An innovation of artist Nicholas Chappell, Vermont Woodsmith blends art, mathematics, and carpentry to offer a unique array of products and services.
An innovation of artist Nicholas Chappell, Vermont Woodsmith blends art, mathematics, and carpentry to offer a unique array of products and services.
Footer forms configured to fit the potential roof
Corner form of entry with rebar, ready to pour concrete
We have a monolithic footer. Appears as a bling ring from above
Foundation made with dry-stacked interlocked cinder blocks. Each hollow has rebar and poured concrete, solidifying a base for the structure
Rough plumbing, specifically drains for sinks and toilet out to city sewer, then filled. Note the entry is empty. This is a future root cellar
Two-ply of rigid foam making R20 under the floor and yellow stago or radon barrier
Road base floor substrate atop foam and the first two wall panels!
It's growing! Panels are 4 x 10 stud/OSB with tar paper exterior. There are 24 total, plus the entry which has different geometry
All panels are up with central support ring in place to receive rafters
First four rafters, only 50 more to go. They are bare on the central ring, which spreads the weight evenly
Roof is roughed in, all 54 rafter are resting in their place forever. Pitch is 7/12. Note the lack of OSB and tar paper on the wall panels, this pic is taken from the entry
Kind of Death Star looking right here, over 2,000 piece of tongue + grove white pine make the ceiling and hold the insulation
T + G is primed as a vapor barrier, and all seams are poly caulked to limit heat loss, ready for blown cellulose insulation in foreground
Metal roof is on! This is a huge step in any building process. Penetrations made for wood stove and sewer vent
Window are in and the entry is shaping up. Logs cleared from the footprint were used to support the front porch. Strapping is attached as an air gap between the siding and the house
Live-edge hemlock siding milled in Wolcott, VT is on. Hemlock weathers very well.
Interior framing starts. Larson-truss, two-walled system is utilized, creating 10-12 inches of insulation. That is R36 - R44. The interior of the whole home is curved all the way around.
More framing. A bedroom is beyond the stairs seen, a bathroom to the right of them, and a loft is above. The post exiting the pic are again trees from the original footprint
My first curved stair case
Every staircase needs a handrail, my first log handrail. Had to find a pair of logs with a similar curve to the stair
Walls with earth plaster (clay-based) and the complete handrail. The bath is the doorway on the right
Plaster (drying) and windows and ceiling. Although subtle the window openings are flared 15 degrees on the sides and top between the two layers of framing. This allows more light and more view ability from various angles
Tile mosaic I designed and installed. This is the wall with the shower head and the hot and cold water mixer
Continuation of the mosaic. The season transition from right to left
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