House Transformed
Getting The
Home You Want With The House You Have
By Matthew
Schoenherr
Discover The Seven Keys To A Successful Remodel
Think you have to move to find your dream
home? Think again.
House Transformed shows you how to create the
perfect place out of the not-so-perfect space you currently call
home. With architect Matthew Schoenherr as your guide, you'll
discover the seven keys to a successful remodel, whether you are
redoing a kitchen, building an addition, or making over the whole
house.
House Transformed is published under the joint
imprint of The American Institute of Architects and The Taunton
Press. Through this unique publishing partnership, the AIA and The
Taunton Press present the experiences of homeowners and architects
who together create well-designed homes of warmth, character, and
beauty.
About the Author:
Architect Matthew Schoenherr, AIA, has been
involved with residential design and the construction industry for
25 years. He is principal in the firm Z:Architecture, which has
completed more than 200 additions, renovations, and new homes. He is
the author of Updating Classic America: Updating Classic America:
Colonials and lives on the Connecticut shore with his wife and three
sons.
Introduction:
Can a house shed its coat and emerge as something new? Can
something as large as a house be transformed? Can one place become
another? Yes. As stout and permanent as they may seem, houses are
malleable -- capable of change -- proficient at flexing and
shifting, stretching and growing, just like people.
Many of us live in houses were not really happy with. The rooms
are too small, the ceilings too low, the exterior lacks character,
and the appliances, the fixtures, the tile, the hardware -- you name
it -- are outdated, worn out, beyond repair. You've talked to your
spouse, your friends, you've even called in carpenters and general
contractors. Replace the siding with maintenance-free vinyl, offers
one. Itll feel like a new home. Tear it down and start over, it'll
be easier than renovating, says another. You know that a new siding
job wont solve your space limitations in the kitchen. And completely
rebuilding your home, well, that seems overwhelming.
But what about another approach? What about transforming your
home into something altogether new? OK, I can hear you say, that
sounds like rebuilding. Well, thats partly true, but completely
rebuilding is at one extreme end of the transformation spectrum.
Through many years of practicing architecture and helping others
remodel their dark or cramped homes, I've found that just as there
seems to be an endless amount of home types and styles, there are
just as many ways to change these homes.
At the friendlier end of the spectrum, a successful
transformation will involve the logical, practical adjustment of the
floor plan: opening walls between rooms to create shared space,
creating better walking paths through the house and eliminating
dead-end spaces, or even finding new uses for rooms that are seldom
used. Another level of house transformation involves rethinking how
windows bring light into the interior of the home, and where
exterior doors are positioned to allow uninhibited movement to the
outdoors. But this is just the beginning. The character of your home
can be transformed as well through the use of new materials and by
thoughtfully creating exterior details that are expressive of the
type of home you desire....
Table of Contents:
Introduction: Same
House, Different Home
A Bigger, Better
Bungalow
Transforming an Ugly
Duckling
In Tune with Tradition
Style by Addition
A Craftsman Garage and
Office
A Vermont Classic for
Today
A Small, Multifunctional
Add-On
Contemporary behind a
Formal Faade
Colonial Transformation
Growing a Box on a
Budget
From Cape to Bungalow
A-Frame Overhaul
Farmhouse Revised
Rescuing a Burned-Out
Shell
Picture Perfect Porch
Cottage Fixer-Upper
Urban Townhouse Renewal
Design with a Difference
Architects and Designers
Hard-cover, 9-3/16 x 10-7/8 in.,
192 pages, with
color
photos and drawings
Published 2005
ISBN: 978-1-56158-711-7
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