Home Plan Detail
Shaping the Seasons
Plan ID Number: LM-713
Designed by: Linda Moody
Linda Moody Architects & Associates, Inc

Specifications
Square Footage
Total living area: 2,226Main Level:1,246 Upper Level:915 Turret:65 Footprint:
Rooms
Bedrooms: 2Bathrooms: 2.0
Master suite: Upper Floor
Attributes
Levels: 2Foundation:
Features
- Cellar/Basement
- Screened Porch
- Garden Room
- Study/Turret
- Whirlpool w/View
- Skylights
Description

This eco-friendly version of the New England saltbox, was featured in the July/Aug. 2004 issue of "Natural Home" magazine. Wood clapboards, double hung windows, and gables to maximize second floor space, are contextual features of this uniquely New England design. Colors come from nature, such as natural cedar stain on clapboards, and leaf green for trim. A garden room, located on the southwest corner of the house, is a two-story passive solar space with about 90 square feet of south-facing glass and a crushed stone/bluestone floor (which, as thermal mass, absorbs and stores the sun's heat, then slowly disperses it at night). On the second floor, the master bedroom features a whirlpool bath surrounded by windows.
Though the floor plan is open, it allows for intimate spaces, with bumpouts for a piano nook and a reading alcove off the dining room. Varying ceiling heights and planes make each space different. The kitchen, for example, has a low ceiling of tongue-and-groove 1x6 pine and is open to the living room with its pine cathedral ceiling. An upstairs mezzanine overlooks the living room. A brick masonry woodstove provides most of the heat for the house. Not only does it burn efficiently and cleanly, the brick acts as thermal mass, retaining heat to release throughout the day and night. Passive cooling is provided through a combination of ventilation and shading. The roof's large two' overhang provides summer shade, as does a large screened porch on the west. Along with operable skylights in the cathedral ceilings, a turret above the second floor expels hot air at the high point of the house.
When it was built in Massachusetts in 1988, construction cost for "Shaping The Seasons" was $75 a square foot.
Foundation Info
This house was originally designed to have a basement foundation. However, if you prefer a crawlspace or a slab foundation, these are fairly simple and inexpensive changes that your builder can often make for you. If the basement design is not displayed in the Floor Plans, it's because it is unfinished.
Floor Plans
(click to enlarge and view measurements)
Elevations
(click to enlarge)







