Integrated Networks

Integrated Networks: Serving El Paso, Greater Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California since 2003

SMART Home News...

 

elements of value
high design doesn't demand a hefty budget.

Publication date: June 1, 2007
By Shelley D. Hutchins

risky business
Buying an empty lot in an iffy urban neighborhood with the hope it'll transition upward is a risk. Acting as general contractor for your new house when you've never built, designed, or even owned a home is also perilous. Making these plans contingent on getting a setback variance means putting it all on the desk of a bureaucrat and wishing for a miracle. For Jill Salter, a recent architecture graduate, and her artist husband, these gambles were their best bet for owning an affordable, yet beautiful home. “Simplicity in form, cost, and construction was our mantra” for navigating the tricky terrain, she says.

First, Salter met with local Raleigh, N.C., city planners. “We were told there was a 25-foot setback requirement for our lot, but it seemed out of character with the neighborhood,” she says. Most of the neighboring houses, built before the roads were paved, hug the streets' edges. Salter won her variance by measuring setbacks, photographing those nearby houses, and then submitting those photos with a set of permit drawings.

The variance allows Salter's L-shaped house to align both streets along its corner lot. Placing the garage/studio at a perpendicular angle to the long bar of the house generated a three-sided courtyard and an unhindered indoor-outdoor flow. Salter and her husband favor a contemporary aesthetic, but incorporating traditional forms made approval from city planners easier and price quotes from subcontractors more reasonable.

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Integrated Networks is a premier Home Automation Systems Integration company serving El Paso, greater Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California. Our customers value the reliability and speed of our service, as well as the personal attention given each and every one.

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What's involved in building a SMART home?

 

 

Do Your Homework

You must first decide what type of home to build. House styles today are as varied as those who live in them, offering you a banquet of ideas from which to borrow.


When you see a home that appeals to you, decide exactly what features or characteristics caught your eye. Make a note of these or, better yet, make a quick sketch. Keep all these ideas together in a file. You don't have to decide how to implement them all yet, but eventually you'll decide how best to fit these into your home design plan.

Create Your Home Design List

When creating a list of criteria for your home design, start with the basics: the number of bedrooms, the number of bathrooms, the number of family areas, the choice between a formal dining room or a more open, community eating area, porch or deck styles for your home's entrances and the size of your garage.


Once your basic list is complete, tackle planning for individual rooms. You'll want to list features that are most important to you first and then add from there. This list can include kitchen features, master bathroom features, audio wiring for speaker systems, Internet and phone connections and so on.

Check Local Zoning Laws

Zoning laws can affect everything from house framing to yard fencing. Checking first to see what zoning laws your community has can save you many headaches.

Design Within Your Budget

Once your list is completed, compare it to your budget and adjust to fit. This is particularly difficult for first time home builders, a big problem.


It happens more than you'd think. People's eyes get too big for their budgets and in the end they wind up overshooting the mark, sometimes leaving them without drapes, blinds and even furniture.


One way to get a handle on your budget from the beginning is to invest in home design software that includes an estimator, which gives you a running total of costs as you design your home.

Design to Fit Your Plot

Your land is unique; each plot has assets and challenges. Keep these in mind while creating your home design. Use existing grades of your plot to your favor. If your lot slopes sharply to the side, consider a walkout side basement door instead of the traditional back door. Working with your land, instead of against, saves you excavating costs and retains more of your plots natural character.


You should also position ground level bedrooms and bathrooms toward the back of the house, away from street and foot traffic, and design windows, foliage and fences to maximize beauty and increase privacy.

Maximize Your Space Efficiency

When mapping out your floor plan, make sure there is a logical flow to your home design. You want to simplify life for your contractor while he builds and for your family while they live in it. Some things to consider:

a.) Design direct access to the kitchen from the garage

b.) Design all your plumbing in one general area, reducing pipe distance

c.) Place your heating ventilation and air conditioning system as centrally as possible, allowing for better temperature balance throughout your house

d.) Bedrooms should be isolated to reduce noise and increase privacy

e.) Place your washer and dryer on the same floor as bedrooms (for two or more story homes)

f.) Make sure all doorways, hallways and stairways are wide enough to move furniture through

g.) Make sure that light switches are placed appropriately for traffic flow, and that outlets are conveniently placed throughout.

Plan for Expansion

If you can't afford to build your entire dream house now, plan your home design so that expansion is not only possible, but easy. One way of doing so is to build your home in phases.


For example, build your main house first, add your detached garage in a few years and then finally, finish that basement. Pick affordable priorities and tackle those first.

Picture Interior Design

When putting together your floor plan, place furniture in the design to see how it all fits together. You can do this using graph paper, magazine clippings or by using home design software. Also, consider your lighting scheme, paint and flooring choices, and how your design will work for entertaining planning for all your favorite activities will help you create proper seating, dining and socializing space (and will insure that your kitchen sink is not visible from the front door!)

Don't Forget the Sun

The position of the sun can affect your home design in many ways, depending on the direction your home faces. A south facing home will be warmer in the winter, but hotter in the summer. Place windows to take advantage of natural light, which allows for better energy conservation. And if you particularly enjoy sunrises or sunsets, then design places into the east or west sides of your home to spend time doing so.

Pay attention to All Sides of Your Home Design

Remember that window placement affects the inside and outside look of your house. Whether you live on a corner or in the middle of the block, the sides of your home are going to be seen. Design the look of your home so that you'd be proud to let anyone walk around it, putting small design elements here and therewhether they be architectural (decks, porches or a covered patio), "landscaping" (flowers gardens, shrubs or an arbor) or better yet, both. Work to create a pleasing, comfortable atmosphere wherever visitors may go.


Integrated Networks: Serving El Paso, Greater Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California since 2003.

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