Professional photos of my house are here!

The Marketing team at Acorn Deck House Company has very, very graciously given me permission to use some of the photos they took recently of my house.  I believe they are working on a new version / update of their website and some of this material looks like it will be included. Thank you so … Continue reading “Professional photos of my house are here!”

The Marketing team at Acorn Deck House Company has very, very graciously given me permission to use some of the photos they took recently of my house.  I believe they are working on a new version / update of their website and some of this material looks like it will be included.

Thank you so very, very much to Paul Hebert, Tim Hebert and all of Paul’s crew – you guys are FANTASTIC.

To Acorn Deck House – you are so wonderful to work with and I truly appreciate your generosity in letting me use some of your material in this blog.

To Atlantic Industrial Models – Joe Fassa and team.  Thank you very, very much for the wonderful execution of the metal work shown here

And finally, a huge shout out to Anthony Crisafulli for the awesome photos

Embedded YouTube video below – the embedding forces it to be pretty small – I recommend going to the bottom right hand corner of the video and either clicking on the FullScreen icon or clicking over to YouTube so you can watch it there.  Great Stuff!

All I can say is WOW – what great photos Anthony!

Picture heavy post after missing a week of posts

I was wrapped up last weekend in doing work trying to continue momentum for my occupancy permit and I never got around to posting anything. All permits are complete, except for the occupancy permit. The Carlisle Fire Chief has requested that the we fill in some gaps in the documentation around the common drive way … Continue reading “Picture heavy post after missing a week of posts”

I was wrapped up last weekend in doing work trying to continue momentum for my occupancy permit and I never got around to posting anything.

All permits are complete, except for the occupancy permit. The Carlisle Fire Chief has requested that the we fill in some gaps in the documentation around the common drive way due to what appears to have been some gaps in what was passed to him from the prior Chief.  We have rounded all of that up except for the documentation that the maintenance agreement for the driveway has been maintained.  Stamski and McNary has agreed to do the inspection and provide documentation.  Their commentary was that:

  1. The sight line for inbound fire trucks along Bedford Road was blocked by my new mailbox (which it was doing but I had not noticed),
  2. The brush had encroached a bit on the driveway and
  3. There was no house number at the point where my driveway split off from the common driveway.

Last weekend I resolved all three.  To simplify things, I completely removed the mailbox (I will get a PO box or continue to have mail sent to my parent’s place and figure something out later if I get a mailbox out in the future).  Then I trailered over the Billy Goat brush hog and chewed through the blackberry bushes.  Finally, Dad and I got a 4×4 pressure treated post, a post hole digger and some house numbers and I installed that.  Fingers crossed this is the last item before the final permit

Last week we also took my Dad’s old racing shell (which had de-laminated) over to Ted Van Dusen for repairs and donation to a youth rowing group in Holeyoke along the Connecticut River.  Ted runs Composite Engineering and they build a lot of the racing boats for a LOT of Olympic teams.  A run down place on the outside but amazing on the inside.  Definitely different from our place!

 

In other news, Paul’s team laid down coat 3 of 3 on the hardwood floor, pulled the tools and stuff from the workshop, is working through their punch list – AND – this weekend, did the final layout of the loam for the lawn.  This includes laying out the large rocks along the property line between me and Kimball’s.  It looks great!!

Before shots of the shop and looking at the “front yard”

Now here is what things look like on the outside after this weekend’s worth of work

And on the inside things are truly wonderful

337 Bedford Road – House number is up!

Thanks to Moda Industria the house number is up!  You may have seen my prior post about the house number – sorry if that was confusing as I used a generic picture of the STYLE of house number I was going to use but not my actual number or color.  Because there is so much … Continue reading “337 Bedford Road – House number is up!”

Thanks to Moda Industria the house number is up!  You may have seen my prior post about the house number – sorry if that was confusing as I used a generic picture of the STYLE of house number I was going to use but not my actual number or color.  Because there is so much red and orange on the exterior of the house, and the number by definition needs to draw the eye towards it, I went with Capri Blue powder coating.  I think it looks great and Paul, yet again, did a great job mounting it

The number itself is very heavy duty and weighs in over 15 pounds I would guess (10 at least).  I really like the floating layer

In other news, things continue to progress.  Bathroom fixtures continue towards completion – but are hard to photograph.    The first 3 (of 4) shots below are of the master bath with the walk in shower.  The last shot is closest to what you see in person when you are there.  I think the accent stripe of pumpkin tile really worked well to break up the monolithic white tile.  The last photo is the guest bath/tub combo

It has cooled off a bit here and I have started working on my new computer nook table.  Milling some custom aluminum myself for this furniture item.  Shots soon hopefully of that 🙂

Summer Solstice is right around the corner

Good morning – A couple of days till the summer solstice and summer is definitely here. I was down and out last weekend due to the flu – so this is a bit of a catch up post, I didn’t feel very creative last week! Things are moving into the home stretch at the house … Continue reading “Summer Solstice is right around the corner”

Good morning – A couple of days till the summer solstice and summer is definitely here.

I was down and out last weekend due to the flu – so this is a bit of a catch up post, I didn’t feel very creative last week!

Things are moving into the home stretch at the house – the Carlisle Tax Assessor sent me a letter with a form to fill out (by month end) indicating how many bits and pieces are complete on the house (septic, foundation, insulation…).  The town’s fiscal year starts in July I think and they want to start collecting more taxes I suppose.  I am going to leave a copy of the form with Paul to fill out – it is basic YES/NO – is this complete or not type stuff.

Speaking of which, detail work is continuing and is very coordination/schedule driven I think.  The flooring guys came in and did a 2nd coat on the floor – which looks fantastic.  The lighting fixture for over the island is coming together – the beechwood box is onsite and also looks REALLY good.  Diane, my project manager at Deck House, noted to me that Paul is really good with built-ins when we were introduced and it is definitely true – you rock AND roll Paul!

Bathrooms are coming along and very close to finished.  I also saw this weekend that the last two exterior light fixtures from Hubbarton Forge appear to be onsite in their boxes – waiting for installation.

Things I still need to do but have been backlogged (at work, this is the busiest time of the year for us.  Friday was a big push and month end coming up.  All went well this week)

  1. Get the stone carver lined up to carve the house number on the granite post out by the mailboxes.  I think we are going to have Acton Monument do the work – but haven’t called them yet.  They appear to do mainly headstone engraving – which is obviously a lot of onsite work when adding ‘beloved spouse…” to a headstone already installed.
  2. Get a mailbox and post installed out by Bedford Road
  3. Get my butt in gear and get my internet equipment purchased.  This is what I am looking at getting the Cradlepoint Wireless Router with a Yagi antenna – getting in touch with their Mass. sales team is challenging since we keep playing phone tag.
  4. Get kitchen backsplash designed and ordered.  I pulled measurements yesterday.  I think I going with a stainless steel system from Commerce Metals online – stainless in the SANDTEX finish (scroll to the bottom) to minimize streaks.  We use some aluminum foil and masking tape to mock it up and it looked really good color/texture wise on the wall.
  5. LOTS of other stuff – but these are the critical path items at the moment.

I hope you all are enjoying your summer weekend.  Now some more coffee and to plan my next San Francisco trip

 

 

House numbers – Mid Century style!

More mid century stuff – I needed a number for my house, so I ordered from a company I found as an advertiser in Atomic Ranch magazine that specializes in Mid Century modern styling.  I ordered my number (337) in cut stainless steel like the photo below but with the background plate in Capri Blue … Continue reading “House numbers – Mid Century style!”

More mid century stuff – I needed a number for my house, so I ordered from a company I found as an advertiser in Atomic Ranch magazine that specializes in Mid Century modern styling.  I ordered my number (337) in cut stainless steel like the photo below but with the background plate in Capri Blue instead of red.  I wanted something that would stand out from the orange and browns of the house – since the point is to draw the eye and provide identification.  Look at the link here for the actual color

 

Moda Industria from Atomic Ranch Magazine advertising

Floating house number

I also have written to my neighbors about getting coordinated with them to etch the number in the granite post on Bedford Road.

May 2016 – a busy month

May has been a really busy month for me with a lot of travel for both work and personal.  I went to California twice, visited the BNY Mellon Innovation Center in Palo Alto which was super interesting and did general work stuff in the office.  Then a few days later my parents and I traveled back … Continue reading “May 2016 – a busy month”

May has been a really busy month for me with a lot of travel for both work and personal.  I went to California twice, visited the BNY Mellon Innovation Center in Palo Alto which was super interesting and did general work stuff in the office.  Then a few days later my parents and I traveled back to the Bay Area for my niece’s college graduation from Saint Mary’s College in Moraga.  In between we installed an all flash memory storage array in the data center in Everett MA (aka – work stuff).

So lots of stuff to talk about.  I will do house stuff first and then family second.

House stuff.  While a lot has been going on, not all of it shows up as something to photograph.  But this month, a lot of things are coming together and Paul and I are talking about wrapping things up, getting final inspection permits and the final bank payment done.  Still a bit out over the horizon on the timeline, but the final pieces are coming together – and it is coming together GREAT!

My mad plan for the cantilevered island counter top, cooking & dining surface came out better than I had hoped – it looks fantastic.  It is a real show piece.  Other things that are done or have made progress.

  • Ceiling fan is installed
  • Sprinkler system is pretty much done, including the pump and the tank, sprinkler heads and cages
  • lighting is 99% installed
  • tile in the bathrooms is complete
  • Hot water heater is installed
  • Appliances needed for inspection are installed, including the kitchen sink.  (faucets are purchased but not installed yet)
  • Steps from the carport to the back of the house are in progress
  • The window seat is installed (and man, does it work well !)

One thing that is becoming very apparent is that the math for the size and shape of the eaves done by Deck House (while we were in the design phase) was spot on the target.  The amount of direct sunlight into the living room that is hitting the floor is reducing and already minimal.  We designed it so there would be absolute minimal heat loading inbound from the sun as of 6/20 and maximum as of 12/20 to help with passive cooling and heating.  It is working out great.  So is the choice of the light tan color roof – it just doesn’t absorb much heat either vs a darker color.  The house is really pretty cool even while the geothermal heat pump is not fully in use – just by basic design.

Below are some outside shots showing the stone work and a panoramic shot showing the house itself – double click on that to blow it up for details

 

Interior shots showing all the progress inside

 

Ok – on to family stuff 🙂

Going out for Margaret’s graduation was a LOT of fun even if it did involve a new hotel room almost every night (more on that later).  The flight out was rather long as it was Boston to Los Angeles to San Francisco and the Airbus had a mechanical problem in Boston (dead auxiliary power generator).  The Airbus needs two and carries three.  After two hours of sitting on the tarmac, they decided to load more fuel, have us fly lower and take off anyway.  Worked out ok but was a long tiring day.  The Best Western El Rancho Inn in Millbrae is within sight of the airport and is super organized for the air traveler.  I HIGHLY recommend them – nice rooms, fantastic organization and very reasonable rates.   We stayed there the first night and then onto Lafayette for the next night and a very early rise for graduation.  Saint Mary’s is down a single lane road – so the advice from the school and the locals was to be driving by 6:30am for the 9:20am start of commencement.  That turned out to be the absolute right thing as we were able to park close instead of 2 miles away!

Due to the sporadic rain and our seats, I personally didn’t get any photos (it would have been of umbrella’s) – but the school has posted a lot of good photos here.   Unfortunately Margaret was not feeling well and had a fairly high fever – sitting out in the rain for her was pretty tough but she got through it.  On to grad school !

We zoomed off to Santa Rosa to visit the Santa Rosa Fohls and stayed at the Marriott Courtyard near Rail Road Square – just missing the Amgen Tour of California bike race (one of the biggest in the United States with LOTs of European Pro teams using it as prep for the the Tour de France).   This was fortunate since our hotel was very close to ground zero for the circuit through downtown (3rd street).  The Amgen is very fun race to watch in person and I saw it many times when it passed through SF in years past – but I was just as glad to have a near miss this year.  We made a strategic decision to hang out at the hotel, have a drink in the bar, and go to bed early – which completely rejuvenated us.  The next couple of days were spent hanging out with family and really fun.  Of special note is the Sonoma Children’s Museum – it is pretty new but really, really, really great.  Lots of indoor and outdoor things for kids 6 years and under to interact with.  For the family, I will send around more photos but below is my youngest nephew Owen playing in the Choo-Choo and the museum entrance.

Other stuff:

It is the Memorial Day holiday so I thought I would include this here.  I walk past the Old Granary Burial Ground in Boston everyday to the MBTA and while they always keep it up very well, Friday it was in full spruce up.  All the veterans buried there had a flag and some had 2 or 3.  However, Samuel Adams – patriot, rabble rouser Son of Liberty, signer of the Declaration of Independence and Governor of Massachusetts was given his due – 4 flags.

Aaaand on a final note of a very long post, my Dad and I had fun time yesterday watching BOTH the F1 Grand Prix of Monaco and the Indianapolis 500 Indy Car race.  Both were exciting for different reasons.  The F1 race was very wet then dried out so strategy played a lot into it and a botched tire change by Red Bull probably was the key factor for Lewis Hamilton in the Mercedes to win.  The Indy 500 was very exciting with a lot of competitive cars and many lead changes.  A number of cautions late turned it into a gamble of pitstops and fuel – a rookie won it sputtering in on fumes and a prayer – he had about a 1/2 lap lead and was out of gas – just coasted it around for the win.  Alexander Rossi – a Californian who spent a year over in Formula 1 before joining the Indy Car series – so an experience racer, even if it was his first trip to Indianapolis.  Michael Andretti’s team, through good strategy pulled off the win AND second place.  Good stuff.

Ok – off to June now!

 

Building a house is like building a sand dribble castle at the beach

About 10 years ago, I was heavily involved in building out our office space in San Francisco (about 96,000 square feet).  This is in a large downtown office tower and it was bare concrete floors and completely empty floor to ceiling on 4.5 floors – so about 22K square feet per floor.  Our architects were … Continue reading “Building a house is like building a sand dribble castle at the beach”

About 10 years ago, I was heavily involved in building out our office space in San Francisco (about 96,000 square feet).  This is in a large downtown office tower and it was bare concrete floors and completely empty floor to ceiling on 4.5 floors – so about 22K square feet per floor.  Our architects were great and the space came out very nice while still being cost effective.  An interesting take away I got from that experience is that EVERYTHING is a decision and those decisions build on each other – like dribbling sand at the beach to make a dribble castle.  Every decision is dependent on the small little decisions that you made earlier.  We are at a stage now on my house project that this is really clear

Not a whole lot has obviously happened since the last post – but things are staged for an explosion of obvious progress.  Specifically, take a look at the photos below.

Blue tape is on the cabinets showing where the door pulls will be.  Dribble-dribble. The I-Beam is now in place (temporarily tacked down with generic screws).  Each cut, mount hole, size of the plate, the under beam mounting blocks were things that we discussed and mulled over and finally made a decision about – all oriented on how to give good leg room under the counter surface while still providing the support needed for the counter itself – and look good?  Dribble-dribble.   This is not a unique or an original observation obviously – but it struck me particularly yesterday when I was visiting just because there are so many decisions that have been taken but not fully put into action on display.

Things that are prepped and pending

  • A lot of the appliances have arrived – the dishwasher and cooktop are in the house (still in their boxes)
  • The door pulls are marked out
  • The master bath tiling looks about to start (materials are here).
  • Plumbing fixtures are showing up and getting prepped
  • Light fixtures are onsite and ready for installation
  • Templates have been made for the counter tops (cutouts for the sink, cooktop etc…) and the counter tops are in progress
  • Surface treatment (3 coats ultimately) is partially complete – the bedrooms are at 2 coats, main public area is at 1 coat

All in all – there should be a lot of good stuff show off soon – built off of all the little prep work that Paul and his team have been putting so much effort into these past few weeks.  The house is looking just fantastic  🙂

Snow in April

It is snowing here in today but we are not supposed to get much.  But it is supposed to be very windy later today – up to 58 mph gusts.  My Dad was scheduled to look at some potential archaeology sites out by Worcester today – but he conferred with the rest of the group … Continue reading “Snow in April”

It is snowing here in today but we are not supposed to get much.  But it is supposed to be very windy later today – up to 58 mph gusts.  My Dad was scheduled to look at some potential archaeology sites out by Worcester today – but he conferred with the rest of the group yesterday and wisely called it off.  There are a lot of damaged trees in the woods this year from the one storm that had really heavy snow (see pictures of storm damage in this earlier post)  – there are a number of “Widow Makers” hanging around here and being out in 50+ mph winds could be quite dangerous – and uncomfortable too!

Anecdotally, my Dad has noted that one of the leading cause of death in Colonial times was being killed by falling tree limbs/widow makers.  We have a theory that these are more common when trees grow without a lot of competition (lower stress, faster growth, less strength).   Today, New England is a reforestation success story – I believe up until the 1990s the net generation of forest land was enormous, only recently leveling out as farming went into a steep decline here.  Around our part of the state, a LOT of trees, of many different species, have been sort of falling apart for no particular good reason that we can see.  The only link is that they appear to be the same general age – between 50 and 100 years old.

This would have also been common in early colonial times as the pre-contact local Indian tribes used to keep the land fairly clear for farming – but they were heavily decimated by disease early on and that activity would have slowed way down in the late 1500 and 1600’s (possibly).   So similar conditions leading to similar weaker than normal trees, leading to more trees falling apart?

Potentially difficult to come up with direct evidence to support that theory – but interesting musing.

On a different subject, I was out sick for a number of days last week (feeling a bunch better now thank you!) – too much getting woken up in the middle of the night (Brussels bombing alert from work, Fire alarms) on top of a fast trip back and forth to San Francisco.  However, Atlantic Industrial Models finished up the I-Beam and it has been delivered to the house.  They are still working on sanding the floor but Paul can at least do final measurements for the island.  Oh – and Wolfers lighting called and the special order fixtures have arrived.

Big house update

It has been a few weeks since I last posted.  I have been travelling a fair bit and lots has gotten done First off and exciting – the Geothermal system is installed and running.  With that up and going, Paul was able to bring the house up to full temperature and get the floor and … Continue reading “Big house update”

It has been a few weeks since I last posted.  I have been travelling a fair bit and lots has gotten done

First off and exciting – the Geothermal system is installed and running.  With that up and going, Paul was able to bring the house up to full temperature and get the floor and trim to all acclimatize and stabilize over a period of a week.  The red oak flooring and trim are now installed and look absolutely great!  This includes wonderful oak heating/cooling floor vent registers that just cleanly blend in.

Interestingly, with the hardwood floors in, the house feels a light quieter and softer from an acoustic perspective.

 

We made final decisions on flooring for the entryway and the bathrooms based on the samples Paul got.  We are going with the Home Depot Montauk Black slate in 12×24″ size for the full entry, utility room, laundry room and pantry as well as the bathroom floors.  The bath tile in the master bath is Ice White Home Depot Daltile (3×6″ subway) in a stacked pattern (no overlap from one course to the next) and an octagon flooring.  We are going to have an orange/pumpkin accent color strip running horizontally around the bath at around the inset soap dish level – to break up the pure white look.

Atlantic Industrial Models sent to me the CAD design for the I-Beam machine work and I signed off on it – it looks great and I can’t wait to see the results in person!.  They should be cutting metal very soon – which means we can pick it up soon and the kitchen island can progress

My parent’s and I went over to Wolfers Lighting and picked out all the fixed lighting fixtures/product and paid for it all in one fell swoop.  It should be really great!  I did purchase a couple of special order items from Hubbardton Forge – a local Vermont Blacksmith lighting fixture company.  Fantastic craftsmanship and design aesthetic.

What I ordered from them:

I also got LOTS of track lighting for both the house and the shop.  It will run along the main beams in the house and some 64′ of track along the full length of the 3 walls in the shop.  This should provide a lot of task lighting there.

 

Finally here are some outdoor shots with new angles

Cold, cold, cold Washington’s Birthday holiday in Carlisle

This morning (Sunday), at sunrise, it was a chilly -21 degrees Fahrenheit on our front porch (indicated at -16 but we normally find a 5 degree difference due to heat from the house impacting the thermometer).  The temperature at the town center is showing at -11.  I think the difference is that we are downhill … Continue reading “Cold, cold, cold Washington’s Birthday holiday in Carlisle”

This morning (Sunday), at sunrise, it was a chilly -21 degrees Fahrenheit on our front porch (indicated at -16 but we normally find a 5 degree difference due to heat from the house impacting the thermometer).  The temperature at the town center is showing at -11.  I think the difference is that we are downhill in a bit of a hollow and at this temperature, the cold air is pooling.  Brrrrr!  good thing we have coffee!

I took Friday off to do more house stuff.  My Dad and I went up to Essex MA to visit Atlantic Industrial Models.  Joe Fossa (the owner) and my Dad go way, way back and I have heard, many, many good stories but have never met him before.  Joe and his team, over the years, have done a LOT of prototyping, model making and small production runs for my Dad – both at GTE Sylvania Lighting (think lightbulbs, camera flash – all sorts of lighting products) and various businesses that I my Dad and Mom started after my Dad retired from Sylvania.

I am having Atlantic Industrial Models machine the aluminum I-Beam for the cantilever section that will underlay my counter top on the kitchen island.  Despite my ‘not to scale‘ drawings, he got it right away.  I get the impression that a lot of what they get is a verbal description and a lot of hand waving – so the fact that I had drawn plans and written things down was a general added bonus.  We also got to spend some time shooting the breeze about his Cessna 180 float/ski plane which sounds really neat and looking at some of the photos of some custom automotive work they do.  A shop down the street is a super high end historic car restoration shop (they restore cars that are entered – and win – at the Concourse d’Elegance at Pebble Beach).  Some of the total one-off machining that Joe’s team did is just out of this world.  They also do need it, but can’t get it anywhere else type of work like casting custom rubber pads for the pedals on a pre-WWII Hispano-Suiza or something equally exotic.  They are really, really capable folks

Below are the plans that I gave to Joe – hopefully it will help describe what I am doing.  The core idea came from “Atomic Ranch Midcentury Interiors”  – Modernist Tract House, 1958 on pages 123-145.  If you are interested in this stuff, I suggest picking up a copy of this book or subscribing to their quarterly magazine (Atomic Ranch)

In flooring and tile news – the pricing came back on the materials I picked out and the cost was 3x my budget plan.  Not good.  So I am back to re-thinking things.  I am kind of leaning towards doing the floor in Home Depot Montauk Black slate (like this below) – picture from a Houzz article on slate floors