Sunday, September 28, 2014

Come see the place!

The date might change, BUT YOU ARE INVITED!

 Come tour Double Oak!

October 18, Saturday, 3:00-5:00

Come and go. No program.
Walk the paths (prepare for poison ivy) and write on the walls of our house.
(Your words might be a poem or inspirational quotation, a joke, a blessing, a Bible verse.
What words should be buried for all time in the walls of our house?
In the quiet will they whisper to us?)

Light refreshments.
Contact us for directions: SusanMarkLandis@gmail.com

Hope to see you!

(Have words but can't come? Send them!)

OSB on the roof and walls (or, I'm rotten at headlines)

These are the days progress is fast. As one person commented when the roof is on and the outside walls are up, it looks 90% done but there is yet 90% to do.
 

OSB board, Zip Board, on the west side. You can see a tree Dennis is trying to save, even though it is scraggly and perhaps cuts off our access to wireless internet. Opinions?

This shot is inside the house toward the west end where the main living space is: dining by the large window on your right, north, and sofa and chairs at the end. The shorter window to your left is over the kitchen sink. The heating/cooling consultant thinks we might have too many windows, but we love sun and the view.

Here is what we'll see while doing the dishes. This west slope will likely be terraced. You can see prairie grass.

Dennis climbed the scaffolding to look out the tower window. The east slope will be wheel chair accessible to the lower level.


The crew nailing OSB on the roof. The final layer will be steel.

This shot is from the northwest: garage on the left, living area on the right, tower in the middle, sand everywhere.

The crew put room dividers on the main floor so we could get a feel for spaces. We discovered the mudroom/laundry room was the most spacious in the house. Dennis made some changes and my office space benefitted. (SML photo and all that follow, but you can easily tell the inferior quality.)






I have trouble believing that the closet on your left is deep enough for a hanger. Most of the rooms seem teeny.































Dennis borrowed the skid steer from the crew to clear a 5' path on each side of the driveway. Why is it called a skid steer? Because of the tracks, one basically steers by skidding this way and that. Note the cage for possible roll overs.






You can't tell, but Dennis has a huge grin on his face: a man and his new toy.

Friday, September 12, 2014

The spirit, not the letter

The days it didn't rain this week, the crew set roof trusses.

"Setting trusses while obeying the spirit of OSHA if not the letter" Dennis


View from the northeast. Notice the sand!

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Walk out, walk in



 (9.6.2014) The big excavating equipment came back end of this week to fill in around the house and rough in the basement walkout. Dennis commented that the drivers handled the equipment like toys.



Main floor walls are up. Now that the house is easier to access,
Dennis enjoys standing at the windows and looking out.

water proofing the foundation walls
 
 View from the south with walk out, accessible basement for guests
(the not visible, east slope is gentle)

Dennis has been collecting rocks for landscaping. Here is his prize.

Friday, September 5, 2014

Reclaimed barn wood

(9.5.2014) One of our goals is to be environmentally sensitive as we build. We've found that researching and finding alternative sources is more time consuming and difficult than we imagined. Case in point: I want to reuse old wood, wide boards, for flooring. We possibly need over 2000 square feet of installed wood.
 
We had thought we'd find several people locally who take down barns and maintain inventory of that size. Instead, we found only one person, who has been in business for about a year. His warehouse is in Lafayette, IN, more than a two hour drive. But we have time, so Wednesday we made a day of the trip. Here are snapshots (meaning that Susan took them) of Aaron's wood at Wabash Lumber (http://www.wabashlumber.com/).
 
This is the side of Aaron's office, made of scraps. He said it attracts more attention than pieces he put together more intentionally. Much of his wood is sold to crafts folks who make items from it, or to people who use it as siding for an accent wall.

A pile of various kinds of scrap wood


Barn rafters such as we hope to use. The unexpected problem? They need time in a kiln to dry the wood and kill any insects, nails taken out, milled to correct size. This process may take 2-3 months and we need 50% more wood to begin with than we need to finish. ouch, ouch, ouch

Possible decorative beams. Ideas where to use them? We have one from Wayne county, a family from Oak Grove, but we'd need to add other beams.

We had lunch at the local Indian buffet, Sharma Kitchen. Some of the entries I'd not had often before, including one with goat meat (on bone).

Fresh naan and hot chicken and onions were brought to the table--a delicious touch.

But the great news here in Goshen is that the local Indian restaurant opened today!

Dennis is checking other places for wood, perhaps including used gym floors, which would be perfect for the gathering room.