Home Plan Detail
The Cottage
Plan ID Number: KA-008
Designed by: R W Knight
Knight Architecture

Specifications
Square Footage
Total living area: 1,539Main Level:924
Upper Level:615
Footprint:
Rooms
Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 2.0
Master suite: Upper Floor
Attributes
Levels: 2House Height:
Ceiling Heights:
Main level 8' 0"
Upper level 8' 0" Vaulted Ceilings in the:
FOY
Features
- Efficient Floor Plan
- Large Deck
- Bay Windows
- Entry Foyer
- Fireplace
- Upstairs Storage
Description
This house was featured in Christian and Christen Gladu's book, "Bungalow Plans". The Cottage is a shingled cabin designed for the shores of a beautiful harbor on the Maine coast, where it is important to have a house that talks the language of its 19th century neighbors. With its cottage–like appearance and features, as well as its compact shape, it would also work well on many other types of sites. This house was designed with the formal entrance at the opposite end from the view side, where the windows are located.
Cottages of the past were always very much about porches, but putting the porches on the south side made these houses very dark. So the architect took the south porch and filled it with living space, but still expressed it in the roof line. This leaves just a corner of covered porch on the southeast where you can sit on a dripping day or stand out of the rain and check your boat on its mooring. Likewise the generous porch on the north is essential to really establish the entry and get the scale of the building down.
Immediately inside the entry door is an entry hall with a high ceiling and the staircase. It gives one access to the downstairs bedroom and bath or the upper two bedrooms and their bath without traipsing all through the house. The main space of the house is a unified kitchen/dining/living space. The result is a sweep of space, yet there is also some separation with the dining area out in the front in what amounts to a bay. On the east side of the bay is a window, and on the west is a low wall that separates a small sitting area that could either be built-in seats or a small office. The 'living room' is a furniture grouping gathered around the fireplace and is focused on it. A lot of the action in most houses really happens around the dining room table, so why not put it in the view and let the living room look over it to get a view. The big deck that makes up the foreground of this plan is really dictated somewhat by the site. On this particular site it grounds this house to a rock ledge that slopes steeply down to the harbor, but your site might dictate something very different.
The upstairs of this house has two nice bedrooms under the eaves of the roof, each with a window seat for views and daydreaming. The east bedroom doesn't have a closet, but can accommodate an armoire. There is a hidden storage area under the eaves, a bit low but useful, that is accessed from the back of the west bedroom closet. Even if you don't use it, the children will love it. Both rooms have a sink in them, because the client remembers them in the cottage that he grew up in on this site. They were left in because it seems like a pretty civilized idea for what is a very civilized house.
Foundation Info
This house was originally designed to have a crawlspace foundation. However, if you prefer a basement or slab foundation, these are fairly simple and inexpensive changes that your builder can often make for you.
Please Note
Due to licensing agreements, this home may not be built in Hancock County, Maine.
Floor Plans
(click to enlarge and view measurements)
Elevations
(click to enlarge)







