Our lot early on...
What a journey we've been on since we first decided to sell our home on Saratoga Road and purchase a lot in Langley. Numerous reasons drove our decision -- living in town to have walkable or bike able services; being on a reliable bus route; leaving a too-busy road; finding a sunnier location for growing our food and heating our home with solar; opening up the possibility of giving up our automobile; having more neighbors; and, in general, wanting to walk our talk. The walk-our-talk was living smaller and more sustainably -- closer to the earth. Being green! How could we live a life less harsh on the earth? How could we shop locally, eat locally, and although we've shrugged off much of the speed and need of this modern consuming life, could we shrug off even more?
It was with excitement that we found the perfect lot to build on. Great land contours; southern exposure; dead end road; in the city limits; and with all utilities set up for servicing our new home. Bonus: great neighbors.
Next came the design of our home. Naturally our architectually-educated son was our first choice for the design work. He already understood us and our needs and desires plus he has his own personal commitment to building small, efficient, green homes. Then we began the long design process -- a year for us -- to come up with a design that would, we hoped, fit our needs, our site, our budget and our aesthetic desires. We pretty much stayed on the same program throughout the process but the concept, although unchanged, led us down many roads of what about this? or this? or...?
Less efficient, but critical for privacy when living small, was our desire for our living spaces to reside under separate roofs. Also, necessary, in our minds for our life style, was to create lots of outdoor covered space so we could enjoy being outdoors even in the NW's frequent rainy weather. We needed space for hobbies, household building and repair tasks, storage for recreational equipment, two offices, entertaining and gathering spots, guest facilities -- all under 1000 sq. ft.
Naturally budget was a factor, as were escalating prices. Time wasn't necessarily our friend, but neither would moving too quickly. Dissatisfaction with the result was not an option. Finding a balance between moving steadily forward, but not too fast, yet enjoying each day as it unfolded was our challenge. Another challenge was to provide the love and respect between all family members so we all felt heard, important, satisfied and pleased with not only the end product but with our relationships with one another along the way. After all, if the relationships are destroyed what good is a lovely new home.
The Barn
The barn is complete so we're now more than one third of the way finished (more if you count design). The other two buildings are well on their way, with framing of the guesthouse happening this week. As we witness what we're creating we can't help but reflect on the fact that this is no ordinary house. We will need to live differently. Collecting too much stuff is not an option! We've designed so the house can expand or shrink as needed but, naturally the question, despite all our planning, is will the spaces work as hoped? Will each individual space meet the multiple uses we intend? Will the big spaces (that are actually quite small) be big enough to accommodate larger groups? Will the kitchen, unlike any other I've ever seen, function well? The answers will unfold, along with our changing life styles to meet the challenges of this new home.
But, through it all the process remains, with the exception of an occasional meltdown, wonderful. Despite the absence of any desire to build a new home, or create the "dream" home, we've found that engaging in building our own unique living space is exciting. It is further enhanced by the creativity of working with a designer who is able to step outside the typical home design. It will be our pleasure to live in these uniquely special spaces.
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