Entries from July 1, 2007 - July 31, 2007
Late summer/early fall 2007 special events
Recommended upcoming New England film festivals
Woods Hole Film Festival (Woods Hole, MA) July 28-August 4, 2007 www.woodsholefilmfestival.org/
Rhode Island International Film Festival (Providence, RI) August 7-12, 2007 www.film-festival.org/
Martha’s Vineyard International Film Festival (Vineyard Haven, MA) Sept. 13-16, 2007 www.mvfilmfest.com/
Newburyport Documentary Film Festival (Newburyport, MA) Sept. 28-30, 2007 www.newburyportfilmfestival.org/
Camden International Film Festival (documentary films shown in Camden, Rockport, and Rockland, ME) Sept. 27-30, 2007 www.camdenfilmfest.org/
Primer: House Garden
Intertwine house and garden so that each contributes to the other
As an architect, I’m a house person, but I’m also a garden fan. What I really pine for is a house garden. My mother has one. She also has a garden house, another thing that I pine for. She has created an exquisite house garden at her village property in Connecticut. She describes it as small, a bunch of pockets, and nothing to get worked-up about, but that’s just it; it’s an imaginative series of connected, small gardens that beautifully weave between and among building elements. The pocket spaces are formed thanks to the intricate relationship between her house, her garden shed (or “summer house” as she calls it), her garage, fencing, a gateway arbor, and the surrounding streets on her privet-edged corner lot. Her gardens within those pockets are a delight in large part because of the very things that keep them small and intricate. For her, house and garden are intrinsically intertwined.
The garden shed is one of the greatest enablers of my mother’s gardens. It
Ask Katie: Thoughts on an outdoor dining space
Q: I recently received a huge single plank table (probably from the late 1800’s) that would make a wonderful large outdoor dining table. I would like to construct some kind of outdoor eating space in my large yard, separate from the house, that includes some architectural elements to make it feel more permanent. Can you make any suggestions?
Katherine from Brookville, MD
A: What a dreamy project. Since your yard is large, evaluate a few possible locations for you outdoor dining space first. Is there a large tree that might provide shade or a feeling of semi-enclosure overhead? Is there a nearby outbuilding, fence, or stone wall that might help to define its borders? Is there a rock outcropping or other feature that might be incorporated into the space? Is there a particular view or approach to take into account?
Once you’ve identified the sweet spot for your dining space, you’ll want to
Design snapshot: Classical comments
Click on this photo to see it in the note cards/prints gallery.A detailed look at a wood, fluted, Roman Doric pilaster in Salem, Mass. reveals the artistry of a classical mainstay.
The shadows created in the concave, vertical flutes are an appealing contrast to the horizontal shadows below them created by the deeply profiled trim known as the “Attic base”. Evidence of the craftsman’s hand is clearly visible in the worked wood. The careful miter joint, where the trim wraps above the base plinth, reminds us that this pilaster is made of assembled parts. Their proportions are thoughtfully considered. The flutes are all wider then the space in between them, known as fillets, and together divide the surface that comprises the shaft into a three-dimensional, patterned form which otherwise, if left plain, would appear flat and dull. The profiled trim just above the base plinth gracefully enables the transition from the narrow upper shaft to the wider plinth that visually supports the pilaster.
Every element of this detail contributes to the overall elegant effect. You needn't be a classicist to appreciate it.
by Katie Hutchison for the House Enthusiast
Don't Overlook Intangible Value and Cost
Focus on long-term architectural utility not short-term dollars and cents
Foremost on the minds of most homeowners about to embark on a residential project, whether it’s a renovation, addition, or new construction, is ‘How much will it cost?’ This is the loaded question that frequently stops a project in its tracks or sends it off in the wrong direction. A better question is: ‘How can value be added?’ or ‘How can intangible costs be avoided?’ Too often homeowners lose track of how a project could positively influence their lives, focusing instead on the dollars and cents spent today. Of course this happens in part because it’s easier to tally short-term financial costs than to tally long-term and non-financial costs or added value. We mustn’t overlook the intangible value that can be added to a project with one course of action, or the intangible cost of pursuing another, just because it’s difficult to measure. First we need to define our terms.