Tag Archives: Small Houses

Modern Cottage and Bungalow Plans

In Pursuit of the Perfect Little House

I’m always looking for contemporary plans with a sense of history; that is, deft designs for modern living that also have warmth and character. Well, Eureka!  I’m very excited about the regionally-inspired designs by Peter Brachvogel and Stella Carosso for their Perfect Little House Company. These plans are the newest additions to our Exclusive Studio Collection. For example, Plan 479-6,  the Tower Studio,

is actually a 262 square -foot  “micro cottage” with a small kitchen/living/sleeping area and bathroom


over a compact one car garage. I think it’s an ideal home office/retreat. With its simple square shape, tapering shingled walls, pyramid roof, and band of windows at the top it recalls early 20th century forest fire lookouts across the rural West, from Tumac Mountain Lookout

near Washington’s Mt. Ranier (Bob Baldwin photo, above) to

California’s  Gardner Lookout on Mt. Tamalpais (courtesy California State Parks). What could be more fitting for a writer’s retreat than a lookout, anyway –  isn’t that right, Virginia Woolf?  I’ll take it!

Classic early 20th century cottages,  bungalows, and farmhouses — which were themselves usually built from stock plans — are important reference points for Peter and Stella. Their 780 square-foot Willow, Plan 479-9,

wraps a generous porch around a compact 1 bedroom 1.5 bath layout to make the house feel larger than it is. A starter home with architectural character — suitable for an infill lot in an older neighborhood or as a mountain or lakeside cabin — this plan

could easily be expanded at the stairway as the family grows and budgets allow. Upstairs,  windows on all four sides

flood the bedroom and bathroom with daylight. Now compare this modern design to the 1908 Wietzel House from Tukwila, WA, shown below,

(photo courtesy Nickel Bros. House Moving). The old bracketed eaves, L-shaped porch, and big gable (not necessarily the weedy front yard) are signature features of many old cottages and farmhouses.  Add a contemporary looking standing seam metal roof and crisp shingled corners and some color — not to mention a new open floor plan — and there you are: another Perfect Little House.  Or compare the Weitzel house to The Cove, Plan 479-2 –  shown below.

It’s even closer in appearance — as if the older house has simply been remodeled. In the  new plan

the garage is on an alley at the rear.

On a somewhat larger scale, the Perfect Little House Company’s 1,914 square-foot, 3 bedroom 2.5 bath Kingfisher, Plan 479-4

offers larger gathering spaces and cozy nooks for reading and relaxing,

and on the second floor each bedroom is designed as a large window bay

for views across the treetops. Note the free-flowing circulation pattern — you can walk through the bathroom to the closet and back through the master bedroom — which adds a sense of spaciousness.

The trellis, shed dormers, and simple gable (shown above in the rear elevation of Plan 474-4) echo features of early Craftsman style houses, like this example

in Gustav Stickley’s Craftsman magazine (courtesy Arts and Crafts Homes magazine).

Peter and Stella earned their architecture degrees from the University of Michigan and recently founded the Perfect Little House Company as an offshoot of their firm, BC & J Architects. Peter has extensive town planning experience with emphasis on project management and building technology, and teaches architecture at the University of Washington. Their Cottages on the Green at Roche Harbor,

shown here, create a strong sense of place: it’s a new community that feels as though it has always been there. Welcome to our neighborhood, Peter and Stella!


SEA RANCH HOUSES

Small Is Beautiful — Again

The great American architect William Turnbull (1935-1997) was a friend and mentor who made the complex art of architecture look simple and inevitable. So I am very excited to announce that Houseplans.com has acquired the rights to sell copies of Bill’s iconic designs for employee housing at The Sea Ranch, an ecologically sensitive community on California’s northern coast. Built in the late 1980s, they’re what cabins should be: modest but memorable.

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Shaker-simple, contemporary, and very small — 650 to 924 sq. ft. — they nevertheless have a powerful visual presence, as the image above by eminent architectural photographer Morley Baer shows (copyright 2009 by the Morley Baer Photography Trust, Santa Fe. All reproduction rights reserved).

Plan 447-1 (interior below in another Baer photo) illustrates how Bill made the most of limited space. The bedroom is an alcove off the living room, allowing each room to borrow space and light from the other. The exposed scissor truss and beautifully proportioned windows add character.

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Thanks to strong outlines, rustic materials, and an efficient porch-oriented plan the vacation begins at the front door.

Plan 447-2, below, organizes rooms in a line like cars on a train, which is appropriate for long narrow sites:

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Plan 447-3 is a two-story design for a duplex. Here’s the elevation, which recalls a Georgian townhouse in its classical simplicity:

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Bill Turnbull first received international attention in the mid-1960s as a principal of Moore Lyndon Turnbull Whitaker (MLTW), designers of the celebrated Condominium #1 at The Sea Ranch, shown below in a wonderful portrait by photographer Jim Alinder:

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Left to right: Richard Whitaker, Donlyn Lyndon, Charles Moore, and William Turnbull. Bill collaborated with Charles Moore and Donlyn Lyndon throughout his life, but started his own firm, William Turnbull Associates, in 1970. Though Bill designed many large scale projects he relished house design as a way to explore three dimensional space and architectural connections to the land. Bill was also a gardener, vineyard owner, and wine maker: a true Jeffersonian who also knew how to carve a roast turkey to perfection. His vibrant successor firm — Turnbull Griffin Haesloop Architects — continues to do exemplary work.

A percentage of the price of each Willam Turnbull Sea Ranch plan supports the Environmental Design Archives at U. C. Berkeley, which preserves the drawings and papers of significant California architects and landscape architects.