Tuesday, March 30, 2010

The Architecture of the "Oh"s

We will look back on the Architecture of the "Oh"s and shake our heads. McMansions are over (we hope).

First thing, let me explain what I mean by the "Oh"s:

To the best of my knowledge, nobody has yet conclusively named our past decade. Everybody comes up blank when I ask: "What will we call the past ten years?" There have been ideas floated: a revival of the archaic "Aught"s of the earliest decade of the 1900s, or the "Naught"s, a feeble attempt at the modernization of that term. But what is a "Naught"?

I propose that the past decade be known as the "Oh"s. Why not call it what we called it? Remember the year that the housing bubble peaked? Was that Oh-seven or Oh-eight? It was fast on the slide in Oh-nine.

The name of the "Oh"s, to me, carries so much of the past decade: one that started with a war and ended with a depression (and still a war). It is like a fantastic groan: oooohhhhhghh...The groan of a whole culture crushed under its own weight.

Looking back at Architecture of the Ohs, we will certainly groan, for sure...

I house-sat recently in a relic of the Ohs, circa 2005. All the hallmarks: gables galore, proportion run amok, 18-foot foyer into a 14-foot cavern of a "living" room attached to an equally cavernous kitchen. Thankfully they skimped short of the traditional, senseless granite countertops (drop a glass and its dead, buddy). But the construction of the house was showing its shoddiness: drywall joints popped, hastily-installed wood flooring that shrank to leave large gaps, and carpenters' sloppy pencil marks left on the balusters. And so much space to fill up with purchased items out of a catalog, and to fill with heat in our northern winters. Such a sacrifice of quality, traded for quantity: more square feet!

The Age of the McMansions is over. The illusion of opulence crumbled, along with the disintegrating housing market. One already sees the cheaply built houses falling down as well. I have seen many a house unfinished, never lived in, already moldering into a heap: transient memorial to a transient buck, a fast buck that was made and lost, leaving us with a lasting impression of the Ohs.

By building small, I don't propose to claim that everybody should live in a house under 100 square feet, but rather that it is quite possible and plausible. Look around the world, and you would see it all over. Our 6000 square foot caves built for 4 could house a village. I don't propose that everybody should live tiny, but I DO know that many of us could afford to live with a lot less. In my travels around the world, I have seen many different living situations, most of them involving LESS: less space, less money, less stuff…

I believe that when we look back upon the Architecture of the Ohs, we will see it clearly for what it is: a false opulence, created by imaginary financing schemes: palaces built out of air. The senseless false gables & towering foyers that made us say "Ooooo...." with our eyes widened, will in retrospect make us say "Ohhhhh...." with our eyes cast downward, shaking our heads.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Specifications for CUBIT construction

The specs for the construction of my Cubit house are as follows:
  • Outside dimensions: 8'-1" x 13'-1"
  • Interior dimensions: 7'-0" x 12'-0"
  • Square footage: 84 SF + 24 SF Loft = 108 SF
  • Wall construction: 6 1/2" EPS SIPs (Structural Insulated Panels), R-24
  • Roof construction: 8 1/4" EPS SIPs, R-31
  • Window construction: 9 custom window units and 2 doors with 3/4" Low-e Argon filled Insulated Glass Units, R-4; Door units are tempered glass.
  • Metal Roof

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Window Mockup

Here is a mockup of the windows I will be building. I milled the mockup from spruce 2x4s from the basement.

Window exterior


Window interior


3 trial runs of corner joint. Top was the first draft, bottom is final.

Joint dissassembled. In this finger joint, there are three gluing surfaces. The exterior face is facing down.

Joint assembled. I will drill & insert a peg at each corner joint. Note the channel on the edge of 1/4" thick exterior flange to accept a bead of silicone to seal the glazing in place. There is a saw kerf in the rabbet to accept the glass stop, shown assembled in the next photo.


Glass stop in place. The thickness of the gap for the insulated glass unit is 5/8". Both the exterior flange and the glass stop have a silicone caulking channel.

On each window assembly, there will be a v-seal weather strip to seal out air infiltration and a tube gasket to create a thermal seal.




A Tiny Model of my Tiny House

These are photos of the model I made of my house. The model is 1"=1'-0" scale, built from reclaimed materials.

Exterior, looking from Southeast


Southern Exposure


Full Size model (Scale = none)


Looking in the front door towards sitting area.


Top view into interior. Entry is to the left; sitting area is at the top of the photo, with loft above; storage cabinet is on the right side; lower right is the bathing area; lower left is the kitchen.

Looking down into kitchen. The range will be on the low cabinet.
Bathing area is on the left side photo.


Convertible space: lounge, dining and sleeping area.
Here the table & bench are folded away...


...and here they are folded out.


The table & benches can also form a lounge/sleeping area. I love how this shot really gives a feel of the interior!