NBN Online for the week of March 17, 2008

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
Research Weighs Consumer Preferences in Soft Market
Builders in Kansas City Bust Housing Myths in the News Media
Case Says Housing Prices 'Flat' in Most Local Markets
Layouts for Living
Floor Plans: BALA Home — Actually, Cottage — of the Year
Coast to Coast
Affluent Are Also Losing Homes
Politics & Government
Congress, White House Step Up Efforts to Rescue Economy
NAHB Steps Up Call for GSE Reform After Syron Remarks
Fund Helps Builders Fight Battles in Arizona and Florida
Economics & Finance
Builder Confidence Unchanged in March
Strong Growth Projected for Cement Demand Through 2030
NAHB Members Urged to Complete Economic Data Census Form
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders' Tip: How to Cope-Cut Quarter-Round Trim
Building Quality
Five Common Construction Mistakes Undermine Sales
KB Home First to Earn National Housing Quality Certification
National Housing Quality Award Entries Due April 30
Business Management
Making Money Starts With a Good Business Plan
Generation Y Is Ready to Buy, Technology Will Help Sell Them
50Plus Housing
Attend 50+ Symposium in New Orleans on May 19-21
Help Rebuild New Orleans at 50+ Housing Symposium
Multifamily
Builder Confidence in Condo Market Erodes Further
Remodelers
Remodelers Have a Passion for Community Service
NAHB Remodeling Channel Provides Valuable Remodeling Info
Building Systems
Systems-Built Approach Reduces Wasted Materials
'Lean' Factory Home Building Boosts Market Share
Technology
Five Things Builders Should Know About Home Technology
Education
Boost Business Skills During National Designation Month
Education Calendar
Legal
S.C. Builders Buoyed by Liability Insurance Ruling
Labor
Team Builders Interns Expand Horizons at Builders’ Show
Building Products
Energy Star Honors Whirlpool for Energy-Saving Appliances
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on DIY, Fine Living and HGTV
Endowment
Willis Homes Honored for Rebuilding Homeless Shelter
Applications for Centex ‘Build Your Future’ Scholarships Due April 7
HBAs: Challenge/Build/Grow Proposals Due by March 28
Association News
Renew, Join NAHB PRx by April 15 for Latest Industry PR Alerts
Drive Away With a Shiny New $500 GM Private Offer
New: Register Online for Spokesperson Training
UPS Offers Up to 30% Discount to NAHB Members on Shipping
Introducing the Hertz Green Collection. Reserve and Conserve.
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Research Weighs Consumer Preferences in Soft Market

Builders in Kansas City Bust Housing Myths in the News Media

Case Says Housing Prices 'Flat' in Most Local Markets

Floor Plans: BALA Home — Actually, Cottage — of the Year


Architects:
    Looney Ricks Kiss Architects

Builder:
    Haven Custom Homes

The 2007 Best in American Living Awards (BALA) Home of the Year, Tucker Bayou, is a modular cottage built as an empty-nester vacation home in WaterSound along the Florida panhandle.

Nestled among southern pine and fronting a golf course, the home is also the 2007 Southern Living magazine “Idea House.” Though designed and built as a cottage, the 3,544-square-foot house also works just as easily as a family home — with clear differentiation of public and private spaces.

 

 

The more private entrance is on the front elevation faces the golf course.

A Home of Subtle Space Distinctions

Homes often distinguish public spaces from private spaces by having the private spaces on the second floor and reserving the public spaces for the first floor.

Tucker Bayou draws more subtly on these distinctions, beginning with its two entrances to the home. While the front elevation faces the golf course, it is accessible only by a private pathway that connects to the other homes in the area. The home’s more public entrance, the one that most visitors use, is at the rear of the home where there is a car park area and an enclosed garden.

 

 

The more public entrance in the rear goes through the garden.

That entry through the garden area also helps define public and private spaces. From the garden, an entry hallway brings visitors through a gallery. There is also a private entry into the kitchen from a covered walkway and the rear porch.

Off the kitchen are a family work area that serves as a staging area for groceries and an adjacent utility area. Public spaces on the first floor include the kitchen, dining area and living room. Private spaces include the owner’s suite and an exercise or study area. The master bedroom has a private entrance.

 

 

The family work area off the kitchen,

The children’s bunkroom on the second floor offers a retreat for the children, giving the adults downstairs quiet time of their own. Two additional bedrooms and a media room upstairs also provide a guest getaway — when kids aren't occupying the bunks. 

 

 

The children's bunk area upstairs.

The public versus private aspects fit with the way empty nesters use this house, according to architect J. Carson Looney, of Looney Ricks Kiss Architects of Memphis.

“It’s a lot of what we see in the panhandle region,” he said. “Homes may blow you away by what’s inside. But there is an overwhelming desire to be understated from the street. Big developments (in the area) don’t sustain value or achieve the price point per foot.”

 

 

Nestled among Florida's southern pine.

Blending in With Its Environment

The cottage fits its environment with ease, both standing out from the forest setting and blending in comfortably. The roof’s shape, with its strong cross gable, accommodates a lot of space, said the architect, but the shape also enables the house to fit into its elegant location.

A Big Home or a Cottage?

Nowhere is that understated nature of Tucker Bayou more obvious than the seeming contradiction of it being a 3,544 square-foot home and a cottage.

 

 

Living room

The home reads as an intimate space with human-scale rooms that allow people to feel relaxed and welcome in the environment. The architects achieved this by making the roof line seem smaller while delivering more space within the home.

The interior design elements also play to the feeling of the cottage. In particular, the palette reflects a quiet life and the bead-board walls, coffered ceilings and pine floor present a pastiche of cottage life that fits the empty nester vacation lifestyle.

“People from Chicago may live in a fine, stately home, but when they come here, they come for relaxation,” said Looney. They don’t want to give up niceties, but they don’t necessarily want to show off, either, he added.

 

 

Dining room

 

 

Kitchen

 

 

Rear porch

 

 

View of the family work area from the utility area

 

 

Owner's bedroom

 

 

Owner's shower

 

 

Gallery and stairs off the rear, more public, foyer

 

 

Upstairs bedroom with study

The BALA awards, the nation’s foremost residential design competition, are co-sponsored by Professional Builder magazine and NAHB.

Photos by Jack Gardner Photography

 

 

First floor
Click for larger image
.

 

 

Second floor
Click for larger image.

 

 



‘Smaller, Smarter Home Plans” Available at BuilderBooks.com

Smaller, Smarter Home Plans,” available through BuilderBooks.com, showcases more than 300 favorite home plans — mostly 2,000 square feet — from top designers. The plans are presented in full-color photographs and artists' renderings.

To view or purchase this publication online, click here, or call 800-223-2665.


 

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