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The List, Windows, and Perspectives

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Last Sunday, Jack started rattling off everything that had to be accomplished this week. He was getting overwhelmed and I was overwhelmed in listening to him. I said, “let’s put it on a list so we can keep track.” And we did. Now that it is Friday, I am proud to announce 98% of the items were accomplished.

The List of tasks for one week

Among the items on that list was to have windows and exterior doors delivered. Check. Begin installation, check. Those windows were heavier than they had anticipated. After a few strained muscles, they rented a lift.

Windows installed on house facing road

Windows installed on house facing road

Up close.  Love the passive solar outriggers!

Up close. Love the passive solar outriggers!

A friend sent me a photo of our house under construction from the water. It gave me a new perspective. Then last week, I was taking a golf cart ride down the runway and got another perspective. One day I had to use a neighbor’s driveway since ours was blocked and got another perspective. I think the house will blend in once it is complete. It’s often good to see things from more than one angle (or perspective). That is so in life too, right?

As seen from the lake cove

As soon from the lake cove

House from the runway

House from the runway

From two houses over

From two houses over

All Roofed In!

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Panel Pros are pro! They spent 10 days here and put on the roofing panels, completed the tongue and groove, foamed all of the joints, added vapor tape and cleaned up! Coming from New England, they loved our weather and southern hospitality. They went home with a better tan than any beach vacation!RoofingPanels
Here is Scott working on the lift. Those men scampered all over that roof!
Manlift
Jack took several of the crew for airplane rides then I insisted on a photo. This was taken as they left the job site Thursday April 18. Thanks guys!
PanelPros

Next steps: Footers for the porches, Tyvec house wrap, install doors, windows and garage doors, build chimney shell, and tarpaper and tile the roof.

I am thinking of these colors:
Feedback?
Hardiplank or Certainteed (the same thing) reps are coming this week to do an estimate on siding. The two beiges are my finalists for the main siding with the darker trimming around the large windows and using the same color on the decks and porches. The green is the roof.
Siding colors

Enjoy the pollen!

Springtime at Bedford Landings

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OK, so last week, we got 3 inches of snow and yesterday it was 87 degrees! Crazy, I know! But, we remain busy! Jack worked to build the second floor walls. Tom R. and Tom B. helped in addition to Matt and Steve.

At least they were smiling through the heavy work!

At least they were smiling through the heavy work!

Destiny was here for Spring Break when just last week it was windy and still cool. She loved my Blue Ridge TimberWrights sweatshirt and we loved having her here!

Note the orange dirt!  That's the color of all our socks!

Note the orange dirt! That’s the color of all our socks!

This week, a new crew came to put up the second floor exterior walls. The Panel Pros crew of 6 drove down from New Hampshire and the first thing they did was take off their shirts so I supplied them with sunscreen for their poor white bodies.

Although they are raising exterior walls, Jack is still framing interior walls staying a step ahead of them.

Adding exterior walls around what will be fixed windows.

Adding exterior walls around what will be fixed windows.

I took this photo about noon today and I just love the complex shadows of the timbers and 2x4s. So this is Jack at work…
Jack reading the plans

And this is me in my work clothes. I go out and check on things in between my work (At Va Tech). I have been super busy this week writing materials for Extension Agents and conducting online training. The only drawback from a hangar/home office is when the air compressor kicks on (very loud roar) during my live presentation! Oh, and it is heating up in here. I have to keep it closed because of the noise when I am online live!

We don't have the steps yet to the 2nd floor but we have this cool ladder!

We don’t have the steps yet to the 2nd floor but we have this cool ladder!

When I took photos today, I couldn’t help but notice how the house is starting to actually look like the model Jack built to help me visualize things. Do you recall I posted about this a few weeks ago ?

So look at these great comparisons!
Here is the model of the kitchen and below is the rough in of the kitchen. Can you see what it will look like now?

Kitchen_Model

Kitchen_Rough

And here is the Common Area upstairs with the rough in and the model.
CommonArea_Model

CommonArea_Rough
Those support beams for the common area will be added this week!

And here is the MASTER bedroom rough in without the walls to the sunroon and bath off of it as well as the model photo.
MBR_Model

MBR_Rough

Once the roof is on, I will post again! Yes! No more sweeping rain and snow out of the house!

Second Floor

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This is Jack posting this time – Karen is doing her Grandmotherly duties with Destiny (who’s on spring break and staying with us this week).  I wanted to share what we’ve done in the past week.

Blue Ridge Timberwrights have gone now, having raised the timber frame and the first floor exterior walls.  Now it’s our turn.  We have until April 9th to install the second floor joists, the second floor subfloor and three load-bearing walls that will support the timber roof purlins over the upstairs bedrooms.  Then, a team from PanelPros in Massachusetts will arrive to complete the exterior structure, installing the second floor walls, the timber purlins, the tongue-in-groove pine ceilings, and the SIP roof panels.

We’ve gotten a lot done this week, and have completed installation of all the second floor joists and the installation of the subflooring. 

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Here you can see our neighbor, Steve, setting one of the joists for the second floor.

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This picture shows the catwalk between the two wings of the house.

We got a good start on the first of the load-bearing walls yesterday (you can see part of it in the foreground of the picture above, laying flat on the subfloor), then knocked off early, bringing all the tools in because it was forecast to rain last night (which it did).  Since today is Easter, we all took a well-earned rest.  

Here is a picture showing the breakfast room (one of the more important rooms in a Bed & Breakfast) with the floor above completed:

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I love the look of the timbers and the knee-bracing.  The ceiling above the timber framing will be 1″ x 8″ tongue-in-groove white pine planking. and all the timbers will be left exposed, with drywall between the timbers.

Exciting times!  This is the part of the project where every day we can see great changes.  Once we get to the part where we’re just doing wiring and plumbing, no one will be able to see much change for weeks at a time. 

Many thanks to the friends that have helped us this week – Tom Brown (who sits next to me in the choir at Bethlehem United Methodist Church), Tom Ruckdeschel (an old friend from Raleigh, who originally got us interested in Smith Mountain Lake), Matt Kidd (a neighbor across the runway) and Steve Watts (our next door neighbor). Without them there is no way we could have done this.

Bless this House

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Today, we earned our whetting bush!

The timber framers are well in tune with this tradition and were willing to assist as we posted the bush. They congratulated us on the completion of the structural timber portion of the house.  The whetting bush tradition represents a symbol of thanks and respect for the timbers, the forest, and a safe timber raising.  Jack and I proudly stood out front while Tim (with BRTW) added the bush to the top of the timber outriggers.

Jack and I said a prayer to ask God to bless and protect our home and all who enter it. We thanked the forest, the sun, the moon!

whettingBush

 

Standing back, you can see the passive solar system that we have designed that Blue Ridge TimberWrights helped us engineer.  These outriggers were a pain for the crew to install, we are sure, but it will pay off in the summer sun!

WhettingBush2

 

What a wonderful crew!  On time, paid attention to details, polite and knew what they were doing! Thank-you Aaron, Jamie, Tim and Scott!

Crew

Just like the Model!

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Bedford Landings continues to take shape.  It is just as we had depicted in the model that Jack built.  See model in foreground.

Timbers_Model

The Blue Ridge TimberWrights crew continues to be a wonderful. Here they are placing the front, and largest, bent.

Front Bent

The photo below features the SIPS (Structurally insulated panels) that are cut for windows and doors.  Wiring is fed through the SIPS before they are placed. This is the corner of the dining room with windows overlooking the cove.

Dining Room corner

Then turning around, the window below looks across the driveway toward the neighbors. Each post will have a sconce.
DIning Room end

Each peg is cut to flush on one side and within one inch toward the exposed side. Yikes- really high!

Work on high

The SIPS are being worked all the way around.  This side is the Master suite.

Bedroom

I love the intricacy of the timbers with the complex morning shadows!

complexity

The crew will work Friday and again Monday then they will leave and we will begin laying the second floor!  Stay tuned!

We’re Proud, Happy, and Thrilled!

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I know it may just be a Karen moment (only funny to me), but when WSLS Channel 10 did the interview with me on Friday about Bedford Landings, it seemed (to me) much like the interview with the wives in the Apollo 13 movie.  Marilyn Lovell told the other wives to just comment on camera that, “We’re proud, happy and thrilled!” Here is that clip. There is a 30 second commercial first.

Now watch this 30 second news story on Bedford Landings. I just wish I had said “We’re proud, happy and thrilled!”

On a side note, some of you know that Jack’s birthday was Friday and he has been so wrapped up in the house that he didn’t realize the super surprise party I set in motion for him!  Thanks to all who kept it a surprise! 

Stay Tuned!

 

 

Technical Aspects

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Usually Karen does the posts, but Jack is posting today.  This is an email he sent to non-facebook users. He outlines more technical aspects.

Today we began raising the timberframe for our house/bed & breakfast.  In the central part of the house there are four “bents”, that separate the space into 3 bays.  We got 3 of the 4 bents erected today.  Tomorrow we’ll get the fourth bent in place, then finish inter-connecting them with girders and purlins.  All joints are standard wood joinery (primarily mortise and tenon joints – see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortise_and_tenon) pinned together with 1” diameter oaken pegs.  The timbers are Eastern White Pine from an old-growth forest in the Appalachian mountains of northern Georgia.  Most are 8”x10” but some are larger, ranging up to 10” x 12” for some of the posts and 8” x 16” for some of the girders.

 Here are some pictures:

 

BEnt1

 

In this picture, the first bent is being prepared for raising.  This bent frames the fireplace so it was actually raised in two pieces – the stone fireplace and chimney will fit in between the two halves of this bent.

 

crane1

 

Here you can see the size of the crane (45-ton) that was used to raise the frame and set it in place.

 

Raise1

 

The first half of this bent is in place with the posts seated in the pockets made into the floor system to receive it.  The crew is bracing it with 2×6’s screwed to cleats on the floor.

 

BF

 

Then we raised the second bent, which has a “Hammer Beam” truss in it (see:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammerbeam_roof) .  This will visually frame the stone fireplace in the finished great room.

 

scaffold

 

Then the girders inter-connecting the two bents were installed, one at a time, including the knee-braces that add rigidity to the frame.

 

BENTS3

 

By the end of the day we had 3 of the four bents in place, with enough of the interconnecting girders to assure us that all would still be there in the morning (that’s me in the orange hat, talking with Paula Davis, the Project manager from Blue Ridge Timberwrights).  Tomorrow we’ll install the fourth bent and all the rest of the interconnecting girders and purlins.  Today was Karen’s birthday and tomorrow is mine.  This is the best birthday present either of us has ever had!  We are so thankful to see the house that we have dreamed of for over 6 years finally coming together.

 TodayWSLS-TV, Channel 10 in Roanoke is coming out to do a story on us, our timberframe house and our B&B.

 

Going up!

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The timber raising has begun. I was in Roanoke all day taking Mom to the neurologist and taking care of various things. When I got home, look what I saw! It is beautiful!

Three of the four center bents are up.

Three of the four center bents are up.

Every joint is fitting!

Every joint is fitting!

These are called knee braces.

These are called knee braces.

Stay tuned!

Shiver me Timbers!

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We awoke about 5:45 like it was Christmas Day!  And all day, Jack and I have had that butterfly feeling of excitement and on the edge of tears happiness as the timbers were delivered and the assembly started!  It has gone way faster than we had imagined.  The Blue Ridge TImberWrights crew is laying out the structure on the ground and barring snow on Wednesday, the crane will be here to raise these sections! The following is a sequence of photos from today. More later this week and things progress!

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THE TRUCK ARRIVED BY 8:15 am!

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The structure is assembled using joinery and pegs. No nails! This is a whole box of hand made oak pegs.

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At the airport, pilots love to stop in to see the activity! Bob, Steve and Barry looked on.

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The lull unloading the truck

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Jack was so excited all day!

 

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The crew begins to pound the pieces together. This bent will frame the fireplace.

 

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Jack gets to drive in the first peg and Karen the second one!.Image
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