Senin, 12 Oktober 2009

Modern in Pound Ridge



Our friends and neighbors, Sue Haft and Eric Moss, invited us a few months ago to see a house for which they had done interior renovations on a cul-de-sac in Pound Ridge. Eric said it was probably going to go on the market soon, and he said he though the architect was John Johansen, although we're pretty sure it's not a Johansen house.


Nevertheless it was worth seeing and, indeed, it's now on the market, for $2.1 million. The pictures on the real estate listing are better than these two, which I took.

Sue and Eric, by the way, live in a modern house designed by Moore & Hutchins, the same firm that designed our house. Moore did our house for a friend of his named Bertram Willcox, and then did Sue and Eric's for himself. - ta

Jumat, 09 Oktober 2009

More 'outstanding' architecture. . .


I guess I never realized before that the Dutch seem to like their architecture protruding . . .

This is housing for the elderly, by MVRDV. It is in a neighborhood of Amsterdam, and it's called WoZoCo. How did it come to look like this? The client's original plan limited the number of apartments per block to 87 units, and each tenant was promised good natural lighting. The number of apartments then grew to 100 units per block. MVRDV's challenge was how to add 13 more units without encroaching on any apartment's natural light or limiting the tenants' common space. The solution was to literally suspend the 13 apartments from the side of the main structure. Saw this a while ago, but it appears to be making the rounds again, via Best House Design. – GF

Oh! this is so . . . schattig!

The first words that popped into my head when I saw Divinatio Restaurant, by Sluijmer & van Leeuwen Architectst, were "it's so adorable!". My online translator converts those words from English to Dutch to as "is schattig".  On the harbor in Utrecht, The Netherlands, it looks like a tall houseboat, but I could see it as well in a field or on a mountainside as a wonderful little house. Seen on Contemporist. – GF

Selasa, 06 Oktober 2009

Presenting our case for House Plans at Ignite Philly

Next week we will be presenting our case for Modern House Plans at the Ignite Philly event in Philadelphia. This is one of those lightening formats - 20 slides, 15 seconds each, 5 minute talk.


We are working on the outline of the talk now, and so far we're about about 8 minutes so some serious trimming or faster talking has to go on. In the spirit of spreading the word I am going to post the draft of the outline below, and I welcome comments on what to chop out, or trim off!


• I am Greg La Vardera, an architect originally from Philadelphia, now in Merchantville NJ.


- Here to talk about my efforts to market modern house designs in the form of Catalog House Plans


- Catalog house plans are generally not very well regarded by practicing architects, primarily because level of design work in these mass produced designs are not very good.


• Where I am coming from - my prejudices:


- residential environment we are building in suburbia today is ugly, uninspired, and harmful to our society on many levels. Home design is so bad, and so widely understood to be bad that we actually have coined a term for the kind of homes built and sold today - we call them of course McMansions


- biggest players in the housing industry benefit from driving housing towards being a commodity, all of it alike, any one being a suitable alternative to the other. Appraisals, real estate sales, financing, all want every house to be like every other house. Builders & developers simply go along with whatever makes them the most money.


- Almost every other class of consumer product today is driven by design. Think about the way you pick a cell phone, or a car, your laptop. All of these products leverage design to deliver more value to you, or to simply convince you that they will. Now think about houses - they attempt to appeal to you with the most base level of pandering - phony architectural elements intended to convey status, multiple roof peaks, brick face, just on the front mind you.


• So how did I come to take up House Plans. Well, this was the state of things circa 2000, active practice, not really doing the kind of work I'm passionate about - I have a love of modern design, modern houses in particular. Modern houses are rare in the region, and clients wanting a modern house even rarer, if you are shopping for a house you can't go out and buy a modern house from a builder. Two choices - hire and architect and design and build one, or seek out an existing modern house from the 50s or 60s and hope a previous owner did not muck it up too badly.


- Into that context came Dwell Magazine - a home and garden magazine that claimed to be dedicated to modern design. I subscribed - my architects radar was telling me that they might actually deliver.


- And they did as well as anybody had tried before. I became active on their online messageboard - neanderthal of online social media. Much to my surprise I was meeting people there looking for well designed houses - not just a few, but hundreds of them, and the circulation of the magazine was climbing towards 300,000. The question was being asked where can I get a house like I see in the magazine. The answer unfortunately was - hire an architect, cost was a dead end for many of these folks. But there was demand, unknown till now, clearly unserved.


• The nature of the demand for housing - no data to back it up, guesstimate based on my experience.


- 90% of people don't care, don't think, or are simply ignorant of architecture as it might apply to the design of houses.


- 10% of people are intellectually curious enough to be anywhere from passionate, to interested, to simply open to the idea of design enriching their home.


- of that 10% maybe about 3% are able to afford an architect, or are passionate enough about design to be willing to spend what it takes to have an architect design their home.


- that leaves something in the neighborhood of 7% of people interested in design, enough to not be happy with a McMansion, but with no options almost universally resolve themselves to settling for a McMansion. But this is a huge country, and 7% of huge is huge. The maker of almost any consumer item would die to have 7% of their market. Apple computer? "Limped along for years with only 3-5% of personal computer sales, meanwhile cranking out some of the best designed product in their market.


• I wanted to reach these people. There was unrealized potential there, and they would expose others to better design, expose people who had never thought about the possibility of a house being something more. How to reach them at a cost people can afford and were willing to spend.


- Considered options, prefabrication was a new hot-button, but it required a change in the business model of builder, developer, and financing.


- Houseplans seemed like an interesting medium. Aside from the fact that architects generally hate them, they are widely used, and well understood by consumers and the housing industry.


- Its 2002 now I searched the world of house plans looking for what I considered good design. An epic search, about 30hrs of web browsing stretched over a week or so. I looked at thousands of house plans on dozens of web sites. I found a few small vendors of good quality traditional design styles, almost nothing in the modern style I was interested in. The overwhelming majority of designs were mediocre, bland, uninspired - just like the houses being built all across the country.


- I thought this could be a way to penetrate the market. Like gene therapy being delivered by a virus, I could use houseplans to deliver better design to the housing industry in a form they already understood and use every day.


• Defined our core values for how to approach this


- Committed to doing a better job than typical plan vendors to describe the house. Status quo plan sites show a floor plan and artist sketch of what the front looks like. Thats it. No views of the interiors, no view of the backs and sides of the house. We are committed to providing decent visualization of what a house will look like, all four sides, inside and out.


- Committed to assuming the consumer is competent, informed, intelligent, and interested in design, and try to meet them on that level.


- Committed to sharing my experiences and encouraging other architects to find new business models to influence the quality of housing, whether its by house plans, or prefabs, or even better something I've never thought of.


• Start up took time. I did not have thousands of plans to offer. I have to create product, at the same time run my practice. A couple of years to build modest selection - 3-4 designs


- Great reception to the effort. First ads flooded me inquiries, calls, constant emails. - But people do not build houses on impulse. The entire process of site search and approvals, borrowing, vetting builders means that there is a long lead time from discovering my product to being ready to buy.


- Lucky to have some early adopters that were on fast track and acquired plans.


- First houses were begun 2003, slowly, then more, by 2008 over a dozen houses built or underway that customers had sent back photos, and many others that plans went out to but did not stay in touch. (many resurface later - two so far in 09)


• I'm hopeful that this is just the start of the "infection". I would like to see a real epidemic emerge.


- So to aspiring homeowners out there I say do not settle for a McMansion. Put it to the housing industry to provide compelling product, product that meets your values and aspirations.


- To architects I say you have to be willing to get out of the cozy nook of your conventional practice and pursue new business models. You need to take risks, do things that actually make this tough business even tougher on you, in order to be able to influence the kind of housing that is built in the US. We need advocates of other design interests, not just modern, but green and craftsman, and bungalows - whatever design ideas you can gather passionate consumers around.

Senin, 05 Oktober 2009

Financial Times covers modern house plans

London based financial newspaper Financial Times covered modern home plans this weekend in an article called Affordable Flair by Tracey Taylor that appeared in their House & Home section. Best part is the article featured our house plans and included quotes from myself, and one of our customers and photos of their Plat House.



Its always nice to see modern house plans get coverage, and even better to see our customers proudly show their house and the hard work they've put into them. What made this really unique is that the Financial Times is a UK based publication. More or less they don't have house plans for sale in the UK. House plans are a uniquely American phenomenon. Houses elsewhere in the developed world are almost universally designed by architects. Its only here in the US that our frontier heritage and value of personal freedom has retained in most states the right for an individual to design their own house, and the strange distortion of that which is the right to have an unqualified person design your house. For better or worse its why house plans exist as an industry in the US, and also why the residential built environment is so poorly designed. As regular readers here know, our house plans are all about combatting the sorry state of the status quo by delivering good design to the market place using the very means responsible for its sorry state.


For any visitors from the UK who have came here via the Financial Times article, that is the short explanation of what this odd product house plans are about, and that's why an architect who might otherwise have other battles to fight might take this up as his cause.


For us locals you can see the Financial Times article here.

Minggu, 04 Oktober 2009

What Can You Get for $1.3 Million in the Pacific Northwest?



A few days back I asked what you could get for $1.3 million in the California desert. Yesterday a correspondent in Washington sent me some photos of what you can get for $1.3 million in the Pacific Northwest.

The answer is found in these photos. The correspondent, Mark Lowder, said it was designed by Alan Bain Jr., who was prominent in the Seattle area and was trained at Cornell. The house was built for Dr. Carl Heller, who Mark says founded the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, although the center's web site says it was founded by Dr. William Hutchinson, Fred's brother. Fred, by the way, was a major league baseball player and manager who died of lung cancer; I had his baseball card when he was manager of the Reds.


Mark Lowder is selling the house. Here's what his email said:

I hate to part with it but we’ve done what we wanted with the place. It was a mess when we purchased it six years ago after being in renters hands for fifteen years. Time to move on.


Jumat, 02 Oktober 2009

Protecting migrating birds from crashing into big modern windows


Growing up in a mid-century modern tucked into the woods, I buried many birds – large and small – that died after crashing into our big windows. It was heart-rending to watch the exquisite creatures try to move, give up, and finally see life fade from their shiny, bead-like eyes. After I was sure they'd "gone" I'd pick them up and examine them: broken, loose necks causing the head to loll, feathers so much more variegated when spread out up close than you see when they perch or fly. . . I mourned each one and often slipped a few seeds into their mouths so they wouldn't be hungry when they got to the bird after-world (remember being 6 or 7?).

Many years ago when vacationing in Switzerland, my father noticed black silhouettes of birds applied as decals to large windows designed to trick flying birds into thinking there was too much avian traffic ahead and to avoid it. He tracked them down and brought some home. They remained on the windows for years, to the annoyance of the window washer. They were slightly effective, but not completely by any means.

Here are two new options I learned about here for keeping birds from beaning themselves on you windows: WindowAlert which is a window decal that is virtually invisible to our eyes but is supposed to be clearly visible to a bird. Then there's the more showy, but perhaps more effective FeatherGuard, which is a hanging mobile that attaches to the outside of your window by suction cup. dangling, swirling feathers are a danger signal to birds that another bird has been killed by a predator, and they should choose a different flight path.

It's worth trying something, as woodland birds like wood and hermit thrushes, oven birds and veerys' forest floor habitat has been so severely compromised by hungry deer. They need all the help they can get. – GF