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| Greenbuilding Archive for January 2002 |
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| 564 messages, last added Tue Nov 26 17:26:28 2002 |
[Date Index][Thread Index]
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Reuben,
That was hilarious & right on the money. What
we are really after is the "Not So Big an Impact House".
Mark
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2002 3:29
PM
Subject: Re: [GBlist] Not so big? not so
small either.....
I had another look at a copy of Ms. Susanka's very
popular Have-Your-Cake-And-Eat-It-Too Bible, and encountered the
following:
"Not-So-Big doesn't necessarily mean small. It means not as
big as you thought you needed....a Not-So Big house is approximately a
third smaller than your original goal but about the same price as your
original budget."
Sarah Susanka, "Creating the Not So Big House," p.
9
She features her own house prominently in the book but never reveals
just how Not-Big it is. At what appear to be three stories + loft + an opulent
attached two-car garage I would guess it to be somewhere in the vicinity of
2500 square feet. Lots of uncoventional angles, features, materials, etc.
While her ideas may well be more pleasing to live in and view in coffee table
book-form, I am not sure, materially speaking, whether her house should be
assumed a-priori to place any fewer demands on the earth's resources than the
ones she is reacting to.
On second reading I find this book of hers an
only thinly disguised attempt to re-conceptualize wealthy folks' over-sized
dream homes in ways that more fully allow creative, personalized
self-indulgence. Aesthetics 8.5/10 Environment 1.5/10
Reuben
Deumling
At 5:03 PM -0500 1/8/2002, Martin&Caruso wrote:
Hi everyone,
This is a little
coincidence here for me, I had just checked out "creating the not-so-big
house" from the library when this discussion began....one of the homes in it
is in my town, Beaufort, SC, in an extremely (in my opinion) ritzy
subdivision.
I live with my husband, two kids, and two large breed
dogs in a slowly crumbling 906 sq. foot trailer, excuse me, mobile home. The
houses in this book that are called "not so big" look enormously huge to me.
We are thinking of building three small structures that will eventually be,
in total, approx. 1500 square feet. Some of the homes in the book are pretty
cool but for the most part I did not see anything especially exciting.
However I was watching extreme homes on HGTV and saw a really awesome
example of something like we want to do with our land, several structures,
small in size and well placed to avoid as much damage to the landscape as
possible-this really cool hawaiian tree house, etc. Did anyone else see
that? and also, does building in a tree have a damaging effect on the tree
or can it be done without hurting it? Just curious, we don't have any
suitable trees here for that, or at least I haven't seen one that has just
cried out "build a house on me", actually I am likely not to do that since I
love trees more than I love most of my relatives and would feel like I was
imposing (still haven't figured out how I am going to deal with having to
put wood structures up to live in since that is made from former trees,
hoping to find alternatives before I get that far, which is why I joined
this list, obviously)
Anyway, I don't see how anyone could call a
2000 square foot house small.
Elizabeth /fontfamily> /fontfamily>
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