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Old 11-02-11, 11:24 AM   #16
AVGWarhawk
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Old missile base/silo make very serviceable homes!

http://www.missilebases.com/properties


Plunk down a small log cabin right on top of silo! Best of both worlds!

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Old 11-02-11, 11:37 AM   #17
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Originally Posted by Neal Stevens View Post
These days I am thinking a small cabin-style house, say, 2 bedrooms (one in the loft), about 1200 sf. Barring any future merciless acts of God, I will be living alone, so I don't want/need a really big house.

But what about bbq/crashing at yours for the (Insert year) subsim meet!

I mean, Jason and Jim will happily share, as will others, but then there's the toilets to consider! No volunteers to go in after them!
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Old 11-02-11, 11:40 AM   #18
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What to build the house out of, i think depends on the envirmonment and climate. In some places, building a house out of cinderblock would have it's advantages.
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Old 11-02-11, 11:51 AM   #19
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Originally Posted by Herr-Berbunch View Post
But what about bbq/crashing at yours for the (Insert year) subsim meet!

I mean, Jason and Jim will happily share, as will others, but then there's the toilets to consider! No volunteers to go in after them!
You missed out the real health hazard....TarJak
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Old 11-02-11, 11:55 AM   #20
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You missed out the real health hazard....TarJak
I can't smell him from here!
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Old 11-02-11, 06:00 PM   #21
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Originally Posted by Neal Stevens View Post
Please do!
I'll try to go easy.


Some of the pictures were taken in the 'Dark Ages' before digitals were affordable. And the handy use once cheapies were the thing.

This is a Spec House We built around around 2000.


3 bedroom. Built by 3 of us over a 6 month period. It was sold at about the 75% complete mark and we earned extra by adjusting things to the new owners requests.

Back of the House

Built into slopeing ground we brought in the John Deer Backhoe. The footer was poured by us and laser leveled of course.
The Walls of the basement were subcontracted but everything else was done by us.

A closer look at the deck area

Nice back deck with stairs to the backyard. Its a full basement with 4 rooms and a small closet. All walls are finished.

A deck we built while working on the Spec House.


I've got more pictures of this deck I just have to find them.
It's got an octagonal screened in Gazebo at one end and the Hot tub at the other.
Built for a lady that hit the Ohio Lottery back then.
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Old 11-02-11, 06:42 PM   #22
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Originally Posted by Herr-Berbunch View Post
I can't smell him from here!

Just wait, the wind direction will change.

@ Neal, why don't you build next to the Cavalla. The commute will be a lot shorter.
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Old 11-03-11, 12:28 AM   #23
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That's a nice build, Jeff. You obviously have a lot of experience in this. Looking forward to more pics.
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Old 11-03-11, 01:45 AM   #24
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk View Post
. In all seriousness, this is what I would look into if I had building my own home in mind.

I'm liking this size and style:
http://www.tranquilacrescabins.com/t...-log-cabin.php



Only, I don't neccesarily need actual "logs" for walls, simply stud wall construction would be fine. But I like the size and layout
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Old 11-03-11, 02:51 AM   #25
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Hello, nice thread !

we live at the edge of a forest, almost at the end of the street. The last house next to "no man's land" is a wooden house built of logs just like that on your picture. It looks very nice, and the interior is beautiful, but it's a house to live in and big enough, not a weekend one.

The heating and water system is very modern, a wood stove with a water cassette inlet and heat exchangers for a second water circle to heat water and the central heating system. Certainly, you need electric pumps for the circulation of the heated water in the radiators, but it's not needed, the stove can heat the house without it with some of the surrounded rooms being a bit (!) cooler then.
Maybe a stirling engine could drive a pump, this would be my favourite solution, no electric current needed then altogether, maybe a backup generator somewhere.

In the first floor there is a "passive stove"; where the funnel from the base stove goes up through the floor there's a flap wher you can divert the heat into an "oven" which is not fed by wood, but just by the hot gases coming from the stove downstairs, so the first floor gets as warm as you want as well.


Our own house is a strange mixture, a frame (half timbered ?) house, where the skeleton is made of oak, and the fields between the timbers look like bricks - but they are not. Instead they are very thin and fastend on styrodur insulation plates, with three layers of wood criss-crossing behind that. On the inner walls there is an additioanl 30-centimeter-thick insulation, finished with wooden boards towards the inside. The whole outer walls are thus almost 50 centimeters thick, and insulate very well.

You do not need the heating installation if a few lamps and the computer are on, unless it gets real cold and windy.

We also have a sun collector water heating system on the roof for supporting hot water and heating, and plan a wood stove with this water cassette. Not cheap unfortunately ..
The first floor is not yet finished, but i also plan this passive stove up there.

I have built the whole house almost myself, including heater, water system and all, certainly with the help of 1 friend permanantly for the inner wall insulation, and another being a carpenter which certainly helped a lot !

Greetings,
Catfish
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Old 11-03-11, 10:26 AM   #26
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Neal Stevens View Post
I'm liking this size and style:
http://www.tranquilacrescabins.com/t...-log-cabin.php



Only, I don't neccesarily need actual "logs" for walls, simply stud wall construction would be fine. But I like the size and layout
For me, if I'm in the middle of the woods or on a mountain top the log cabin is the house to have. The inside should also be the bare logs. Some have used stucco for the inside of the walls. Looks like plaster board. But, yes, the size pictured should suit.
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Old 11-03-11, 10:28 AM   #27
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ducimus View Post
What to build the house out of, i think depends on the envirmonment and climate. In some places, building a house out of cinderblock would have it's advantages.
True
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Old 11-03-11, 11:32 AM   #28
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Catfish View Post


I have built the whole house almost myself, including heater, water system and all, certainly with the help of 1 friend permanantly for the inner wall insulation, and another being a carpenter which certainly helped a lot !

Greetings,
Catfish
This sounds worthy of some pictures
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Old 11-04-11, 07:27 PM   #29
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My most favorite thing to do is remodeling or repairing.
When you build a new home?
It's all pretty much cut and dried as to how and what you need to do.

When you go into a house that's around a hundred years or more older to do remodeling work?
That gets the mind working!


Plus you sometimes find really Cool stuff.


I removed an Oak Stairway from a remodel job a few years ago.
Once I had it down, I found a box hidden inside that gave me the date it was built along with a NewsPaper and other information.
The date was April, 1893!

I turned everything I found over to the owners.
I may be looney in someways?
But I'm not a thief!
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Old 11-05-11, 02:49 PM   #30
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Depending on area selected ...

http://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/21299/..._peak_1934.jpg



a fire tower home would be a nice selection for where I live
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