TOOLS, CONSTRUCTION, ALTERNATIVE ENERGY > What are you building?

Cabin redesign

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Flyin6:
I'll likely cover the actual construction of this cabin over at my "Hide-Site" thread, part 6, but will talk about the design of it here

So I am starting with a 16x32x9 structure with a 12/12 roof with a second floor level at the 8 foot mark. spanning all of the "upstairs"

I'd like to start with an open forum discussion to get me some ideas, as mine are not so great at this point. Some fresh thinking (except from people with names like "Dave") will no doubt contribute.

I have an aggressive plan to actually move into it within two years. We plan to build it, move into it at the farm, then ready our current castle for sale. We will sell this big house and use the profits to fund the building of our final modest 3BR home that will also be built on the farm. I should have $250K-$350K to fund the building of the final home, something like a 2000 sq/ft cape cod on a full foundation with attached garage.

My end goal is to be in heaven. But just before that point, I want to be living in my final home, with one of you knuckleheads visiting and staying in the cabin and have everything...EVERYTHING completely debt free. The pre-rangers who hopefully will be senior rangers with nine combat tours by then will inherit the whole thing and only owe annual taxes. I think I am even going to put in a Hardhead, err, I mean a Harward grave yard there too.

So, I am working on Sketchup at the moment. Did I say working? Correction: Struggling on sketch-up doing all the wrong things. I have added one 8X12 box onto the barn door side to be a future mud room. I will raise that old mechanicals room up to floor level and out of it make at least, a mechanical room, pantry, closet, and something else.

I have sketched a ten foot extension onto the south side to serve as a small bedroom, bathroom, and ????

I still want to add a loft office space to write my drivel and insult all of you(ses) and spend time with my God. Hmmm, seems inappropriate to include God time with insulting boneheads, but, what the hey, that's me!

I want to tear out part of the upper floor to add volume and reduce the cramped feel. I think I will keep the kitchen all in one place against the far wall opposite the mud room, and I will place a mucher preddierier wood stove in a corner beneath the opened up top floor. That will contribute to the spreading of the heat all over to warm my aging tootsies.

I will still need to add on a master bath and bedroom somewhere

Flyin6:
Today's musings:

Flyin6:
^^^^^^^^No where near complete yet.

Kitchen will go in main area left side

Loft will grow out some

Need an engineering space along with a laundry space and more closet space

TexasRedNeck:
Don, my guest house is 16x24 with 12/12 and a loft under the peak.  I have a bath down and kitchenette down.  8 feet would allow for 4 more feet in the bathroom and kitchen and would make a big difference.

Couple of points.  First, good luck with sketch up.  I hated it and just got a big sheet of graph paper and drew it up the old fashioned way.

Second.  I have 12ft walls with the second floor at 9ft, giving me about a 28 inch pony wall upstairs above the floor/ceiling joists.  The reason that is important is that code requires the wall height to be a minimum average across the room, which in my case mean 5ft at the lowest part of the wall.  That gave me 10ft room width. If you don’t have that height of pony wall above the floor your room width will be much narrower.  This also allowed for full length of the building storage between the 5 ft wall height and the outside pony wall which is invaluable in a smaller structure.  You can also place some mechanicals there if needed.  I was originally going to put the water heater there but went tankless on the exterior of the house.  That storage is nice, its about 28 inches deep about 3 ft or so tall and runs the length of the structure on both sides.

Now as you consider stairwell in a smaller structure the traditional stick framed staircase will eat up way too much space.  I had a spiral staircase made of metal and it was a real space saver.  It’s mounted center of the length against one side and allows me to have a small shed dormer over the top to have the appropriate 6’8” minimum clearance above steps.

I used gluelam  for the floor structure and engineered I beam floor/ceiling joists for the second floor which allowed me to keep the floor thickness to a minimum which maximized by ceiling heights on both floors.  9ft down and 10ft at the peak upstairs.

Happy to share pics or point to where the pics are in the hide thread.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

stlaser:
Don, just wanted to point out your doing it all wrong. No specifics really, just that it’s wrong. I’m sure a Ken or Dave will be here shortly with exact issues so don’t fret.

Tex, he lives in the state that doesn’t enforce having working trailer lights on trailers. I don’t think codes are an issue or inspections for that matter.

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