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To make it interesting they set about designing a Usonian style
one story brick house, not just a year 2000 style house with
vinyl windows, asphalt shingles and finger jointed wood trim,
but a red brick, cypress wood, glass, tile roof house with a
red concrete radiantly heated floor slab and built-in furniture.
In so far as possible the plan, construction and aesthetics
would be a revival of the Usonian experience sixty years after
Frank Lloyd Wright invented the Usonian house and the word Usonia
which more or less means United States of North America. We
call the house “Red House” because of the red brick,
red mortar, red concrete, red cypress, and red fir woods used
in the construction.
By September of this year the project will be completed. The
finished product will incorporate many Usonian concepts. The
building section will be reminiscent of the Hagan house, “Kentuck
Knob” and others. The plan will resemble all of the “L”
shaped houses and the Erdman Prefab #1 houses. The windows and
French doors reproduce the standard Usonian house ones and are
installed between clear 2”x8” vertical grain Douglas
Fir wood columns spaced 4’-0” on center without
any trim. The horizontal brick joints are raked and the vertical
joints are flush. The mortar is red. The concrete floor is colored
tile red with pigmented hardener and finished with Johnson’s
wax. Grid lines are cut in the slab 4’-0” on center
in both directions. Only the Master bath floor and the shower
floors have tile finishes. The soffits, fascia, and Interior
coves are finished with clear cypress boards. The partitions
are paneled both sides with 11” wide clear cypress boards
alternating with 2” recessed battens. The vertical module
is 1’-1”, being one board and one batten.The ceilings
are the underside of 2”X10” roof rafters. The roof
is sloped 1’ in 3’ and is covered in with concrete
tiles with 1” thick butts, giving the roof a definite
horizontal appearance. Outdoor terraces are level with the interior
floors making the interior space flow seamlessly outside through
3’-10” wide French door openings. And so-on down
to the last detail excepting the use of piano hinges on all
doors and cabinets.
I intend to publish photos of the completed project when available
and subsequently write about what it is like to live in a Usonian
house.
Additionally I will add information and photos to the site about
a specific aspect of design or construction which I think will
be interesting. I would also be happy to cover construction
techniques, structural analysis, and materials if anyone expresses
an interest in this information.
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