Wednesday, December 9, 2015

House and Home as a Journey

While a house is a journey, a home is a journey also. A home is about making a house into one’s home. At Building Arts we believe that a house is more than a collection of rooms (even well decorated ones), and while your house may constitute your arrival home, it is also continuation of your own journey. A good home design should facilitate this journey, and it can do this in a number of ways.

The extent to which your house supports your life includes not only the comfortable and secure places into which you can retreat, but also those that incorporate passage or mystery.

A window, for example can simply be an opening in the wall, or it can be a place for your imagination to reside.


A window can also be a place to rest.

A wall may be punctuated with doors or windows.

One’s journey can be enhanced by creating discrete yet interconnected rooms.

Long views with marker points which break the view into segments make a house feel larger without feeling voluminous.

Through the hint of a room beyond, rather than simply a door into a room, we create the feeling of passage to that room.

Why should a house be a journey? For one thing it is analogous to each of our lives as a journey. We reside in our house and our house resides in us. 

The idea of the permanence of one's home within ourselves is poignantly expressed in this NYTimes essay by Alan Wightman, The Ghost House of My Childhood, in which the author describes a return to his childhood home:
I turn onto West Cherry Circle, drive past familiar houses. Flowers are blooming, it’s spring. But something is wrong. The house isn’t here. There’s a hole in space where the house used to be. Slowly, I inch up the driveway and park the car. Something is terribly wrong. I feel as if I’m not in my body any longer. My body is a distant, cold moon. There was a two-story house here, with pink brick walls and a porch with white posts and dormer windows. I can see right through the empty air to bushes and trees on the other side. And on the ground where the house was, new grass. Not a single brick or splinter or piece of debris.
A home is a journey as with traveling. Imagine yourself on a train, which is a room moving through the landscape or the city, on the way to your destination. If you are feeling delight or anticipation in your travel, this is not unlike the way you might feel moving about a well designed home—a journey, even though your house is not moving. At Building Arts, we strive to achieve this feeling of delight as you, the homeowner, move through your own home.

Friday, September 18, 2015

Allison Landers Joins Building Arts Team

Building Arts Sustainable Architecture+Construction, LLC is thrilled to have Allison Landers join the Building Arts team! This partnership brings together a combination of talents unparalleled in the Twin Cities' residential architecture and construction community.

When I began Building Arts’ practice in 1998, my goal was to provide a seamless design and construction process for our remodeling clients by combining space-planning, architectural design, and construction. At that time, architects were generally not contractors, and design-build firms were a new concept. We were moving away from the idea of using products as an end in themselves, and instead centered our process around our clients’ lives and families.

Allison Landers
alanders@building-arts.net
With the addition of award-winning residential designer Allison Landers to the Building Arts team, we can expand and deepen our approach of client-centered design.

Allison has been in the Residential Design+Build industry for 11+ years. Among her many awards, she was named Best of St. Louis Park's 2013 Interior Designer in the St. Louis Park Magazine and Best of Houzz 2015 in design and customer satisfaction.

Allison has played many roles: Lead design, sales, draftsman, estimator, specifier and artist. Within all of these roles her core beliefs have been a huge asset: patience, the ability to listen, artistry, individuality and flexibility. She is passionate about creating an individuals' dream home; from a tiny powder room to a new build, there is not a project that she does not love and dive into head on. She also shares our interest and expertise in making more sustainable living environments.
I try to keep the process simply for active working families. Everybody has a budget. But so much can be done even in small spaces to make life more functional and beautiful.

It is therefore with great excitement that we introduce Allison Landers as the newest member of our Building Arts team in order to carry on our cherished ways of working with clients.

You can find Allison on LinkedIn, Houzz, and now also on our Building Arts About page. Please join us in welcoming Allison to our team!

Building Arts' New Team: Ben, Bella (mascot), Harvey, Allison

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Home is an Indelible Place

I have felt this for a long time, but haven't been able to put it into these words. Recently, I came across an article in the New York Times Sunday Review (January 11, 2015), The Battle to Belong written by Roger Cohen. He considers home in a larger sense than a house. That is, the place and culture of one's history. Cohen writes:
“(Home) is the landscape of unfiltered experience, of things felt rather than thought through, of the world in its beauty absorbed before it is understood, of patterns and sounds that lodge themselves in the psyche and call out across the years. When home is left behind or shattered, an immense struggle often ensues to fill the void.”
One's house, made into a home, comes to be a setting or a container for this view of our world.

The spirit in which Building Arts designs and builds is to treat each of our clients’ homes as such a setting, and so this seemed a good jumping off point for our 2015 blog series since it so aptly captures our intentions.

“Indelible” is defined as “that which cannot be removed, washed away, or erased.”  This does not mean that when one leaves one's home for another or changes their home, that something is lost, but rather something is carried with you. It is that “something” that intrigues and motivates us at Building Arts.

When one embarks to change their home through remodeling, it is not simply a matter of taking down a wall or making a kitchen larger or dressing it with the latest fashion in cabinets and counters, so we encourage our clients to work with us from a place “of unfiltered experience, of things felt… of beauty absorbed… of patterns and sounds that lodge themselves in the psyche….” This is not always completely achievable, but we try, since following this path will lead to better connection between you and your home; it makes for a better product.

How, then, does this translate into working with our clients and their homes? I believe in examining what exists. Every house, no matter how ordinary or elaborate has been built to meet needs and desires, so we look in depth to determine what should be held on to (what cannot be washed away) and what might change to serve our client.

I also firmly believe that we are designing and building for our clients, not for ourselves as designers, that it is YOUR home and that the essence of change should come from you. I interpret, helping you translate into spaces, materials, colors, textures, light, rhythm, views—those components which make for resonance with your living space. Of course, we bring ideas for you to reflect on, based on what you tell us and on our observations of your living in your home, physically and emotionally. That's the fun part, sorting through and reflecting on possibilities via a process of iteration, but here’s the key: if you think too hard, it won't work!

At Building Arts, we are VERY good home planners and designers.  Ours is not a process that makes your remodel more expensive, only better conceived.  We do have an affinity for projects which add to the value, durability and life of your home, such as siding, windows and roofs, moisture mitigation and energy performance, and we do these projects in a similar spirit—that thought must go into the character of the home and how the products and methods used will appropriately to strengthen your resonance with your home.

Photo of architect Harvey Sherman in his office
Harvey Sherman, Architect


Photos taken from Lake Nokomis green kitchen and family room addition and South Minneapolis den addition.