Thursday, November 27, 2008

Calculating Sun Angles


A powerful (and free...) tool for modeling is Google's 'Sketchup'. We regularly use Sketchup to help our clients envision their new addition or new house. For Stacey and Matthew Flier, a primary concern for their new sunroom addition was: how will the sun come through the windows or be blocked by the eaves throughout the year? We designed the roof overhangs in Sketchup, using a tool to view the sun angles throughout the year. This animated model shows sun angles in the afternoons from January to December.
You can see how the overhangs effectively block the sun in the early summer months, but not in the late summer and early fall. This study told us that a pergola would be necessary to help shade the lower windows and glass french doors for those months.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Making it Look Like It's Always Been There

Why do some house additions stick out like sore thumbs? Most times, it's because the addition was just 'done' without drawings or a consideration of how it would really look.

Most of our clients at Spinnaker Architect come to us with the question... "Can we build this addition and still make it look like it belongs to the original house?" Of course! That's our specialty!

Dan & Fran Compton's House - can you tell what part is the addition?


Here's a BEFORE picture. If you didn't spot the addition, don't feel bad - several of Dan & Fran's neighbors and friends missed it, too! After they completed the addition in 2005, some of their friends (who hadn't seen the construction) asked them, "Weren't you planning a big addition project this summer?" They were delighted to answer, yes, and it's done - can't you see it?

This picture (above) is the house my husband and I live in, and it's where I operate Spinnaker Architect. In 2008, I managed construction for a whole house remodel that we had been planning on doing for 4 years. When the new roof was being installed, neighbors who are kitty-corner to our house stopped by because they needed resolution on an arguement they were having: the husband thought that we were just getting a new roof, and the wife said, "No, they added that whole new piece on the roof!" Sure enough, she was right - we had added a dormer, and enclosed the front porch. The photo below shows our house BEFORE the project.