Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Orcas Island Cabin

David Taber here with a post about a new cabin that is starting construction this summer:
From the ferry, the site is an enjoyable 10 minute drive through rural farm land to the northern edge of the island. The  5 acre, steep slope property will provide a year round getaway for this extended Seattle family.    

The property has expansive views of the water and the northern most San Juan Islands beyond.  Access to the rocky shoreline 140 feet below is attained by a meandering path through the rugged landscape and a steep wooden staircase. 


Site Section

The detached garage/guest house have been located deep into into the property, away from the secondary access road and nestled in-between several old growth Douglas Fir trees. Further downhill, the cabin is accessed by foot, down a set of stairs and across a short, steel framed bridge. 



Entry/Upper Level Plan

From the bridge there are views through the cabin to the water beyond.  Designed as an "upside down house", the living areas are on the upper level in order to take full advantage of the dramatic views and natural light.  Spaces have been placed along the east/west axis and oriented north.  Expansive bi-folding glass doors spill out onto a deck which runs the length of the cabin and terminates at a covered outdoor dining area adjacent to the kitchen. Two master suites have been stacked and isolated from the the cabin by a glass enclosed stair tower.



Lower Level Floor Plan

The lower level contains the second master suite, two additional bedrooms with a shared full bath, and a large multi-functional playroom.  Each primary space spills out onto a narrow stone terrace which connect to a small play area, numerous hiking trails and the family fire pit.  

View of cabin and detached garage/guest house beyond


Stair Tower 


Floor to ceiling windows maximize water views to the north and secluded wooded views to the south.  Open stair risers and cable railings increase natural light to the playroom and hall at the bottom of the stairway.   



Kitchen / Dining 

Select Douglas Fir trees cleared for construction will be seasoned and milled for exposed structural members, flooring, ceilings and finished millwork.  The open kitchen, living and dining areas are flooded with natural northern and eastern light by large transom windows and wide sliding glass doors.



Stay tuned for the construction photos coming this summer!

Saturday, February 28, 2015

Re-inventing Microhousing - The Yobi Apartments Tour April 25-26



Yobi Apartments is one of our most exciting new housing projects.  We've written about the project in earlier posts, discussing its innovative approach to micro-housing and design features that promote community among the residents.  The project will be featured in the NW GreenHome Tour on April 25th & 26th, so I thought we’d take a post to review the project’s sustainability.

The project has a number of notable sustainable features.  Like most of our work, it is certified Built Green 4 Star, which means that it has met performance criteria over a broad range of categories, including stormwater management, water use, energy use, indoor air quality, and waste reduction.  The project is particularly interesting when you look at its energy usage.


Yobi Apartments has a number of energy saving features, including a high performance exterior envelope, spray foam insulation, passive solar design, high efficiency lighting, and high efficiency gas boilers.  All together, the project has an energy use budget that is 60% of what is required under the current energy code.  That’s pretty good in and of itself, but it’s only half of the picture.
Energy use for buildings is usually measured in a unit called EUI (Mbtu/sf/year). EUI is useful for comparing one building to another in terms of energy use per square foot. Micro-housing is very space efficient & each occupant uses dramatically less square footage than what you see in typical housing, so to really understand the building’s performance you have to look a bit beyond EUI.


A typical code compliant apartment building will have an EUI of about 40.  If you include common areas and circulation, a conventional apartment takes up about 800sf of floor area for each unit.  Yobi Apartments has rather ordinary EUI of 38, but Yobi uses only 280sf per unit.  So, when you take space efficiency into account, you start to see just how energy efficient small apartments can be.  A person living in the Yobi uses roughly 1/3 of the energy of someone living in a conventionally designed apartment building. 


EUI (Mbtu/sf/yr)
SF
per unit
EU per unit
(Mbtu/yr)
% Energy use compared to typical apartment
Typical Apartment Building
40
800
32
100%
Yobi Apartments
38.7
280
10.8
33.8%


The Yobi apartments represents a very important housing type, providing private market affordable housing in a desirable location, designed to promote community and a featuring a carbon footprint per occupant that is leaps and bounds ahead of conventional housing.  Ironically, Yobi may be both the first and last project of its kind.  Projects like Yobi were largely banned by anti-microhousing legislation passed in November the city council.  It is our hope that city officials and council-members will take advantage of the Green home tour to see Yobi and come to an understanding of just how much baby was thrown out with the bathwater.

Yobi Apartments Project Team:
Architect:  David Neiman and Liz Pisciotta - Neiman Taber Architects
Structural Engineer:  Todd Valentine and Brice Parrish - Harriott Valentine Engineers
Landscape Architect: Patricia Lenssen, Philbin Landscape Architects
General Contractor and Development Services:  Trent Mummery, Metropolitan Company
Marketing and Leasing: Chasten Fulbright, Blanton Turner



Saturday, February 7, 2015

Marion Green Featured on Architizer



We recently submitted our Marion Green Courtyard project for an Architizer A+ Award.  Hard to say what our chances are with the awards jury, but we clearly got the attention of the editorial staff.  They are now featuring the project on their homepage. http://architizer.com/


Monday, November 10, 2014

2014 Green Building Slam - Nov 15th 5:00pm Kane Hall



Our good friend Scott Engler of Heartwood Builders will be presenting our Beach Drive Residence at the 2014 Green Building Slam (formerly 10x10x10).  If you've never been it's a pretty cool event featuring lots of inspirational projects.  We are very pleased to be included and grateful to Scott for taking the initiative to submit and present the project.  For tickets and event information see:  http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/731790.

2014 Green Building Slam - Seattle
Kane Hall, University of Washington
November 15, 2014 5:00pm

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Marion Green Tour

For a few minutes this weekend the rains relented and we were able to enjoy some clear skies for our Marion Green tour.  We truly enjoyed the opportunity to show off the completed project to our friends and to thank many of the people who helped take this project from concept through to completion.


This was our second project using the central covered courtyard concept and our first project as architect/developer.  It is difficult to prototype a new housing type and we were helped enormously by efforts of the city council and DPD who saw merit in what we were trying to do and helped clear away some of the regulatory hurdles that cropped up along the way.  Marion Green wasn't easy to pull off, but the path has been mowed and the next one will certainly be easier.

I noticed that another development group has picked up on the courtyard-over-parking idea and is proposing a similar kind of project.  It is my hope that many others will follow suit as well.







Monday, October 27, 2014

Marion Green Sneak Preview

Alec Gardner from our office ran out to Marion Green last week to snap some sneak preview pictures.  We hope to see you at the tour.  Open House on Saturday Nov 1, 1-3pm.  More pictures at:  http://www.neimantaber.com/marion-green

A-Untitled_Panorama2 (2).jpg

A-Untitled_Panorama5.jpg


Thursday, October 23, 2014

Marion Green Tour - Saturday Nov 1 - 1pm to 3pm

Marion Green, our first project as architect/developer, is just about finished up and ready for the new owners to move in.  We will be holding an Open House on Saturday Nov 1, 1-3pm to share this unique project with our friends and colleagues.  This project represents a major step forward in terms of providing a model of dense infill housing that facilitates community among neighbors, provides generous open space and natural light, and deals effectively with the aesthetic and logistical challenges of automobile parking.


Thank you to our partners at Paar Development and to our many collaborators:

Architect:  David Neiman and Juan Vergara - Neiman Taber Architects
Structural Engineer:  Jim Harriott and Benjamin Bird - Harriott Valentine Engineers
Landscape Architect: Patricia Lenssen, Philbin Landscape Architects
General Contractor:  Peter Ottele and Doug Scheer - Village Builders
Strategy and Marketing:  Joe Paar, Paar Development
Sales Agent:  Jacob Menashe, Berkshire Hathaway

Event details and RSVP at http://www.eventbrite.com/e/marion-green-courtyard-townhomes-open-house-tickets-13891679387


Friday, October 3, 2014

Madison Apartments

Perspective looking east down Denny Way 



The Madison Apartments is a mixed-use building on an existing vacant lot on the corner of East Madison Street and 23rd Avenue East. The project hopes to successfully develop a challenging site that is currently a missing tooth in the urban fabric, provide housing and commercial opportunities that are scaled to the local housing and business needs, and to develop a high quality building that is authentic to its time and is responsive to its context. 
The project has been designed to respond to both the commercial nature of the Madison Corridor and to the residential nature of Denny.  Along the Madison corridor the project steps down the hill, creating multiple retail entries that can support small incubator retail businesses.  The façade design features large storefronts, projecting awnings, and a certain degree of visually dynamic asymmetrical composition.  Along Denny, the project uses similar materials, but there is no expressed storefront base, no continuous canopy, and the composition is more ordered and quiet.
The project has been specifically designed to step the lower levels of the building in order to adapt to the sloping public way.  This stepping allows for a more porous edge along the Madison commercial corridor and a minimization of the visual impacts of the parking and utility uses along the Denny façade. Placing the residential entrance along Denny Way creates pedestrian activity and activates all sides of the site.  
At the corner between the Madison and Denny Facades, The project celebrates the corner with a façade that is more transparent, features a double height retail space, and expresses the geometry of the site by featuring a sharp prow that is typical of triangular sites in the Madison corridor. The transition from the corner prow to the Denny façade leaves a little space between the two masses to allow them to be visually distinct and resolve in a more successful fashion.

View looking west down Madison Street
The project has been designed to accommodate narrow floorplates, multiple entries, and correspondingly small, more affordable apartments and incubator commercial spaces. All of these features are highly responsive to the needs of the neighborhood residents and businesses. The project massing has been designed to express the geometry and take advantage of the sloping nature of the site. 
Parking is in an area behind the building, partially enclosed and partially open.  The portions of the parking enclosure that are open are screened by a green screen wall and an overhead trellis.

View looking west up Madison Street

In commercial zones adjacent properties can be developed to the property line, so projects have to be designed to work both in their current form, and in a future condition with a neighbor built up against it. The NE blank wall features unit balconies that create depth and shadow, and a composition of colored panel siding to add visual interest.  The SE blank wall features a frame-infill pattern that echoes the Denny facade.  A portion of this wall has been set back three feet to allow for windows in the façade to increase visual interest.
The project features a number of high quality materials that are selected with durability and appropriateness to climate in mind.  Project materials include Integrally colored GFRC cement panel siding (OKO skin), Anodized aluminum storefront, powder-coated steel canopies and decks, vinyl windows, rainscreen installation of all sidings, exterior insulation of all roofing. 
Permits are expected to be ready for a Spring 2015 start of construction.

Friday, September 12, 2014

Artist Reception

Please come and join Neiman Taber Architects this Saturday evening, September 13th, from 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm for an evening of art and cocktails.  We will be showing the work of two talented local painters - Janice Tayler and Alan Rushing.

If you can't make the show, several pieces will remain on our walls until the next party, so feel free to swing by anytime over the next month to take a peek.

Neiman Taber Architects
1421 34th Avenue  Suite 100
in Madrona

Janice Tayler  "Wounded Undertow"  36"x 36"

Alan Rushing  "Bay view"  30" x 42"



Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Micro-Housing Legislation Needs Work


Background
Marion Micro Housing by Neiman Taber
In response to the ongoing controversy over micro housing, Councilmember Mike O'Brien has proposed new legislation that would significantly change the rules for micro housing development in Seattle.
Depending on your point of view this proposal is either a welcome reset of the development standards for the zone, or a step backwards in terms of accommodating the real world needs of our housing market.  Putting this question aside, the proposal is based on the premise that current forms of micro housing have a unit density that is inappropriate (too dense) for the low-rise (LR) zones.
Ravenna Micro Housing by Neiman Taber
Current micro housing development is mostly built in the form of congregate housing (private sleeping rooms with shared kitchens and other amenities) and produces an average unit size of about 150 ft.². Councilmember O'Brien's proposal would ban private development of congregate housing in LR zones, replacing them with conventional studio apartments with a minimum average size of 220 ft.². Development under this new proposal would result in a unit density roughly two-thirds of what is typical today.
Land-use regulations should always be as simple and as flexible as possible. Since the purpose of the proposal is to limit density, the straightforward way to do so is to impose a density limit. Instead, the proposal attempts to regulate density indirectly by restricting unit type, size, and features in a manner that is unnecessarily restrictive, complex, and likely to lead to unintended consequences.
As architects that specialize in infill housing we have designed a number of small unit housing projects. Some of the projects are congregate style micro housing with shared communal spaces. Some of the projects are conventional studio apartments that have few shared amenities. While these two types of small unit housing serve a similar sector of the housing market, the unit designs for the two types are quite distinct from one another and neither type matches very well with the unit sizes that are anticipated by the new proposal.
The Difference Between Micros and Studios
Small studios and micros are not the same thing. Micros are generally designed with built-in amenities along the perimeter of the room and a walkway down the middle. Studios are generally designed with bathrooms & kitchen areas clustered into a zone so that the remaining living room area can be set up with loose furniture arrangements.
Because of their efficient configuration, micros generally average around 150sf (Figure 1a).  As they get bigger, the built-in amenities get roomier, resulting in larger bathrooms, kitchenettes, desks, and beds. In all sizes, a double loaded walkway down the middle remains more or less a constant (Figure 1b).


Because of the pragmatics of furniture settings (and a code dictated minimum living room size), most studios are larger than 220sf (Figure 2a).  In our projects, it is rare for us to design studio smaller than 250sf.  As studios get smaller, they get progressively more difficult to furnish in a useful manner (Figure 2b).  220sf is very close to the lower limit for a studio. 


So, while it is quite possible to design a useful dwelling unit at 220sf, or even 180sf (the minimum size currently proposed), the low end of the range anticipated by the proposal is not realistic in the studio format.
The floor plan arrangement that works best at that size is the one we use for micro’s, but this kind of floor plan cannot meet the minimum living room area required for studio apartments (currently 150sf, proposed 120sf).
Conclusion
The legislation, as proposed, would make it impossible to provide a small unit in the format that makes it most useful for the end user.
If the goal is to regulate density, then regulate density.  Council member O’Brien’s proposal would work out to roughly a density limit of 1/150 in LR3 and 1/230 in LR2 (units /land sf).  LR1 already has a density limit for apartments.
Enacting a density limit would achieve the council's stated policy goals while making large parts of the remaining legislation unnecessary.  With a density limit in place, there is no need to regulate minimum unit size, both small apartments and congregate housing could be allowed, and there is no need for the land use code to micromanage the interior design of housing units.  The outcome is predictable, flexibility is preserved, and individual developers and architects remain able to design housing that best fits the needs of users.

Table A for 23.45.512: Density Limits in Lowrise Zones
Zone
Units allowed per square foot of lot area by category of residential use
Cottage Housing Development (1) and Single-family Dwelling Unit
Rowhouse Development
Townhouse Development (2)
Apartment (3)
LR1
1/1,600
No limit
1/2,200 or 1/1,600
1/2,000 
LR2
1/1,600
No limit
1/1,600 or No limit
1/1,200 or No limit 1/230
LR3
1/1,600
No limit
1/1,600 or No limit
1/800 or No limit 1/150


Saturday, August 2, 2014

Olympic View Courtyard Townhomes

Our latest courtyard townhouse project is getting ready to submit for permit review.  Olympic View sits on lower Queen Anne on a sloping site that looks over the Uptown neighborhood with views out to Downtown, Mt Rainier, and Elliot Bay.

While Olympic View shares many attributes with its predecessors Beacon Green and Marion Green, it is the first time we have applied the idea to a sloping site, so the project terraces down the hill to provide units with an unobstructed view from each roof terrace.

The parking level is a little different than anything we've done before, featuring a mixture of garage and open parking that allows us to get a larger parking area.  This translates above into a larger courtyard space than on any of our previous projects.

We've been experimenting with using Google Earth to help study the views from the project.  To help verify the Google Earth info, we modeled distant bits of the topography, shoreline, and downtown buildings.  An example of the framework we use for this is shown below

Olympic View is scheduled to construction in April 2014 with units coming to market by the end of the year.

Olympic View Townhomes - Overview
View from Roof Deck
Section View Through Courtyard
Model framework of Downtown and Elliot Bay used to test views and window placements.


Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Church Green Townhomes - first hurdle cleared.

Our townhome project for the West Seattle Church of the Nazarene took a step forward today.  It was reviewed by the City Council Central Staff and the Planning Commission and placed on the docket to be considered for a comp plan amendment that would allow the project to go forward.  In about 2 weeks, we will have another hearing, and if we get past that one we'll be well on the way.