Design snapshot: Patio season

To me, residential architecture extends beyond the built structures of our homes to the spaces around, in between, and within sight of them. Here, a simple, flag-stone patio, a few feet from a house and only a small step down from it, converts a sunny oasis, nestled within hedges and shrubs, into a living space. Sturdy, silver-grey cedar furniture, softened with comfortable throw pillows, invites leisurely conversation among alliums and soon-to-be-potted plants. Lanterns for votive candles atop a table tell us this place is also enjoyed in the evenings. Carving out an intimate space outside a French door can provide visual interest from the interior as well. ‘Tis the season for the outside to borrow from the inside and vice versa. Enjoy.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast

Design snapshot: Happy shack

This diminutive boat/barn hybrid has much of the appeal of both a boat and a barn. The inverted, hull-shaped roof beautifully suits its beach context. The elegantly projecting rake at the peak is more than a design flourish; it supports a pulley (as on a barn) to hoist lobster traps or whatnot into the upper loft. The boat-like roof shape combined with the barn-like board-and-batten siding, plus the pleasingly functional door- and window-placement make this fishing shack an original charmer. I imagine folks whistle while they work here.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast

Design snapshot: Mini-me garage

As this garage with second-floor living space was being built, I expected to dislike it. Why, I wondered, would they put a garage directly in front of the house, effectively hiding the main attraction? I had been a big fan of the house and had even extolled the virtue of its original dormers in a JLC column about dormer design. When the garage went up, the dormers on the house were regrettably reconfigured. (You can see a sketch of the earlier dormer design towards the bottom of the second page of the JLC column.)

Yet now, years later, the completed garage, planted a few feet in front of the house, strikes me as a pretty appealing mini-me.

Though view from the front of the house is blocked, the small distance between the two buildings allows for at least indirect daylight to enter there. It’s better than if the two buildings had been attached. My bad; they are discreetly attached, off-camera. Making the mini-me seemingly independent helps to keep the house from appearing overly long and monotonous. It differentiates the subordinate use of the garage from the main residence. Matching, or nearly matching, the primary roof slope and details from the house, while scaling them down on the garage, makes for a successful pairing, like big bear and little bear. The shed dormer which extends from the upper slope of the gambrel roof on the garage is different from the long, linear dormer on the house, but related.  Repeating the same window type from the house in the garage helps to further tie the two together.

The second floor shutters on both the house and garage, however, should really go, unless they’re sized appropriately. Turns out they are sized correctly to fully cover the windows they serve; they're bifold shutters. Pet peeves aside, I’ve warmed to this mini-me garage.

Read more about shed dormers in a design column I wrote and illustrated for Fine Homebuilding.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast

Design snapshot: Blossoming color combo

Click on this photo to see it in the note cards/prints gallery.Look to nature to augment your paint scheme or to inspire it. This white blossoming fruit tree beautifully compliments the navy blue and white Victorian it embellishes. For breathtaking spring impact, pair a white flowering tree with a strong siding color, offset by crisp, white trim. A white blossoming: dogwood, magnolia, pear, crabapple, or cherry would all look great against a striking house color accented with white trim.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast

Design snapshot: Japanese waiting shelter

Every once in a while this house enthusiast ventures beyond New England to make other discoveries. Sometimes similarities are more striking than differences. Such was the case with this diminutive waiting shelter in the Tea Garden of the Portland Japanese Garden in Oregon. It reminded me of the little waiting hut at Mytoi on Chappaquiddick off Martha’s Vineyard which I wrote about here one Memorial Day.

Both structures have a nearly visceral appeal. The Portland Japanese waiting shelter has a simpler roof than the Mytoi hut, and it incorporates bamboo as well as earth-tone stucco, which the Mytoi hut does not. Despite subtle differences, both are assembled with sophisticated attention to detail, and both demonstrate a refined simplicity of purpose and material. They are pint-sized delights that display a nuanced range of variation within a rich ceremonial tradition. Whether in New England or out West, a Japanese tea garden is to be savored.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast