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  • Existing 1940’s house partially deconstructed to reuse framing lumber and donate or recycle as many other materials as possible
  • Original 775 sq ft cottage footprint kept intact, plus 1000+ sq ft master suite addition, 600+ sq ft garage addition, and 560 sq ft finished basement addition
  • Design incorporates 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, kitchen, dining room, living room, numerous closets, exercise room, laundry/mud room, sauna, private enclosed patio with hot tub, and extra long garage for boat and auto parking
  • Extensive built-ins and cabinetry throughout house, built by Paul Johnson Carpentry
  • Well insulated and highly efficient house keeps bills low while maximizing comfort
  • Framing lumber from original house de-nailed and reused as framing lumber where applicable.
  • All other framing lumber and plywood certified FSC, from local sources
  • Existing red oak flooring removed, reinstalled, and refinished
  • Custom bathroom tile designed by client and produced in Italy
  • All excavation, framing and concrete work by Nathan D. Young – www.ndyinc.com
  • Architecture and design by eM/Zed design – www.emzeddesign.com
  • All interior and exterior railings by Pacific Custom Ironworks – www.pacificcustomironworks.com
  • Truly collaborative effort between architects, clients, and contractor created a space perfectly designed to be a “forever” home for the clients
  • Master suite addition includes bedroom, bathroom with double shower, walk in closet, exercise room, laundry room, and access to private patio
  • Basement includes large “flexible space” bedroom, bathroom, sauna, closet, and stairway/foyer with access to large, conditioned crawl space storage
  • Tall ceilings keep expansive feel throughout house
  • Single car width, extra deep, extra tall garage allows for parking of boat/trailer and car or truck, plus tons of overhead storage
  • Home designed to be ultra low-maintenance for travel and ease of aging in place
  • Well thought out house design allows for unassuming facade from street, belying the spacious house beyond.
  • All leftover building materials and debris donated or recycled

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