Category — Windows
Bathroom Design Option # 3 – A small addition makes a big difference
Next in our series of possible bathroom design options we look at adding a couple of feet to the back of the room and creating a shed dormer.
We want to manage costs so the expansion will be minimal but still develop the necessary space. The sketch on the right is the same starting point we have for our other design options. Now let’s see what happens with a few extra square feet positioned in the right place.
We will incorporate a tub, full shower, two vanities and a toilet compartment in this expansion.
The tub is generously sized with ample room on the deck for towel storage and decorations. The shower has a large seat and potential for multiple heads and there is room for a private area for the water closet. Having his and her vanities makes sense for many couples. The complement of quality cabinets on either side of the room, such as the WoodMode cabinets we feature, not only allows symmetry in the space but creates a focal point to the tub and window above. The added window could be the most valuable component. Large amounts of natural light flowing in the bathroom through a round or elliptical transom makes the room feel more connected to the outside. The ambient light in a room often negates the need for illuminated lights. Finally, look at the closets. They have more than doubled – something every family could use!
So now you have three functional options to the standard bathroom in the Washington, DC, metropolitan area. Each one has different priorities but none come at significant expense because they are designed and constructed in a logical and practical manner. With these designs you can bring your home from the 1940’s quickly into optimum design standards for your lifestyle today.
Feel free to contact me by e-mail at Bob@NatelliHomes.com or visit our website, www.NatelliHomes.com
May 18, 2010 No Comments
Window choices – where do you start?
It must be hard for a consumer to decide how to select replacement windows or windows for a new home. How do you start, where do you start and who do you trust for such an important investment? All the manufacturers claim high efficiency glass, tax incentives and new and improved technologies. In my career at Natelli Homes, which is going on 25 years in residential construction, the window and door industry has grown and improved the most. The standards for all the major manufacturers are so much improved that I would venture to state that there are arguable financial and performance benefits to replacing windows that are only 10 years old.
Windows and exterior doors are the biggest contributors to heat and energy loss in a home. People notice it more in the winter when we can feel the cold spots and drafts around windows and doors, but imagine how much is also lost in the summer when we are not quite as sensitive. Poor performing windows and exterior doors contribute to an immeasurable amount of energy loss in our world.
Again, where does one start? You might start with the U-value of a window which is a measurement of 4 combined ways windows lose heat. This is a standard by which a homeowner can evaluate the performance of manufacturers on an even playing field. Simply put, the U-value of a window combines the heat loss of a window through (1) radiation, (2) convection, (3) air leakage and (4) conduction. The lower the U-value the better performing the window is.
I found a great sketch in an article by Paul Fisette in Fine Homebuilding. Paul Fisette is director of the Building Materials Technology and Management Program at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, MA (www.umass.edu/bmatwt). Chart information courtesy of W. W. Norton & Co. Inc., except where noted. Photo: Brian Vanden Brink; drawings: Dan Thornton.
February 23, 2010 No Comments