Home Designs

20 Essentials of Great Log Home Designs

Log Home - 20 Essentials of Great Log Home Designs
Log Home – 20 Essentials of Great Log Home Designs

Everything you need to know to create a warm, comfortable, attractive log home.

Over the last 30 years, architects and designers have taken log cabin design to places our founding fathers could scarcely imagine. Yesterday’s one-room cabins have become full-fledged homes—even castles—sought out by do-it-yourselfers and boardroom barons alike.

No matter how far-flung the application, log homes remain a direct link to things that are earthy and natural. We see them. We feel them in the very marrow of our bones. Logs choose us as much as we choose them.

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Because these homes are what they are—dynamic, vigorous, natural—there is much to learn from them and about them when it comes to planning and decorating.

You will find many quirky challenges, but also exciting opportunities. Together, they form the core of your journey to the home sweet log home. To make that journey a little easier, here are 20 design essentials I have discovered during my years photographing, writing about and living in log homes.

1. Your Decor Should Fit with Your Logs

When decorating, you need to be mindful how the decor you choose will fit with the log style and corner style of your home. While nobody would pigeonhole a given decorating style as being specific to one log style or corner treatment, certain decor does fit better with certain log profiles and building techniques. Rustic and casual styles often work best with rough-peeled and dark-stained logs. Traditional furnishings fit well with hand-hewn dovetail construction. And the contemporary decor is a good match for round, smooth-skinned walls with light finishes.

2. Drywall Isn’t a Dirty Word

Sometimes an all-log house can feel oppressive or dark. While exterior walls may be wood through and through, you should consider building at least some of the interior walls from conventional studs and drywall. Framed walls provide a break from the logs and make room for wall art, decorative paper and paint (not to mention providing hiding places for pipes and wiring).

Clip Art Graphic of a Yellow Residential House Cartoon Character

3. Tall Walls Need Visual Relief

A 25-foot-tall wall built with small logs can feel vast and disproportionate without visual breaks. To create a visual tier and balance out empty vertical space, consider installing one or more large, attractive light fixtures that drop down into the room. In like fashion, you can break up a tall, unbroken expanse of log wall by hanging large tapestries, quilts, and rugs. Unique architectural ornaments, such as Victorian gingerbread, an iron gate, old window frames or ever-popular recreational gear, like canoes, sleds, and snowshoes, also are good choices.

4. Let the Trees Speak

As a raw product of nature, logs are as the sculptor’s clay: there to be carved and transformed into images of grace or fancy. When building your interior, consider using curvaceous branches to create spontaneous weavings and decorative rails. Or give a piece of burled wood a place of distinction. It is humorous, touchable and intriguing.

Used in a big way, logs can even give shape and substance to a room. Massive trusses and sculpted passageways help set the emotional pace. Arches, curved posts, and roaming twigs can become the focal point of a room or serve to soften the powerful

interplay of vertical and horizontal lines inherent in log walls.

5. The Sun’s Kiss Can Be Dangerous

Since log homeowners often pay dearly to get a building site with spectacular views, there is a tendency to shy away from installing shades and draperies over the windows. Depending on where you live and the exposure of your house, this can be a huge mistake. High-altitude cabins are particularly susceptible to damaging ultraviolet rays that can harm interior wood and furnishings. If your home is still under construction, consider installing windows that have special low-E coatings, multiple layers of glazing or tinted panes. Each of these reduces the amount of ultraviolet light that gets into the home. To mitigate problems with existing windows consider sunscreen shades. Made of flat, washable, synthetic materials, these shades are exceptionally durable and nearly transparent when lowered.

Clip Art Graphic of a Yellow Residential House Cartoon Character

6. Don’t ‘Oversize’ Your Furnishings

In log homes, there’s a tendency toward grand rooms with soaring ceilings. Such places frequently call for larger furnishings. This makes sense since stout pieces match the stature of log walls while overstuffed chairs and cushy pillows invite comfort and intimacy. Just don’t go too far. Decorators emphasize that things can get too big.

Rather than over scaling everything in a large space, create separate furniture arrangements to accommodate smaller groups or different activities, such as dining or game playing. Use different- sized—and shaped—area rugs to divide a room and anchor individual furniture groupings. Tuck nooks and comfortable crannies into a room. Window seats and little alcoves can feel cozy and exceptionally private, even in a large space.

7. Every Room Needs a Point of View

Wherever possible; create places with a dramatic element that draws your attention. It might be any number of things, from a large picture window to a prominent fireplace, a magnificent staircase to an eye-catching chandelier.

In oversized spaces, you will frequently have more than one focal point to plan around, such as a fireplace at one end of a room and a breathtaking picture-window view off to the side. You can enlist those elements to create areas for separate uses. For instance, one furniture arrangement may encourage nighttime leisure around the fireplace while another might have you sporting binoculars to watch an errant moose rambling through your garden.

Clip Art Graphic of a Yellow Residential House Cartoon Character

8. Muffling Your Walls Will Improve Acoustics

While the acoustics in log homes can be superb, log architecture differs from conventional construction in ways that an astute audio buff will want to consider. Sound waves can bounce around on bumpy walls, making it hard to control their direction.

To absorb and diffuse these errant waves, try installing large furnishings and heavy draperies. Bookcases at the end of a room, wall hangings and tapestries also help.

9. Your Rooms Should Be Versatile

You can enlarge your home’s practical value by planning and furnishing rooms for multiple uses. A convertible couch in the office or an armoire with a fold-down desk in the guest room is an obvious way to overlap space and function. However, what about installing a drain in the mudroom floor so you can wash down the dogs? Or, add seasons of use to enclosed porches by adding a heat source and trading screens out for Plexiglas windows in the fall.

10. Log Homes Crave Extra Lighting

Logs tend to be darker than plastered, painted or papered walls. Furthermore, the light that is reflected is typically warmer than it would be in other forms of construction. That means it takes more light to achieve the same level of illumination.

This is especially an issue in high spaces with striking trusses and beam work. Carefully consider your lighting needs and include additional lighting in the ceiling if it is warranted. Plan ahead. Wiring is relatively cheap before the logs go together and the roof goes on but retrofitting is not!

Clip Art Graphic of a Yellow Residential House Cartoon Character

11. Brightening the Walls Helps, Too

Beyond electrical lighting, there are other things you can do to brighten dark interiors. You can stain the logs a lighter color. Refresh your chink lines with a lighter hue. Paint the wood ceiling white or cover it with bamboo matting, soft suede hides, tin ceiling tiles, even embossed (and possibly painted) wallpaper.

Want more options? Try enlarging existing windows or merely lightening window dressings with bright fabric-covered valances. Or line up a row of prints framed with broad white mats, or hang up a quilt.

12. It’s OK to Play with Your Decor

Whether you favor the Wild West, Mission style or something more eclectic, identify the inspiration for your decor early on. This way you can narrow down your palette of colors and materials.

Do not be afraid to take chances. Slathering your kitchen cabinets in fire-engine red or papering a framed wall with a bold floral print can be exciting. Indeed, you can make a wrong turn, but if the fear of trying leaves you with a dull, neutral palette, your log home might lack the very qualities of originality you desire most.

13. Color Can Accent and Unify

Pops of bright color used sparingly unify a space and create flow among rooms that spill over into each other. When choosing the color, balance it with the surrounding walls. If you have three or four dark- stained walls, then mix in lighter, brighter furnishings or big splashes of intense color. Where lustrous honey-colored wood dominates, you may want to use subtle, earthy tones as accents. Have gray or pickled finishes on your walls? Consider colors that are more contemporary or a roomful of cool neutrals.

14. Fabrics and Textiles Should Match the Setting

Fabrics are the building blocks of home decor, so it is important to choose yours wisely. In log homes, coarse treatments and nubby textures are especially popular while durability and feet-up comfort are also high on the list. Soft-to-the-touch chenilles invite you to curl up by the fire. The leather is about the most durable fabric you can have. It will stand up to rivets, jeans, and big-buckled belts.

For a new look, recover a couch, throw a half dozen patterned pillows on a bed, or re-dress your windows. You also can apply backing to fabrics and use them as wall coverings, much like paper but with more muscle.

Clip Art Graphic of a Yellow Residential House Cartoon Character

15. Flooring Should Fit with Its Function

Log homes are steeped in a timeless sense of permanence. We instinctively want to pair them with kindred materials: stone, granite, more wood, earth-inspired tiles. But when choosing flooring, countertops, and other hard-surface materials, it is important to keep function in mind. Light-colored carpets naturally do not fit well in a home filled with kids and pets. Likewise, unforgiving stone floors are not good choices for the kitchen or rec room if you have young children around.

On the other hand, stone, brick or poured concrete are the best options if you intend to have radiant- heat floors. They transmit heat readily and, with the thick mass, continue to give off warmth even after the heating system has cycled off.

16. Consider Collectibles for Your Cabin

Despite being all grown up and perfectly capable of formal and sophisticated airs, log homes still come from a long lineage of doing and using stock.

As you pick your furnishings, keep that in mind and work in the trappings of everyday stuff—the things people use, wear and eat—or the things they used, wore and ate in former times.

Tools, hides, heads, utensils, quilts, blankets, boots— logs make friends with them all. Fix them to the wall, saddle up a beam or set a canoe afloat in the rafters.

17. Hanging Wall Art Takes a Little Creativity

Chunky, bumpy walls can make hanging pictures a challenge. But I have yet to meet homeowners who were stopped cold by a few errant dips and humps. Instead, they seek creative solutions, such as fitting corks behind pictures to even out irregular spaces and help the pictures sit flat against the wall. One designer uses a crumpled tissue to help temporarily float groupings of pictures on new log walls.

Later on, after the logs have settled, she will go back and make the fix more permanent. When it comes to nail holes, logs are forgiving, making it easier to have fun with your art and move pieces around.

18. Nature Belongs in Your Log Home

Our need for nature is as fundamental as our thirst for water, and bringing it inside is partly instinct. To incorporate natural features into your home, look to your local willows, woods or distant red-rock cliffs for color and inspiration.

Fill an urn with long-lasting corkscrew willow, red dogwood, and paper birch. Or add baskets and containers full of earthy collectibles and fresh flowers. They make a home feel lived in and comfortable.

Feel free to vary things occasionally, too. Change table linens, draperies, blanket throws or the art on your walls to suit seasonal shifts and moods.

19. Decorating Doesn’t Stop at the Back Door

Outdoor spaces enlarge living areas and often extend the connection with nature that log home owners value and delight in. To create comfortable living space outside your home, start with the porch. Fill it with a swing and rockers, line the walls with pegs for gear, screen it in or even include an outdoor hearth.

Want to take the outdoor theme further? Build a stone-lined path down to the brook or out to a hammock anchored under shady boughs. Scatter Western memorabilia and abandoned farm equipment around as yard art. Hang collectible metal signs on your barn or shed.

20. There is Always Room for Improvement

Houses grow a little as people do. They get older. Styles change. Eventually, they may need some cosmetic surgery—or a heart transplant.

An older, nothing-special house might need a decorative infusion of cabin spirit and some log accents to perk it up. If you have got an aging log home, consider some structural adjustments to update it. Knock down old walls to create one spacious room where several small ones once lived. Or add on to the home to create unique space. If you are not a purist, you can save time and money by framing up a new addition then using log siding. Siding can also come in handy when trying to cover scarred logs that surface when you move a closet, eliminate a fireplace or take out existing cabinetry.

Log Home

 

Click here to download:  Log-Home-Energy-Performance

Click here to download: LOG HOME CONSTRUCTION AND MAINTENANCE TIPS

Click here to download: Canadian-Log-Home

Click here to download: Log Home FAQ

How Much Does It Cost to Build With Insulated Concrete Blocks?

How Much Does It Cost to Build With Insulated Concrete Forms?

How Much Does It Cost to Build With Insulated Concrete Blocks?
How Much Does It Cost to Build With Insulated Concrete Blocks?

If you’ve ever tried to nail down a hard answer on this subject, you’re probably already familiar with the broad range of estimates out there.

To determine the cost to build with Insulated Concrete Forms and to make your search a little easier, we’ve taken a look at the major reports on ICF costs throughout USA and Canada and boiled them down to the basics.

One thing that makes cost comparisons difficult is the fact that ICF blocks costs are usually measured in square feet of wall area while wood frame costs are measured in square feet of floor area.

House Plans

So, How Much Does It Cost to Build With Insulated Concrete Forms?

Depending on the study, you might see ICFs converted to relate to floor area, so it’s a good idea to keep track of what’s being measured to avoid any confusion.

Another thing to bear in mind is that different studies use different costs. Some give what the general contractor paid (referred to as builder’s costs or total house cost) while others give what the general contractor charges to install ICF blocks (referred to as sales price).

Let’s take a look at some numbers:

A Portland Cement Association technology brief drawing from work done by VanderWerf, Feige, Chammas, and Lemay (Insulating Concrete Forms for Residential Design and Construction, 1997) concluded ICF blocks cost builders about 4%-5% per square foot of floor area more than wood frame houses of the same design.

At the time of the study, the typical US and Canadian homes cost the builder about $80-$120 per square foot of floor area, so using ICFs added about a $1.00-5.00 premium to this figure.

This held true only for homes built by experienced contractors (who’ve built at least 4 to 5 houses).

Along similar lines, the NAHB Research Center’s Demonstration Homes Project also evaluated the use of ICFs in residential construction in 2007.

They experienced up to 10% increase in total house cost, adding about 7%-8% to the final price for the buyers. The NAHB’s Tool-Base report found that ICF Blocks increased builder’s cost by $20 per square foot of floor area compared to wood frame construction.

These days in Southern Ontario prices range from $16.00 to $18.00 per square foot of finished ICF wall.

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The Bottom Line:

So where do all those studies leave us? The bottom line is this: ICFs usually cost more than wood frame. But by how much? It depends. There are so many potential influences on the price that it’s tough to nail down a solid estimate.

Here’s why: concrete, lumber and foam prices, ICF form prices, lumber prices, exterior finishes, design features, crew experience, labor markets, and engineering all influence the cost of the intended project.

Results from the NAHB Research Center’s Demonstration Homes Project showed that total costs for construction of ICF foundation walls can be less than that for poured walls.

An added cost of $15.00 – $20.00 per square foot of floor area seems to be in the middle of most of these ranges. But take that figure lightly; construction with ICFs can increase builder’s costs much less or more. It’s easy to see why there’s been so much debate on this issue.

All this being said ICFs do have significant cost savings opportunities. Because ICF construction is more energy efficient, HVAC systems can be downsized, and those savings offset part of the cost difference.

Using Stucco as your exterior finish will also reduce some of the expense of the base styrofoam required for stucco installation is already set up.

Most builders report fewer customer service calls on their ICF homes

ICF homeowners enjoy lower utility bills, better sound proofing, and durability. Some have estimated that the monthly savings provide a good payback on the initial investment. And then you have the benefits of a stronger, quieter, more comfortable home.

In Conclusion:

The cost of ICF vs. more traditional methods of construction is typically more for the actual construction, but the cost of ownership of an ICF structure is significantly less than the more traditional methods. In nearly every documented case of the cost of an ICF structure, the return on investment (ROI) for the extra construction cost is within 10 – 15  years with many showing less than ten years.

Depending how costs are viewed, ICF blocks may cost a little more or significantly less to build and operate.

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ICF Foundation Cost discussed here:

Healthy Homes – A Must For Our Children’s Futures!

healthy homes
Healthy Homes

The myth that building a “Healthy Homes” can cost a great deal more is not right.

Home may be where the heart is but it’s also where you’ll find dust mites, paint, asbestos, mould and mildew, off-gassing synthetic carpeting, plywood with heavy formaldehyde concentration, radon gas and mould spores. Indoor air pollutants that can cause problems ranging from sneezing and skin rashes to severe breathing problems, cancer, and even death.

Healthy Homes are part of the “green building” movement in this country – We don’t want office buildings that make us sick, and we don’t want a home that makes us uncomfortable or ill.

A few of the improvements in the house building industry include the fact that lead-based house paints have been banned since 1980, and asbestos (used for insulation and as fireproof wall barriers) since 1986.

Urea formaldehyde-based insulation can no longer be used in houses, and formaldehyde emissions from urea formaldehyde bonded hardwood plywood are far lower than it was 15 years ago.

More home buyers want electronic and non-electronic high-efficiency air cleaners. And where some builders used to give their new house customers a lovely houseplant as a thank you gift, many give a duct-cleaning gift certificate as a thank you instead, since so many people want their ducts cleaned before they move in.

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In addition to duct cleaning homeowners wanting healthier houses are opting for hardwood floors in the bedrooms, which can be easier to clean and have no out-gassing like synthetic carpeting, and one-piece fiberglass tub enclosures that eliminate mold and mildew.

Chemically sensitive individuals or others with allergies may opt for cabinets made from solid wood and galvanized steel, stainless steel kitchen countertops with welded and polished seams, central vacuum systems, outdoor exhaust, and copper water lines that are joined with lead-free solder.

The myth that building a “Healthy Homes” can cost a great deal more is not right. Some homes don’t cost any more; others can add up to 25% more. But balance that with the money spent on the medical and insurance expenses for problems caused by an unhealthy home and the costs are well justified.

It has been said that we shape our buildings, and then our buildings shape us. When we consider that the average North American spends at least 90% of life indoors, the significance of this statement becomes apparent.

Seven Tips for Keeping a Healthy Home

  1. Keep it Dry – Prevent water from entering your home through leaks in roofing systems, rainwater from entering the home due to poor drainage, and check your interior plumbing for any leaking.
  2. Keep it Clean – Control the source of dust and contaminants, creating smooth and cleanable surfaces, reducing clutter, and using efficient wet-cleaning methods.
  3. Keep it Safe – Store poisons out of the reach of children and properly label. Secure loose rugs and keep children’s play areas free from hard or sharp surfaces. Install smoke and carbon monoxide detectors and keep fire extinguishers on hand.
  4. Keep it Well-Ventilated – Ventilate bathrooms and kitchens and use whole house ventilation for supplying fresh air to reduce the concentration of contaminants in the home.
  5. Keep it Pest-free – All pests look for food, water and shelter. Seal cracks and openings throughout the home; store food in pest-resistant containers. If needed, use sticky traps and baits in closed containers, along with least toxic pesticides such as boric acid powder.
  6. Keep it Contaminant-free – Reduce lead-related hazards in pre-1978 homes by fixing deteriorated paint, and keeping floors and window areas clean using a wet-cleaning approach. Test your home for radon, a naturally occurring dangerous gas that enters homes through soil, crawlspaces, and foundation cracks. Install a radon removal system if levels above the EPA action level are detected.
  7. Keep it Well-Maintained – Inspect, clean and repair your home routinely. Take care of minor repairs and problems before they become significant repairs and issues.