleverly combines bricks that are side-by-side, in rows of running-bond, and strips of herringbone. The soft burst of green in the mounded planting accents the masonry composition with life. The green works well with the complementary red of the brick, and both benefit from the contrasting cool, blue-grey puddles of river rock. With a little imagination, simple materials can be arranged to create a dynamic hardscape carpet underfoot.

by Katie Hutchison for the House Enthusiast

Posted on Monday, June 16, 2008 at 05:36PM by Registered CommenterKatie Hutchison in | Comments Off

Design snapshot: A woodshed to remember

dsswoodshed.jpgTo immortalize a woodshed in this way both amused and heartened me. Of course, this isn’t marking any, old woodshed; this recognizes Henry David Thoreau’s woodshed, behind his cabin near Walden Pond in Concord, Mass.

The elegant, engraved, flush stone denotes a site vital to Thoreau’s solitary cabin life in the mid-eighteen-hundreds. It was here that he stored the wood, vital to stoking the cabin fire that warmed him while he wrote. Without the woodshed, perhaps he never would have had the cabin experience that led him to write Walden: Or, Life in the Woods.

I imagine that the notion of acknowledging and celebrating something as fundamental and essential as the woodshed would have pleased Thoreau, as would the stone marker itself. Simple and rugged, surrounded by a soft bed of leaves, it seems a fitting echo of Thoreau’s hardy life amidst the natural world.

It is, after all, the luxury of life’s essentials, like wood for a warm shelter, which makes our intellectual lives possible.

by Katie Hutchison for the House Enthusiast

Posted on Tuesday, May 27, 2008 at 06:39PM by Registered CommenterKatie Hutchison in | Comments Off

Design snapshot: Shaker stone barn ruin

barnruin.jpgI wrote about the 1846 Shaker South Family Dwelling, shown in the background, a few years ago for Yankee magazine. I paid the homeowners in Harvard, Mass. a recent visit and marveled anew at the stone barn ruin on the property.

I learned that it’s comprised of two wythes of stone. (Wythes are vertical sections of a masonry wall that are one unit thick.) The exterior stones have more regular shapes and are tightly coursed; the interior stones have less regular shapes and are more loosely coursed. The two layers are connected by select through stones that join one wythe to the other. Over time, the roof collapsed, and water infiltrated between the two wythes, subjecting them to the forces of expansion and contraction. Today, all that’s left are the lower portions of the walls, complete with enormous lintels, and some perilously tall corner remnants.

The owners have been collaborating with the Harvard Conservation Trust in hopes of raising funds to stabilize the structure to prevent it from deteriorating further. If you can help preserve this landmark, contact the Trust.

by Katie Hutchison for the House Enthusiast

Posted on Wednesday, May 21, 2008 at 05:49PM by Registered CommenterKatie Hutchison in | Comments Off
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