Home Building

Have you ever considered building your own home? If so, read this overview to learn all the steps from foundation & framing, to plumbing, drywall, finish & more

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Southern living homes are the ultimate in style, practicality and American architectural history. Learn more about Antebellum and Southern living house designs.

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Learn how to build your own screen porch in our step by step guide. You will enjoy being outdoors even when the bugs are thick and the weather may be hot.

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Keep your home and loved ones safe with a state-of-the-art home alarm system designed to prevent home intrusion and burglary and ensure personal safety.

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Homeowners have more choices than ever when deciding on the insulation for their homes.
Plastic foams, rock wool, cellulose and even cotton insulation are readily available. Insulation materials come in many forms. They are sprayed, stapled, blown, nailed or simply laid in place.
The choices can be difficult to sort through, but cellulose insulation is one of [...]

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Insulated or Insulating Concrete Forms (ICFs) give you all the benefits that have made concrete popular over the years.
Concrete forms offer the same wind and fire resistance, but also offer an additional built in layers of foam insulation.
Homes built with insulated concrete forms offer homeowners greater energy efficiency and less noise pollution from outside.
An insulated [...]

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Well, we passed our final inspection on Friday, October 6th!
This means that the El Dorado County Building Department is finished with us, and that I should be expecting a tax re-assessment soon.
It does not, however, mean that T.B. is finished. He is still completing the exterior trim, and has a few odds and ends to [...]

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It’s been three months since my last update to this site.
My sincere apologies to anyone who has been faithfully checking the site for current information! Why so long?
Well, I’ve been kept pretty busy, between the house, the business, and the challenges of life in a tiny trailer.
A lot has been done in this three months, [...]

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The house now has a roof! Or at least part of a roof, anyway. It’s changing the feel of the project dramatically.
T.B. and Don spent most of last week finishing infrastructure, installing hip rafters, and straightening walls, and then put up the first roof panel last Friday, August 20.
The roof panels are supported on the [...]

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Saturday the 14th my friend Ray and I went to the Bay Area to see what we could salvage from some homes that are being demolished.
You can get some idea of how it works from the Whole House Building Supply web page.
The sales that weekend were an "estate" home in Atherton and a more modest [...]

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Two weeks after setting the first wall in place, we’ve finished all the exterior walls and the key interior walls.
Next week we’ll start putting the roof panels in place.
My friend Tom came over to see the house on Tuesday the 11th, and boy were we glad to see him!
We needed to set a 28-foot gluelam [...]

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Thursday we just bathed the slab regularly and cleaned up all the junk on the edges.
Then Friday we got to start playing with those structural panels mentioned in the July 26 notes.
We started on wall J, which is the west wall. Three windows, no doors, so it should be simple.
First Structural Wall Panel in Place
The [...]

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This was a day to remember. T.B. and Don and the concrete crew arrived at 6 a.m.
The pumping truck and the first concrete truck arrived at 7.
The early start is imperative in the July heat, since the hotter the temperature the faster the concrete sets. Starting early gives the crew a little more time to [...]

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These photos were taken during the slab preparation phase of the project.
This first shot is taken from the knoll to the east of the building site. It shows the entire "floor" of the house.
At the top left you can see the river, which runs roughly parallel to the south wall of the house.
Top right is [...]

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The house was designed by David Wright, an architect based in Grass Valley who has specialized in passive solar design for over 30 years.
The goal was to design a modest-sized house (1400-1600 square feet) that was easy to live in and very efficient to heat and cool.
Though I haven’t yet lived in the house (as [...]

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