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Case study: Deco window

February 2nd, 2011 No Comments

We got word of a beautiful and unusual renovation featuring Marvin from Wooden Window in Oakland, Calif. They graciously provided us with photos and a history of this project.

The owners of a 1930s San Francisco home  have been restoring it for the past nine years. After several door and window projects with Wooden Window, they proposed their most challenging job yet: the design and fabrication of a 10-foot-wide picture window that integrated a deco design the couple had seen as a railing in another nearby neighborhood.

Their original design posed structural concerns, so Wooden Window and Marvin collaborated with the clients through eight rounds of revision until, as the client put it, “we arrived at a design with which I was pleased and that Marvin was comfortable building.”

The result was a stunning work of art and craftsmanship that exists as the focal point of their deco facade. Wooden Window Inc. also won a Northern California NARI award for this project.

The next step is the replacement of a different window with French doors that will open to a step-out balcony. They plan to again work with Wooden Window and Marvin. ”The renovation is a continual work in progress,” according to the homeowners. Following a recent paint job, tiling, the addition of a marquee and neon house numbers, their home will have you turning your head next time you find yourself on Monterey Boulevard in San Francisco.

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Posted in case study, design

myMarvin Architect’s Challenge: Smyrna Opera House

January 6th, 2011 No Comments

The Smyrna Opera House in Smyrna, Delaware, was constructed in 1867 and expanded in 1878. Fire destroyed the third floor and bell tower in 1948. The second floor originally housed a theater and other public spaces, but it stood vacant for many years.

After determining feasibility, reconstruction and adaptive use of the old building plus needed support facilities — stairs, elevator, mechanical equipment, toilets, kitchen — were phased with fund-raising efforts. To meet code standards — and to re-create a balcony in the theater which provided a column free floor — extensive structural improvements were required.

Though no original documentation was available, spaces were designed to be consistent with that period while still accommodating contemporary needs. Analysis indicated that window replacement was a better choice than repair, based on both initial cost and long term performance. Marvin fabricated the windows to match the original. The re-creation of the third floor and its windows was based on a few old photographs.

Marvin Clad Custom Ultimate Double Hung Round Tops were used in this renovation. Jay Cooperson of Cooperson Associates in Wilmington, Delaware was this project’s architect.

Posted in architecture, case study

Case study: Quick Residence

December 8th, 2010 No Comments

The owner of this house in Jaffrey, N.H. was committed to creating a unique home that complemented the rural setting and acknowledged the classical traditions favored by her architect grandfather, but with a distinctly contemporary feel. She charged the architect with creating a home that was both restrained and exuberant, both classic and modern – and was delighted with the result.

Architect Frank Riepe of Building Arts in Sudbury, Mass. looked to early New England architecture, Shaker meeting houses and rural Italian churches for inspiration. He sought simple composition, an intimate relationship between indoors and out, a strong sense of shelter, an expression of honest craft and a timeless quality of proportions and massing. These goals translated into walls a foot thick and special detailing around the windows set into them. The modest program of this small house reflected an early American sensibility of simplicity, spareness and directness.

Marvin’s broad range of standard sizes, ability to customize critical details such as the fixed corner casements, and uniformly high standard of quality combined with technical support and helpful design assistance to realize this project. The large size of the double-hung windows (they are 4′ x 8′) was a part of a calculated over-scaling of window components in a decidedly small house. As a result, people approach the house with a sense of wonderment.


Posted in architecture, case study

myMarvin Architect’s Challenge: City Market Restoration

November 18th, 2010 No Comments
 
Restoration and renovation of the historic Merchants Bank Building in Kansas City into leasable tenant space brought this historic property into the 21st century while maintaining the historic integrity of the structure. This historic property had only a few original wood windows intact; several windows showed signs of severe deterioration, others were covered with plywood. The entry door was completely missing; moisture infiltration had caused considerable damage. New Marvin windows and entry door bring balance and a natural rhythm to the building’s façade while helping greatly to improve the indoor thermal comfort and arrest the deterioration of the historic interior.

The design intent was to utilize modern materials in creative ways to replicate the unique architectural context of this historic building, based on historic photographs. A system of built up Marvin aluminum stock mouldings at the main entry re-created the proportion and complexity of the door opening which originally was built with limestone and decorative glazed terra cotta.

The City Market Restoration was designed by Susan Richards Johnson of Susan Richards Johnson & Associates, Inc. in Kansas City.

Posted in architecture, case study

myMarvin Architects’ Challenge: Vacation Home

November 2nd, 2010 No Comments

This playful little home, perched on a wooded hillside in Pomfret, Vermont, has lots of personality.

Diverse materials and design elements are all arranged to create an open, informal, comfortable retreat in the woods. The design satisfied the client’s desire for a contemporary getaway, and the assortment of windows facing every direction capture light and views of Vermont forests and mountains.

More than just a contemporary “shed in the woods,” this home was built to be environmentally friendly and thermally efficient, thanks in part to Marvin’s High-R Tripane glazing. Marvin products used in this house included casements, French casements, Venting Picture Windows and awnings.

Vacation Home was designed by Jeff Stetter of Gossens Bachman Architects in Montpelier, Vermont.

Posted in architecture, case study

myMarvin Architects’ Challenge: Victorian Conversion

October 21st, 2010 No Comments

Originally built as a single family house, this Victorian structure had suffered a series of serious compromises by being altered to a rooming house in the 1950′s, and then into five poorly subdivided apartments in the 1960′s. The still discernable beauty of the underlying spaces and proportions, however, suggested a creative solution. While San Francisco codes did not permit a return to a single family occupancy, the design configures three new units in a way that they can be joined into one large home, or inhabited individually allowing flexibility and change in the way it is inhabited.

Proportions, windows and doors “make” the spaces in this residence. Vertically scaled windows and 9′ French doors are appropriate to the high ceilings. Equally important were energy considerations. Antiquated counterweighted single glazed windows were replaced with weathertight, clad, double glazed and coated windows which improved occupant comfort and slashed energy usage. By creating modern livable plans within while respecting the original spirit of the Victorian design the house gained a new utility and aesthetic for its second century.

This home was renovated by Alexander Seidel, FAIA.

Posted in case study

myMarvin Architects’ Challenge: Island House

October 14th, 2010 No Comments

This beautiful house, on an island in New York, was designed by Jacob Albert of Albert, Righter & Tittmann in Boston.

The clients wanted a new take on local Shingle Style traditions for this seaside vacation retreat. Its neighbors, which date from the 1880’s through the 1920′s, are light-hearted and picturesque but understated vacation houses. Island House distills the essence of its seaside summer community, updating local traditions to accommodate the requirements of modern living. The round tower and gently flared gambrel roof give the sense of swelling volumes characteristic of the Shingle Style. The strong, continuous eave line helps to root the house to its site.

This house takes full advantage of the ocean view with its large windows and French doors. Dramatic repetition of pointed dormers places paired Marvin double hung windows on an angle to better capture the sweeping views to the water. A row of awning windows on the entry side wraps around a conical tower and continues onto a dormer, visually linking the separate forms. Durable Marvin windows were very important to this project, given the harsh year-round weathering. Marvin clad windows keep the weather out, requiring a minimum of maintenance, while staying true to the flavor of the place.

Posted in architecture, case study

myMarvin Architect’s Challenge: Palo Alto Family Home

October 12th, 2010 No Comments

The design for this Palo Alto, Calif. home for a growing family grew through a careful blending of the husband’s love of some of the more exuberant examples of Arts and Crafts homes and the wife’s strong desire for a quiet and refined ‘California Craftsmen’. Wide porches and predominantly horizontal lines harken back to the classic homes of architects Green and Green, while remarkable attention to detailing produces a “buttoned down” refinement of character. Inside, the generous use of glass, in windows as well as doors, floods the home with natural light, providing brightness and exuberance beyond that typically found in historic arts and crafts design. This project is all about the detailing. Windows and doors play a crucial role in the overall aesthetic of the home. Marvin windows and doors allow great flexibility in sizing and mullion design, and ordering options allowed windows to be trimmed in the field to meet specific requirements.

Marvin product used in this house included Ultimate Double Hungs and French doors. The house was designed by architects at the Fergus Garber Group.

Posted in case study

Traditional bathroom gets remodel with Victorian flourish

October 7th, 2010 No Comments

Good taste and restraint can go a long way in designing a home remodeling project.

When the owners of this bathroom were looking to remodel, both they and architect Jean Rehkamp Larson understood that the existing layout offered the best configuration.

“The space was already well laid out, and as we weren’t making any changes to the size of the bathroom’s footprint, it was decided we could better improve the functionality in other ways,” says Rehkamp Larson.

Built in the 1890s, the home features a great deal of traditional detail, which the owners were keen to reference within the bathroom.

The Marvin windows used fit the style created throughout the bathroom. Marble countertops, bronze accents, and dark wood trim complete the look.

Kind of makes you want to see the rest of the house, doesn’t it?

[photo]

Posted in case study, design, remodeling

myMarvin Architect’s Challenge: Minnehaha Creek Addition

September 30th, 2010 No Comments

Originally published in “The Small House” magazine in 1931, this Minneapolis house was designed by an architect for a property overlooking the creek. The client was a writer who frequently contributed to the era’s shelter magazines. In his articles he discussed the connection of the house to its site, and the great pleasure of living in a place so connected to nature.

The current owners bought the house for these same qualities but needed to expand the 1,100-square-foot house to meet the needs of their growing family. They set out to take best advantage of the bluff-top setting without compromising the charm of the original house. The addition design brings together the elements of a small, New England saltbox with the red board and batten siding of a Swedish Stuga.

The new construction works with the existing house to control views to the neighbors and create privacy, but remains open to the park and creek below. The large scale and fine detailing of Marvin double-hung windows echo the tradition of the large, low-set double-hung windows that originally existed in the house. Windows, used around corners on all three levels, provide wonderful views of the creek valley. Marvin’s attention to both the performance and appearance of their products allows them to integrate seamlessly with high-quality custom millwork. Other Marvin products used in the Minnehaha Creek Addition include wood French doors.

The Minnehaha Creek Addition was designed by Todd Hansen and Christine Albertsson of Albertsson Hansen Architecture, Ltd. in Minneapolis.

Posted in case study

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