Flattop Story: Designing for the Property
The first time we visited the property where Flattop now stands, we saw a small and semi-rough 15-sided house with a view over the Salish Sea.
The house was move-in ready, if you didn't mind aging appliances and very limited insulation. For us, it was perfect, as it gave us a way to experience the location while designing our future home.
For two years, we split our time between Seattle and Orcas Island and got to know the property, the weather patterns, the position of the sun across seasons, our proximity from the services and stores, and more. We noted anything that could help us ensure the future house would account for the location. In terms of livability, this was essential.
A Few Examples
The Sun
Flattop faces west and in the summer, the sun sets in the middle of the water view. It's beautiful and I would never want to change it, but it does come with issues. The west side of Flattop is mostly glass and when sun hits it, the rooms can warm up quickly. It's also incredibly bright as it reflects off the water.
Being long-time residents of the pacific northwest, we're a bit like vampires in terms of our exposure to the sun. Our sun-seeking friends disagree, but we often feel it's too bright. Knowing this about ourselves, we looked at how we could account for the sun in our design and make the house more livable.
The first decision was easy. We'd need shades on all the west facing rooms, and not just any shades. We'd need blackout shades. The great room needed special attention thanks to floor to ceiling glass that stretches 24 feet across the room. Covering that much glass would be a challenge. The manufacturer could accomodate the shades, but that was only part of the equation. Because the view was important to us, we wanted to hide the rolled up shade in the ceiling, virtually out of sight.
It took some problem solving by our GC and creative carpentry to make it happen, but today, the shades do exactly what we need. They make the rooms livable in the warm summer sun and few people notice they are there when it's dark.
Repair Proximity
When we lived in Seattle, we had roller shades that operated with an electric motor and could be programmed to open and close. When we started to consider shades at Flattop, we looked into the motorized option and an idea struck. We now lived on an island without people ready to service an electric motor. It wouldn't be easy to fix if it stopped working. So, we chose a system which has worked reliably for thousands of years: a pulley.
The Wind
In our first summer on the property, we noticed that warm summer days consistently ended with a persistent wind going west, toward the water. This is apparently a phenomenon called a "land breeze".
Having noted this, it became a part of our design. We imagined ending a warm day by opening windows on the east and west sides of the house so that the evening wind could blow the warm air away and replace it with cool fresh air. To accomplish this, we added operable windows across the east side of the house.
The Rocks
Orcas Island is also called "Rock Island" and rightfully so. Near the coastline, the island is predominately made of hard rock that was exposed when glaciers flowed by in the last ice age. In terms of construction, the rocks offer a dependable substrate that will hold the house in place. What we didn't realize in the design phase, is what would be required to remove some of the rock to make room for the house's foundation. The rock hammering took weeks and was far more expensive that we expected. Had we looked into the reality of building at our location, we may have identified ways to avoid it.
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