Posts Tagged by homes
What’s Your Number?
| November 22, 2011 | Posted by Lauren Moss under architecture, Design, Guest Bloggers, Outdoors |
Regardless of design, location or style, there’s at least one essential thing that all homes have in common: address numbers. (And mailboxes, but that’s for another post…)
Often overlooked as a purely utilitarian feature of residential design, house numbers can be utilized as exterior detailing that not only defines location, but reflects the aesthetics of the inhabitants while creating interest and visual appeal.
So, for your Tuesday morning, a few fun finds to add a bit of design to your entry, while directing guests in the right direction…
A favorite of architects: mid-century modern numbers, designed by Richard Neutra in the 1930′s.
Add a bit of green to your entry with these artificial turf and aluminum numbers from Potted.
If you prefer doing the gardening yourself, consider this multifunctional and unique Metal Lantern address sign.
To light up your entry, check out these efficient solar LED address numbers- no wiring necessary!
These are just a few, and the options for house number signage are great and diverse enough to fit any style, budget and application. Integrate them into a low wall, light them from below, create a custom planter- the opportunities for creativity are infinite, so use your numbers to keep things interesting and inviting…
Because, after all, no matter how beautifully designed and well-appointed one’s house may be, it can’t be appreciated if it can’t be found!
Lauren Moss is a LEED Architect and owner of Moss-Yaw Design. You can find her writing about architecture, design and generally cool stuff over at her blog MYDStudio.
sustainable by design: modernism meets passive solar
| March 25, 2010 | Posted by Lauren Moss under architecture, Guest Bloggers, Sustainable Living |
So, most of us architecture fans are familiar with the work of Jacques Herzog, Pritzker prize-winning partner at the firm behind the Tate Modern, a great example of adaptive reuse, and the Dominus Winery, a well-known stateside project that employs gabion walls as thermal mass.
For today’s post, however, we’d like to take a look at a lesser-known Herzog and a residential project that was designed in the 1970′s, but still resonates today as an early embodiment of energy efficient architecture. The House at Regensburg, Germany, by Thomas Herzog, is elegant in its simplicity, with a form that enables one of the most fundamental principles of sustainable design: passive temperature control through the thoughtful use of material and geometry, coupled with an understanding of how to manage thermal gains from solar energy.
The ‘sunspace’ concept has been in practice since the Victorian era, when conservatories were added to the exterior of buildings to control heat transfer, by providing a space between the exterior and interior to moderate daytime and evening temperatures.
Herzog employs this concept in the House at Regensburg, but within a distinctly modernist, rational form. The sunspaces (also serving as greenhouses) face south, and the structure is divided into zones along the north-south axis. The main enclosed living space is connected to the sunspaces with an intermediate hallway, as seen in the image of this transitional space below.
The entire system of spaces is enclosed by an angled plane of dual pane glass above the sunspace zone that turns into a titanium-zinc roof structure above the living spaces. This spatial integration of solar gain, transitional, and occupied zones allows for a simple triangular form. The visual strength of this form is apparent from the side, clad in locally sourced wood, which softens the minimalist form with contextual, sustainable materials.
A quick analysis of how solar energy is captured, stored, and re-radiated to maintain a comfortable temperature during the winter months is indicated in the section diagrams below.

During the daytime in the winter months, solar radiation penetrates into the sunspace, as well as the main living spaces at a low angle, allowing light and heat to enter the home.
To manage temperature at night, the concept of thermal mass is incorporated into the design and informs material selection. Heat is gained and stored in the stone floors throughout the day and released slowly in the evenings to warm the occupied spaces. Dual pane windows serve to further insulate the space.
This is a strategy used in countless projects, both old and new. Today, we often see concrete utilized to serve this purpose, as discussed in February’s case study analysis of Stryker Sonoma Winery. Last month, we also discussed the importance of site and context, and it’s relevant in today’s discussion as well…
Herzog designed the House at Regensburg to sit lightly on the earth, with a raised floor system which minimizes any potential environmental disturbance and protects existing drainage patterns, as well as the numerous beech trees on the site. In fact, the design responds to immediate context by removing the sunspace element at a location where an existing beech tree remains.
Maintaining the natural tree canopy not only is inherently ecologically responsible, but this practice also provides for shade and natural cooling in the summer months by moderating the microclimate at the site. Lifting the structure off the ground also aids in passive cooling by allowing airflow beneath the building and enabling natural ventilation.
One of the reasons we have featured this experimental home today is to emphasize the fact that environmentally responsive design doesn’t mean a building has to look a certain way. Herzog rejected the widely-held belief during the early 1970′s that energy efficient design had to adhere to a specific aesthetic. As opposed to many designers of the era, who turned to an anti-industrial ideology to help them define ecologically responsive form, he celebrated the convergence of science, modernism, and innovation to generate a unique solution.
The House at Regensburg has helped us to expand our understanding of sustainable design and to underscore the truth that creativity is not compromised by sustainability. Creativity is, in fact, enhanced by this type of contextual and innovative thinking, and makes for a project that is, as we like to call it, sustainable by design.
We love it here.
| March 23, 2010 | Posted by David Betz under architecture, Guest Bloggers, Inspiration, Real Estate |
One of my (lame) past times is just driving around going nowhere. It helps me think. “East side” Costa Mesa, CA is on the way down to PCH from where we live, and I’ll usually take the long way and drool over the nice houses along the way. Yes, people, I know that I am not normal. This also gives me an opportunity to see what people are up to in the area and potentially nab a few ideas. Being that I am in the remodeling business, I can use the mileage as a write-off, since I am doing research. Right?
All of Costa Mesa tends to be a melting pot, architecturally, especially compared to the sterile, and perfectly manicured 10-15 year old communities just to the south of us. One street will have $1M homes up and down the block, turn the corner and you’re surrounded by ratty apartment buildings, go one block further still, and there will be a mixture of both. Perfect is boring, and our fair city is far from it.
Let’s have a look at a few of the nicer houses, and one at the end that shows how loose they are with their regulations here.
Absolutely stunning with the black trim.
Not a great pic or an amazing house, but this is a quintessential Costa Mesa home.
Do you have a house painted black in your neighborhood? I didn’t think so!
A barn and a boat. I really need to knock on their door one day, and introduce myself. They are certain to be interesting people.
6 Awe-Inspiring New Green Homes
| January 26, 2010 | Posted by Linsi Brownson under architecture, i heart this blog, Sustainable Living |
Found a great article today on The Daily Green
6 Awe-Inspiring New Green Homes

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