Introducing - Country Living 2014 House of the Year
I've been alluding to the fact that we are augmenting our march toward national brand recognition with a collaboration with an important shelter magazine, and I guess now the cat is out of the bag (now, why the cat was in the bag in the first place is an interesting question I don't think is asked enough).
In Rhinebeck NY, to sync up with one of 3 Country Livings Fairs scattered across mid-America, where folks from the fair can come tour the house.
It's good exposure - and we've been made to pay for every sq inch of that exposure by the stress of a condensed timeline and an incredible harsh winter that left us still searching for the end of it at the beginning of April. Luckily, how the sausage gets made is kept behind closed doors.
A quintessential right-sized home at 1500 sq ft 3 bedrooms 2 baths 5+ acres lots of porch on a quiet country road about 4 miles outside of Rhinebeck.
Good Stuff.


Hudson River Renovation
Deck progress. We used the cedar siding to wrap the posts and then used our see through cable rail to really keep it open.




The Shack's Shed
We are building a Shed at the 500 sq ft Shack.
Here's an article on the Owner -
Upstate Getaway




Cottage 46 - April Fools Joke


So the two young men who are building Cottage 46 with us in Narrowsburg NY got a surprise the other week when we sprung on them that we actually were 30% done with their home that they thought hadn't even started.

The story starts like this - we do a deal, and then the winter hit hard, and instead of fighting the elements and ending up with quality or warranty issues, we just made the mature and correct decision to hold off till spring - a hard choice, but the right one. And a house is a long term investment, so losing 4 months might hurt, it's not a super big deal big picture. The fact that they had made like all their decisions way early (unlike another project I'm working on not mentioning any names) made the surprise possible.

So, when the brutality of the winter settled in and we got used to it and it became just another predictable hurdle to hurdle, we could regroup and make a plan. So we snuck in the woods and test the ground and underneath the leaves and snow, the ground wasn't frozen. the next week was predicted to be 40 degrees, for about 6 days, before dropping back into artic land (can't pour foundation in too cold of weather - so worst case scenario was we opened the hole, dug the foundation, and then the weather dropped preventing us from proceeding or going back).

So we got the foundation in and then we were off to the races. I'd write the guys emails like "I'm so sorry, this is the longest winter ever, and I don't know when we will be able to get started and I know this is a big bummer, but life is hard and unfair..." I was like a kid before Christmas, trying not to tell them casue I knew they'd be digging it.


And now today we start insulating, since the mechanicals and electric is done.
Happy Easter.