Starting a New Company.

Bubblingbrooks

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Marianne said:
I have a friend that has the same set up, but with cabinet doors over the front. She has an insanely little kitchen, so they used the space between the studs in a near by area. It looks just like the kitchen cabinets until you open the doors. Then the 'shelves' are just one can deep. :D Sure gave her some much needed space.

While we are making the wish list, can I please have a bathroom vanity that is taller??? Something that is made more for grown up people? My aunt (5' 10" tall) actually had a huge argument with a contractor because she wanted the bathroom vanity built up on 2x4's. With a 6' 7" tall son, he was bending over practically to his knees to wash his face every morning.

Okay, now I'm nitpicking. Way back someone wanted a house for $90 a square foot or less. By picking up stuff on clearance, mixing miscolored paints ($5 a gallon), etc, we have kept our house project around $43 a square foot. That includes buried electrical and any labor costs, but the bulk of it we have done ourselves. It's not finished yet, but we'll come in way below $70 per foot, I bet. And we have a lot of features that new houses don't have - radiant heat, wood burning furnace, and more.
Do you happen to have a blog showing your project?
 

Marianne

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No, I never even thought about it. We have taken a few pics along the way. Usually we just collapsed at the end of the day. :D

When we moved in, we had one large room with drywall, no permanent heat (moved in Jan 15th!), a hillbilly kitchen, laundry and a small bathroom plumbed (no door).
It was pretty rough, but I was so glad to get here. We were driving back and forth from 30 miles away. Loaded the pickup with lumber and supplies, then headed to the farm to work...over and over.

One of these days I might get pics in order and do some show and tell...good and bad. The mistakes are just as important as the things that went right, in my opinion.
Sorry for the off topic tangent....
 

FarmGirl

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There are lots of great ideas here!

We are planning a single story, passive solar, geothermal home with a walk out basement. Maximum 2000 sq/ft

The basement will include a root cellar (with access to the outside), wine cellar and a cheese cave along the north wall where there are no windows. There will also be two spare bedrooms and a bathroom in the basement.

The main level will have the master bedroom/washroom, living room and kitchen with a screened in porch and sunroom. A large mud room, laundry area with room for a freezer and a large laundry tub/dog wash. The kitchen will include a walk in pantry. There will be no separate formal dining room so the kitchen table needs to be in an area that can extend into the living room when a large crowd gathers.

My husband does want a 'lookout room' with views on all sides so we will probably plan an office on the second level that will double for this.

We will use cisterns for water collection but also have a well on-site.

Finishes outside and inside won't be fancy - durable and low maintenance is the goal.

Good luck with your company!
 

hillfarm

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Large kitchen with gobs of counter space. Pantry too. A wood stove central to the open kitchen and family area. SEPERATE area for me and hubby from kids. Two bathrooms. Small so Its easy to keep but functional.

Wood floors. ceiling fans. good storage arrangement.
Fencing. Garden area and pet area seperated out.

GOBS OF TREES. 5 acres.

Good soil that doesnt shift the way it does here. My door frames shift four times a year. drives me crazy.

No neighbors within shouting distance.
Within a state park would be a massive bonus.

hmmm.

wind turbines for my personal electricity use.

grey water recycling.

a root cellar oh and a tornado shelter, since im in tornado alley.

oh and a huge tub to soak in. I miss that so much. Here we have is a shower. It's so unfair. Im trying to talk hubby into putting one on the back porch just put a blind around it or something.

oh and screened porches are the best. i spent many child hood nights sleeping on our porch in the summer to stay cool. cant beat the way it feels.

The best part, a creek that runs threw the property with a natural water spring. so you always have fresh cold constant water.

that would be a great start
 

mom2bbjandag

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I like the basics in some things, but I'm also a bit spoiled ;).

Open floor plan is a must, as are hard floors. Plenty of natural light - for me that is simply lots and lots of windows. We have no curtains on any of ours. Natural water. Wood heat from outside source, vented through the house - ours is retrofitted into central unit. Ceiling fans in every room.

Extra insulation in exterior walls, insulation in floor ceiling and roof. More $$ spent up front saves a LOT in the long run.

Each of our children has his/her own bedroom, though they are small. But hey, all they need is the closet and bed, then whatever else they personally choose. I would love to have built-in twin beds, up high, with storage or workspace underneath, but I can't get hubby to build :(.

Lots of porches, yard, shade, plenty of rooms outside, with area specifically designed for outdoor cooking, eating, and lounging.

Basement is an absolute necessity, multiple uses there. We have great storage above, not a full 2nd floor but taller than typical attic space. Unfinished, but with shelves and hanging areas.

Don't try to cut too much in the kitchen or bathrooms, in my opinion, and save on space and "extras" in areas that won't be often-used.

For me, a separate laundry/sewing/craft room is a fabulous bonus, and is really a necessity, too, for my sanity. I suppose I could do without the room, but it does keep me organized, content and happy. Our freezer is in there as well.

We do not have the tankless water heater, but they're sounding better all the time - my parents just got one and so far they love it.

I know it's not technically part of the house, but including plans for a small greenhouse and storage building might be a "catch" for many just toying with the whole simplicity and more self-sufficient idea (much like me... doing what I can now, but not really accomplishing a whole lot).

When we added on to our house a decade ago we added a dining room. Mistake. Wasted space as a dining room, never used. We have a bar in the kitchen, long, to seat all 7 of us, and that's where we eat. It's the tall bar height for eating, with one end butted up against the wall, the other end extends beyond the eating part, with a lower, countertop height for workspace, with cabinets underneath.

Paula
 

gettinaclue

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I hate to be repetitive, but I will be anyway LOL. Please keep in mind, I'm no contractor and some suggestions may just be dumb LOL

A large pantry with room for a freezer, and maybe even an additional 'fridge. We use both of our 'fridges and as much as I love the convenience, the extra is in the way. We currently have it sitting in front of one half of the sliding glass door, so it blocks the additional light it could bring in. It's an eye sore, but there's no where else to put it. Most of my extended family members use 2 'fridges and sometimes 2 freezers of a good size.

Maybe have access to the root cellar from the pantry? I would love a root cellar. :love Or just make it all in one/combo deal - maybe have a seperate section of it that could be used as a tornado shelter.

Tons of storage is something that's needed through the entire house. Places to squirrel away the blankets, coats, and jackets that you aren't using in the summer. The broom, dust mop, mop, hand broom, dust pan, step ladder and cleaning supplies need a seperate home as well to help keep them out of kids reach. Linen closets!!! If you have large or walk in closets in the bedrooms, you could store sheets and the like in there, but you need somewhere to put the towels, TP, shampoo, soap, shaving cream, extra razors etc, etc. I shop whole sale and I love the money I save, but it gets full pretty quick under the sink...and a basket against the wall for towels is a pain.

I would love to have combination wind and solar heating. We don't get enough of one, so would have to incorporate them both to make it a more self sufficient set up. Maybe you could install a "starter pack" of some sort? ..and the home owner could complete installation if they choose - you supply the parts maybe, or you could at least provide the option? That way, building the home would be less expensive and they would be more likely to buy and feel more comfortable with the set up started, but feel good about saving themselves a little money by completing it.

We currently have an outdoor furnace that heats our water and home all winter long. It's fabulous and I love it. Maybe you could partner with a dealer to be able to offer this option on your homes. http://www.heatmor.com/ It's not the exact one we have, but it's very similar. I believe they have come out with an attachment that you can hook up to the dryer so all the dryer has to do is rotate - the heat comes from the fire - no smokey smell. A great thing on rainy/super cold days when hanging out the laundry really isn't doable.

Er... A good size clothes line! Something where I can wash sheets and bedspreads and be able to hang them properly.

A large kitchen with oodles of counter space and storage is essential. I thought we had one big enough when we bought the house, but we have VERY quickly outgrown it as we have become more and more SS. I absolutely despise the space we have between the tops of the cabinets and the ceiling. Sure, it's cute for decoration, but the dust and grease really tend to accumulate and cleaning it is a pain in the behind. I have to crawl up on the counter tops .... not pretty. Maybe make that space for additional storage of things like the canner, water bath, food mill, ball jars, cherry pitters, shellers etc.

Built in gun safe? I noticed a few years ago, there was a trend to "secret rooms" in construction. I even saw a few plans that offered it. Might not be a bad idea. Maybe put the gun safe in there?

What about offering an option to install a butchering station? Let them pick the equipment maybe? and you install? Might not be feasible...

or maybe just have a good stainless steel island where the butchering could be done? I think being able to wheel it out of the way would be a good idea, but also think that having a stainless steel island with a sink and running water would be ideal. Maybe offer a butcher block option if they don't like stainless steel.

I agree with nothing textured. My counter tops and floors are textured and it is a lesson in aggrevation/frustration/anger management trying to keep them clean with kids in the house and a hubby who won't take off his muddy boots.

A utility/mud room with a large sink.

Something with at least a crawl space for easier repairs.

I saw a few years back where, on one side of a house it received direct exposure to the sun and the other was completely shaded. You could stand at one end of the house at the window and look out the window on the other side of the house. Opening both windows provided a good breeze because to the temp differences on the opposite ends of the house.

Somewhere to set out and start growing my seedlings in the spring without having to install grow lights or build an expensive green house.

When we bought this house, a big selling point with us was the kids rooms were on the other side of the house with their own bathroom.

Natural light! Overhead lights are EVIL LOL.

Ceiling fans

A wood stove big enough to cook on if the power goes out and someway to block off the room that it is in to trap the heat if it's necessary.

Hard flooring of some sort.

Great insullation in the walls and ceilings. Not just the stuff that is required to bring it to code, but something that is actually going to be cost effective for the homeowner. - like mom2bbjandag said.

One story. DH has bad knees and we aren't getting any younger. Also less of a falling hazard for the kids.

I don't necessarly want to be close to town, but at least with in a reasonable distance to a country store/gas station.

We have 3.6 acres and are quickly realizing it is going to be crowded with all the fruit and nut trees we want to put in and have a big enough space for a large garden, chicken coop, turkey coop, duck coop - the runs that go to each, along with the berry beds. I think ideally, we would want at least 5 acres and have the house located where I can't see my neighbors and they can't see me, but they are still close enough that we could help them if they needed it.

Maybe have double paned windows with blinds in the middle? That way, the blinds won't get damaged or be in the way and stay nice and functional - but still be practical by being able to close off the east facing windows in the summer to help control the temps.

A screened in porch in the back yard with a large ceiling fan.

The dining room only gets used on the rare occasion we get company - maybe once every 6 months - if that. It's currently my sewing/storage room.
 
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