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The perfect house for winter and Christmas! The details on the 2 doors and various windows are beautiful!
Taken in September 1973.
A day view at an angle from our room at the London Park Hotel. The small, modular houses in the foreground were intriguing. They looked exactly like homes that the American Plywood Association was promoting as build-it-yourself vacation homes in the 1950's. (I was in my teens then, considering architecture as a career, and cut out articles about them from magazines.)
The one thing about them that struck my American eye was the lack of driveways or any other provision for taking your car off the street.
The tower in the background is the Lambeth Hospital.
Taken in September 1973.
A night view at an angle from our room at the London Park Hotel. The small, modular houses in the foreground were intriguing. They looked exactly like homes that the American Plywood Association was promoting as build-it-yourself vacation homes in the 1950's. (I was in my teens then, considering architecture as a career, and cut out articles about them from magazines.)
The one thing about them that struck my American eye was the lack of driveways or any other provision for taking your car off the street.
The tower in the background on the right is the Lambeth Hospital.
Cute little cottage set on the grounds of Principia College in Elsah, Illinois.
"Sample House," or "Mistake House
Blogged here finderskeepers-designs.blogspot.com/2011/01/year-1-look-b...
Updated dining room remodel photo. New molding has been installed! Living room is completed! Well almost, we still need blinds for the windows.
I'm so on board with dig this chick's curated mess idea that I'm posting a photo of the inside of our usually messy tiny house. It's in a state of mid-construction, always needing more money and time (mostly money), so not everything has a place just yet. There are a lot of moving piles. So this goes into the whole picture of the tiny house, good, bad and ugly.
The cabin flares out in plan to frame the forest views. From the trail it appears stoic with only clerestory windows, while the back that faces the woods opens up with sliding glass doors. A part of the roof folds up to create a dormer that frames a rocky outcropping.
I seriously doubt life could get better than this little reading nook ... especially when it's dark and gray and wet outside. A cup of coffee and a log in the stone fireplace ... Today the weather was perfect ...
The Small House Living collection.
This little house needs a bit of work, but it's a wonderful example of Cotswold cottage-style stonework and clinker brickwork. It has the rolled composition roof that imitates the "thatched" roof often seen on this style.
This one is used as bedroom and working area. The other one, made out of a shipping container, includes kitchen, sofa and a small library.
A small house in snow-covered Old Sturbridge Village, a recreation of a New England village in the early 1800s. ("Small" refers to its size, not a family name.)
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Seen on a walk this morning. It appears to have been established during the past month or so. I really like it. Prisma’s Wind filter was used here.
The cabin flares out in plan to frame the forest views. From the trail it appears stoic with only clerestory windows, while the back that faces the woods opens up with sliding glass doors. A part of the roof folds up to create a dormer that frames a rocky outcropping.
This small cottage bungalow was designed by O. M. Akers in about 1923 for J. R. Blows, one of the bazillion builders that were putting up small houses all over Portland. It's in Ladd Addition which adds to its charm. Need to do a bit more research to confirm. It looks like the original trio of casement windows have been replaced, but it doesn't seem too much the worse for wear.
From the Antique Home Style collection.
This is another typical house in Japan. I can see almost th e design is same. But, I can see it is still unique and resembles japanese culture of simplicity. In front of this house is a garden designed by the owner of this house. Still Japanese residence have a keen to beautify their environment including their own private place. I like the way of this style. Even their house is small, they still use almost every corner of space beneficial to their eyes. I can feel in my heart that it is awesome!!!
Seen from the back of my parents house...my house now when the little shed now my workshop still looked original from Autumn 1970 before the back addition was built a few years later.
This one’s right on top of the small street it faces. It’s on the nearest east side of Marietta, only a short walk from the Square.
House at Mutsugi
Mustugi, Adachi-ku,Tokyo,2006 SD review winner
Designed by SGM Architect&Associates,Inc.,
Satoshi Sasaki, Hiroto Ito 2007
www.kajima-publishing.co.jp/sd/index.html
Fuji Finepix S3pro
↓Here is the photo set of "House at Mutsugi"
This is looking from our kitchen doorway through a short hall into the living room. The light is focusing on our floor-heater, which is under the house. Heat rises naturally without a fan, and heats the whole house. Our house is small.
When the kids were little, we kept many smooth river stones on the floor heater-grate. This was for two reasons: you can see it is in the way of someone walking from the living room into the hallway. If you are barefooted in winter (which we usually were) you might burn your feet if you stepped on the heater grate. The rocks made people go around the grate.
Every time we went floating on the rivers in Montana, or hiking in the mountains, we always brought back one stone for our heater. Our stone collection was a beautiful sculpture in the middle of our wood floor.
The great thing about having the stones on our heater was that we always took at least one big stone to bed with each of us at night. The hot stone would keep our feet warm in bed. I made small flannel covers for the stones so they would not burn our feet. We called them our bedrocks.
You may wonder why I don't have the stones there now. I have simplified since the kids grew up and left home. The stones now live in our garden. Maybe someday they will move back into the house with us.
This is part of the set,Home & Studio here
This is another view of japanese house. Some of the house and its compartment is big, allowing to put several cars and have a 'large' garden. I think, it depends on the size of family as well. My foster parents has 4 children. Two of them already married. Right now, the person staying at the house is mother, father, 2 younger brother, two grandmother. Later, our family will add new person, that is two little babies that expected to born middle of year 2012. From my point of view, this is a good news if the number of family members becoming larger and larger than before. It is because one of the japan main crisis is low birth rates and it will severely effect japan giant economic flow. By looking at this house, how it is look like? Is it same as previous photos that I have shown to you? Yes, indeed. The design is almost same. But for me, i can see it is one of uniqueness about Japanese house. It is simple, cute and yet shows the functionality of each space at the house.
An unfeasibly small house right on the beach front at Aldeburgh. Judging by the Mercedes sitting outside, worth about a million quid.
The cabin flares out in plan to frame the forest views. From the trail it appears stoic with only clerestory windows, while the back that faces the woods opens up with sliding glass doors. A part of the roof folds up to create a dormer that frames a rocky outcropping.
The perfect house for winter and Christmas! The details on the 2 doors and various windows are beautiful!
I found this "Swiss chalet" at the Thrift Store a few days ago, I couldn't believe it! It's so adorable!!!! I spent time decorating it for Christmas yesterday for the blythe girls and it turned out awesome...pics later on!
This house plan is perfect as far as I'm concerned ... It's called the Marysville and was offered in American Builder magazine as one of their selected floor plans in August 1925. More plans from American Builder magazine.