Part 1 – Ritter Lupita Residence, Massachusetts

Part 1 – Ritter Lupita Residence, Massachusetts (PDF)
Part 1 – Ritter Lupita Residence, Massachusetts (JPEG)
Part 1 – Ritter Lupita Residence, Massachusetts (Full Symbol Library)
Part 1 – Ritter Lupita Residence, Massachusetts (Demo)

  • James Scott

    Good morning Team,

    I see many similarities to the Ratliff project from a few weeks ago. http://theslowhome.com/design-project/part-2-%E2%80%93-ratliff-residence-pennsylvania/

    John – Is there a lot plan, rear garage to be more specific? That side entrance can certainly be enhanced if the space is available between properties. And of course MA has expensive areas such as Boston, so every square foot counts. It would be nice to take advantage of the yard, front and back as well.

  • John Y

    I’d also like to know if the back deck is far above grade — that plays into the “improving the connection with the outdoors” client request.

  • John Brown

    James,
    I am on my way to orientation camp for the first year architecture class this morning and don’t have time to get the site plan for you. However, I can describe it to you from memory. There are 4′side yards. The front yard is about 20′ and has a small wrought iron fence that extends out to the sidewalk. There is one semi-large deciduous tree just to the right of the front sidewalk, near the fence. The rear yard is about 45′ deep. There is a double garage at the back that takes up about 22′ of that. The rest of the garden is pretty open. The neighboring houses were all built at the same time and the front and rear facades all line up. My sense is that it would be difficult to expand into the side yard, at least on the ground floor, for this project.

    I hope that helps. I will try to check in during the day but am in the mountains.

  • John Brown

    John Y,
    Very good questions. Further to my comment to James, the house is located 1′ above grade so there are two steps at the front entry. At the rear there is one step down to the deck from the house and one more from the deck to the garden.

  • Brad W

    [img]shdp281.jpg[/img]

    Open the stair case, move the kitchen towards the middle of the home, reconfigure the bathroom to incorporate the fridge, and add a small broom closet at the side entry.

  • leo

    [img]3_slow.jpg[/img]

    Here is my attempt. I don’t have speakers, so I don’t know what the design brief was, but I can guess. I placed a bench with shoe storage at both entrances and combined the closets. I know that closes things off a little, but I like open entrances. I debated opening the stairwell like Brad, but I’m undecided as yet.

  • John Y

    I’m giving serious thought to moving the powder room over to the north side and clustering closets, stairs and wc all on one side of the house. That opens up the opportunity to use roughly 2/3 of the house’s width as an unbroken, front-to-back line of sight. My concern is the difficulty of moving the plumbing over there — but since there appear to be stairs going down to a basement, I’m going to go ahead and assume that the plumbing can be moved/extended if necessary.

  • John Y

    leo — a fair bit of the design brief is usually included in the PDF, over in the right hand column.

  • James Scott

    [img]1_shdp28demo.jpg[/img]

    Here is my first attempt. I reversed the bathroom fixtures and the door. Added some mill work to the living space and created a walk through with the mill work to add more division between the living and kitchen spaces.

  • Emily Scott

    [img]2_shdp28demo.jpg[/img]

    I put more mill work in the living room because I think they needed more storage on the first floor. I also made the bathroom bigger by pushing the wall out. Next I made the kitchen bigger by extending the wall space and counter space.

    My dad, James Scott, introduced me to the Slow Home site.

  • John Brown

    Emily,
    Welcome to the site. I think that you and your are dad are the first “intergenerational” members of slow home.

    I like your idea of placing the millwork on the north wall of the living room. It is an effective way to make use of this part of the room without disrupting the major circulation route to the back garden.

  • John Brown

    James,
    My reading of your plan is that there is an intriguingly distinct difference in feel between the front and the back of the house. The millwork that wraps around the two walls of the living room give the space a library like feel that is more connected to the garden than the kitchen and dining area.

    BTW, what does the pattern in the hallway between the living room and kitchen mean?

  • John Brown

    Leo,
    An interesting strategy with the combined closet along the kitchen. If properly detailed, it could be a very striking central element to the plan.

  • John Brown

    Brad,
    A nice simple plan. My only questions are about the open nature of the guest bathroom door location and the large space in between the furniture grouping and the millwork in the back living room.

  • James Scott

    [img]3_shdp28demo.jpg[/img][img]2008235840.jpg[/img][img]4_shdp28demo.jpg[/img]

    John Brown – I’m excited to see Emily (11 yrs) jump in and submit a plan. Beats MSN and all the other STUFF.

    On my first plan the hallway is mill work that drops the ceiling down just to add division between the two spaces. On the living side it is all mill work.

    On my second submission above I reversed the kitchen and dining spaces with the living space. Having the deck and a nice sized rear yard handy I can see value in connecting this space to the back yard for personal pleasure and entertaining.

    During both plans I was actually tempted to remove the bathroom altogether but considering age issues and entertaining I thought better of it.

    It’s also interesting that one can go nuts with mill work. Whether a little or a lot there seems to be countless opportunities in each project.

  • leo

    James

    I too am curious what the zigzag is. A strange rug? Antiskid surface? Strobe lighting?

  • James Scott

    Sorry, to explain further I’m assuming the ceiling height is a bit over the usual 8 feet and that there may be room to play around.

    If you prefer the anti-skid-strobe-lighting-strange-rug, try this:
    http://www.albrightknox.org/Past_Exhibitions/2008/steinkamp/index.html

    Actually it was very exciting and I was the only one in the museum that day.

  • Liz James

    [img]cambridgehs3.jpg[/img]

    The wall between the dining and kitchen is a glass+millwork screen. The corner of the bathroom is also a glass and millwork screen, with millwork down low, glass to the ceiling.

  • Brad W

    John – I agree with your concerns about my plan. I have trouble with the powder room location when the space is as small as this one.

    I was in a philosophical mood today wondering why we build large kitchens. Even in this small space we always attempt to build the biggest kitchen possible. This encourages large weekly shopping trips rather than daily trips, contributes to excess food packaging for storage, etc… During the yesterdays exercise, I looked at many New York apartment renovations and was surprised by the small size of most kitchens even in what would be very expensive real estate. Anyway, food for thought…

    I’ll make a small revision to my plan but the concept will still be the same…

  • Cat

    Brad W — Some interesting thoughts about kitchen size. But I think it has more to do with the number of people we want in the kitchen rather than the amount of food stored or prepared there. My mother never let anyone into her kitchen — it was her territory. My daughter, on the other hand, has everyone in the house (which can be quite a few people when she’s entertaining) in her kitchen and gives them each a chore to do.

    What I don’t understand is why we need such large bathrooms.

  • leo

    I’m with you Cat. The kitchen is large because life seems to revolve around it. Bathrooms on the other hand are rooms that I tend to avoid if possible.

    Having said that, Brad, your idea about excess storage in the kitchen has merit. My fridge is too big, so it ends up filled with food going bad. An architect acquaintance of mine once noticed that when he lived in an area in Europe where everyone had a small fridge and had to go shopping every day, it certainly made the village a much more interesting and social place. “Small fridges make good cities” was the catch phrase he came up with.

  • Grace
  • Brad W

    [img]shdp282.jpg[/img]

    Small revisions as promised. I am not happy with the powder room but I understand why it is desired.

  • Grace

    I actually liked your first half bath very much, Brad. It feels much more private with the recess from the living areas.

  • Brad W

    Leo – That is exactly what I was getting at – small fridges make good cities – I like that. The other consideration is environmental impact.

    Cat – I agree on the bathrooms.

  • Brad W

    Grace – that was the idea…thanks…I still think the bathroom is too close to the living areas and there is not enough space to redirect the entry but maybe John can save the day.

  • leo

    Grace

    was that ceiling what James Scott put on his first plan?

  • Brad W

    Liz – swapping the living room and dining room has some merit

    What is it with these peek-a-boo bathrooms lately? First it was Volker with the tub in the middle of an apartment then yesterday with the translucent shower (great for shadow puppet shows amongst other things) and now window overlooking a toilet. The latest trend in design porn I guess…

  • Scotty

    [img]image0002.jpg[/img]

    Hello; just wanted to submit this old-school (hand drawn) solution for discussion. I attempted to keep the entire space open inside, though not much has been done to address the back yard yet. The 1/2 bath shifted across the space, while the kitchen bridges both the living and dining rooms for entertaining.

  • Grace

    haha–must be!

    Check out the slide show–the fencing and tile work are beautiful, and the roof and chair, if eccentric, are beautiful, too.

  • Brad W

    James – nice to have Emily on the site – I thought she did a great job! Your plan is not too bad either..

  • Brad W

    Scotty – nice!!

  • Scotty

    [img]1_image0002.jpg[/img]

    Or I suppose conversely, flipping the living/dining room, with a little bit more wall cabinet space in the kitchen and a large dining room.

  • Scotty

    [img]image.jpg[/img]

    Woops, sorry, this is the alternate scheme…

  • Terri

    [img]ritlup1.jpg[/img]

    I decided to try putting the powder room between the up and down staircases, which meant moving the down staircase back to where the old door and closet area was and turning it too. I know this is a major rebuild of stairs down, but I think the privacy gained is worth it. I lived in a duplex once that had this kind of powder room and it worked.

    I liked the idea of opening up the entry more as yesterday’s case study home did, especially since this couple plan to have clients over to their home–the space would be more necessary then. This eventual use of their place also seemed to require a way to close off the “business” area of the kitchen so that it would not be so visible, so I’ve indicated a sliding french glass door across the dining end. I imagined some traditional elements in this older home, even though it will be more open now.

  • MichaelG

    [img]shdp28mg.jpg[/img]

    I went through a number of ideas for this, basically moving the kitchen to every part of the house, and i think the kitchen in the middle works best. Mine has masses of counter space for dinner party preparation. And two paths through into the back of the house. The only full height cabinetry I envision is along the stair case wall, the island and the south wall are counter only. It should present a pretty clean, open look. I’ve also given them a bar to eat breakfast or quick meals at, and a 6 seater dinning table for their dinner parties.
    I inadvertently stole John Y’s idea of moving the toilet to the north side of the house (assuming that plumbing wouldn’t be an issue) and a utility room, with the stairs to the basement, door to outside, and some shelving for a pantry/cold food store room. Might be too tight though.

    One thing on the second floor home office, will they have clients over for their consultancy business? I guess not if they’re happy with it on the second floor…

  • James Scott

    Grace – I’m going to send that link to some of my distributors. Great way to deal with old samples.

    Regarding Emily’s submission, we did discuss the hallway, a bit tight it was decided. As well as opening up the kitchen to keep the light flowing through the space. I know she would admire some of your feedback on her plan as well.

  • Terri

    [img]ritlup2.jpg[/img]

    Whoops! I got the configuration backwards on the plan above, so I corrected it. The powder room isn’t as private as I’d hoped to make it though.

  • Terri

    Emily,
    I’m impressed with your interest and ability in doing floorplans at 11! Hope you become a regular like your dad.

  • Terri

    Grace,
    I finally had the time to check out your link to the NYTimes piece–THANKS! Loved it! Reminds me of handbuilt houses on the West Coast here. Although the cattle-bone chair seems a little macabre, it’s fitting for Texas, where it’s used.

  • Grace

    Yes, Emily, your work is very impressive. I say that as one who, for the time being anyway, has given up on paintbrush. Good for you!

  • Grace

    Terri–glad you liked it. Yes, that chair!