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Home Plans: 1 - 5 of 69
Architect:
Ed Kriskywicz
Construction Design
Mountain Woods was designed to blend in with and be surrounded by nature. Architecturally, the interior is all about interesting angles and versatility.
Architect:
D.R. Coleman, AIA
Passive Solar Design
Solstice is a simple yet distinctive home, with a large first floor that includes the master suite, and a unique floor plan for the upper level. The great room is vaulted, as are all of the upstairs rooms. If you wish to take advantage of its passive solar design, the front of this house should face north.
Architect:
Jean Larson, AIA
SALA Architects, Inc.
This new farm house looks like it belonged to the land in its agrarian past. The house is nestled into the east side of a knoll, and looks out onto a pasture of wild grasses. Its form revives the simplicity and good proportions of classic farm-houses seen across the rural areas of the Midwest.
Architect:
Michaela Mahady, AIA, CID, Principal
SALA Architects, Inc.
There is something about this beautiful Craftsman–style house that seems to make everyone who sees it fall in love with it. The steep–pitched roofs (with a unique curving "lip" over the entry), combined with the shingles, wood siding, and wood detailing, produce an exterior that dazzles all who approach it.
Architect:
Francis Sullivan
Francis Sullivan Architect
Originally designed for an energy efficient specialty builder, this two–story craftsman style house won an award from Efficiency Vermont. Red cedar shingles and decorative trim provide a slightly rustic look to this exceptional home. The many windows and expansive feeling on the first floor prove that a house need not be a windowless box to meet high standard energy codes, and leave a small carbon footprint.
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Home Plans: 1 - 5 of 69

