Posts Tagged home plans

Understanding Your House Plans

When it comes to reading your house plans, it can be quite confusing. It seems as though there are too many symbols, lines and drawings to decipher. With a quick overview of the items that make up your plans, you will be reading them in no time.

The first thing you need to do is take your ranch style home plans and spread them out where you have plenty of room. You should probably make plenty of room on a large table so you don’t feel cramped while trying to read them. There are several different sections that make up your house plans. There are the site plan, the floor plan, and an elevation. Depending on your house plans, you might have even more parts that go with the plans. These plans are little maps that help each different construction worker do their job exactly right.

The site plan is drawn to show the location of the home on the property and how it will sit within the boundaries of the lot. This plan is drawn from the overhead perspective so those who will be pouring the foundation know where to begin. The site plan also includes the location of utility services, easements, driveways and walkways. You can use this drawing to get a general idea of what your house will look like in the empty lot that sits there now.

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Southern Home Floor Plans – The Subject of New Book

An important new book of Southern home floor plans has been published by the Southern Architecture Foundation. Southern Architecture Illustrated (ISBN: 0-932958-23-0) is a compendium of over two hundred and fifty photographs, which illustrate over a hundred residential designs and forty-two floor plans. This invaluable design volume was originally published by Harman Publishing Company of Atlanta in 1931. The original had a foreword written by Lewis Crook, A.I.A. from Atlanta; and it had an introduction written by Dwight Baum, A.I.A. of New York City. The selection of plans and illustrations of outstanding suburban and country homes in America’s Southland was made by a committee of prominent local architects. The Southern Architecture Foundation’s new slipcase publication of this landmark work is the S.A.F.’s second publication, the first being The Architecture of James Means – Georgia Classicist, which was issued in the fall of 2001. Southern Architecture Illustrated presents a heady look into an almost forgotten pre-Depression world. This architecture of Southern coastal vernacular home plans includes some of the ritziest early twentieth century suburban and country houses in the South. What makes the presentation so particularly appealing is the included floor plans – and also the shadowy, quaint, green sepia-type photographs with their chiaroscuro quality.

Although there are lots of porticoes, nonetheless the majority of plans represented are of modern-style homes – new yet classic – with the particular taste of the South in the antique; in fine fabrics, prints, and painting; in fine landscaping with every Southern hospitality in mind, awaiting the stylish party guests to arrive. These plans featured Southern cottage house plans morning rooms, sleeping porches, and drawing rooms which were decorated by exclusive firms such as Porter and Porter – Interiors – of Atlanta’s Peachtree Street; and of James Blauvelt of New York City.

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