Permanent Renewal

I am currently re-doing the study and want to match a splash of strong colour with a modernist theme. I have chosen apple green for the walls with white trim, door and blinds. I am also gathering - hence the links - all white furniture. The desk will be from the reasonably priced stalwart and amazing industrial engineering icon, Ikea. The Vika.

The chair is a more difficult issue. In Virginia I had a geek chair with netted back, adjustable everything, etc. But now I use the Macbook in ergonomically impossible places like the bed, kitchen bench and sofa. So the chair in the study doesn't need to be as hardcore as the desk will only occasionally be used for 'work from home' style things. Consequently I am going to get this cool metal chair from vessel.

I have to do an installation that will be built from a white box with my Marshall amp embedded in, and I have a white Fender Stratocaster copy, and a (soon to be white) bass guitar that will be hung on the walls. I will also buy some canvases and make them up in a mix of grey background with splashes of orange outlines as art for the larger wall. But this leaves some more floor space which needs something on them, but nothing big, which runs the risk of shrinking the room unnecessarily. The answer is molo design's felt rocks;

I will post pictures when it is finished.

Note: Have to install these electrical plugs in the study too.

Note II: And get this clock for the room. Or alternatively, this wall clock.

Note III: Need to get a Stendig Calendar for the room.

Note IV: Also a memory stone to replace post it notes.

Note V: A U-shaped USB desk lamp

Note VI: Retro Wall Slats.

Note VII: White concrete planters.
Guy: My recent experiences with Ikea have left me seriously wondering whether the cost reduction resulting from the lack of assembly is worthwhile or not. It's like Lego, with occasionally misleading instructions and a real risk that you will end up doing damage to your product!
cam: Guy, You mean like this?

Guy: Heh heh - yep!

Designing An Outdoor Patio Area

One of our long term goals is to buy land and design a modernist house ourselves. We have friends who have started on that process as well; they have the land and he is doing architectural courses at night to make sure their design is sound. They have plans for it and they are awesome.

When we were in the Mayan Riviera we happily mixed our times between the beach and the resort's pool. Which raises the issue what makes for a good patio/pool experience? Our current house has a pool and patio area which we do not use much, which raises the issue, why don't we use it more?

What makes a good patio/pool area?

1. The pool is a good temperature to swim in.
2. The furniture is comfortable.
3. The patio area is pleasant and roomy.
4. The patio area is easily accessible with other areas like the kitchen (drinks, etc)

So we fail in many areas. The pool we have is a diving one with a 10 foot deep end. It means it is cold for most of the year, too cold to swim in. In Arizona it is 90F at the moment and the pool is still too cold to swim in. As a consequence there is little impetus to go out into the patio area. Pool warming systems are expensive but it would be one solution. In the future dream house though, the pool will not be so deep and be shallower so that it can be swum in more of the year.

The furniture we have on the patio is not comfortable. The resort had big, long, banana type chairs that were relaxing to read, lie, or sunbake in. They also had palapas everywhere so shade was never far away when needed. The pool area also had many tropical plants which gave good shade coverage when needed. We recently pulled down the pergolah area in the back yard, so there is little shelter at the moment. It will most likely get replaced with sails/shades.

Most patio areas on houses are an adjunct. The living room is usually dominant in house design and whatever remains from the house plan, the patio is then usually just tacked on. Architectural indifference as it was called in a talk I went to recently.

In outdoor cities like Phoenix the patio should be an integrated part of the house plan. We actually live in a small circle which makes much of the house unused and useless. We spend 90% of our time in the circle of the bedroom, kitchen and patio. We do not use the lounge room as the bedroom is large enough to have a couch in it, so most of our music, computer, reading, etc is done in the bedroom or kitchen.

Most of the rest of the house, such as the living room, lounge room, and front bedrooms are only used when we are entertaining, and being Arizona, a kick arse patio would be more useful in that situation. When we threw a party last winter we hired warmers, as a consequence nearly 2/3rds of those that came spent the entire time outside. So in reality the lounge room and living room can be shrunk to the point of being dropped if the patio is sufficiently strong that it can replace those living areas.

Finally, our current patio area enters the kitchen through a tiny door rather than through sliding doors or the back of the house being mainly glass with sliding doors. So it is inconvenient. At a resort of course bars are always near the pools so getting a drink is never an issue.

So our current patio doesn't get used that much because it fails in those areas. It is also why we used the resort pool area so much. In order to make the current outdoor area more usable we need to change the furniture, put in some shade, heat the pool up and landscape. Ouch, expensive.

For a dream-house I am of the opinion that the living room can be moved outside, which would cut down the size of the house required significantly. This also makes the patio an integral part of the design that needs to be harmoniously worked in with the pool and kitchen (and the main bedroom leading out to it). That will probably end up being a goal.
todd: When I lived in Florida, some neighbors had a very cool pool. It wasn't a square seement pond, it was irregularly shaped and made with colored cement (I think) with waterfalls (more bubblers, really) that made it look a lot like a "natural" arboreal watering hole. It was big enough to swim in, but I have a feeling it would be hard to do laps because of the color and shape. It wasn't a diving pool, and it was great for water volleyball. The cement was also dark, not white or blue, so the pool warmed up very quickly in the spring.

A good pool patio needs a bathroom with a shower that you don't have to go through the house to get to. (Especially important for beer drinkers!) You don't want to drip all the way through the house and it would be good to be able to shower before you get in the pool, also without traipsing through the house all wet and drippy.

cam: The shower we had in Mexico was very Mexico-ish. We mentioned that a dream house should incorporate an outdoor shower with appropriate privacy. This house we looked at had his/hers (marked that way) toilets directly off the pool area. Like you said, it is a good idea.

I think it is hard to integrate the outside as you would the inside just because it goes against what you normally think. Usually the house is an island safe from the outside world, so the inside is worshiped over the outside. In Arizona that isnt so much an issue.

Often furniture is things like making ctl-alt-del pillows or transferring something else, such as a brick pattern, to chairs. Not very creative or interesting. These white chairs though by Naoto Fukasawa are very nice.

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