Clark's maps and journals describe a small village of
several wood houses of the native Tillamook people who lived on both sides of the creek he named Ecola.
In his journal, Clark described a small village of
several wood houses of native Tillamook people who lived on both sides of the creek.
Not exact matches
With six levels, the
house has a sweeping staircase, four - story glass atrium,
several wood - burning fireplaces and a basement with gym, sauna and bath.
Soon, we arrive at his
house, a five - floor, industrial - style space with brick walls,
wood floors and
several personal touches: a Charmander Pokémon stuffed animal in his bedroom and a bong shaped like Benny Blanco's head in the living room.
There are
several little huts and dog
houses throughout the
woods with bedding inside that serve as private nests.
In a century - old
house made of dark teak
wood, simple but well - kept rooms have high ceilings, soft beds, mosquito nets and
several windows.
The
house features: Earth sheltering on three sides with a carefully designed PAHS style insulation umbrella that uses the surrounding earth for thermal storage.Passive solar gain through the south triple glazed windows.Active solar through
several Trombe walls integrated into the south wall.An extensive earth tube system that pre-heats incoming fresh air and recovers heat from outgoing stale air.A carefully designed back up
wood heating system.Solar water heatingProvisions for solar electricity.The
house is located at 45 degrees north latitude and has a serious winter — the total heating bill for the past two winters has been $ 70 worth of
wood — about 0.6 cords.
Made to fit a family of four, Laird arrived at this modern, FSC
wood - built, second version of his mobile «Leaf
House» after
several prototypes.
However, there was no code prohibiting
housing several hundred people in a building made of
wood, and no code prohibiting the use of wooden roof components which allowed the fire to further spread.
This Victorian greenhouse with a striking
wood - and - metal framed roof
houses several hardy cacti species.
Several rooms in my old
house had
wood trim, too.
As soon as we closed on our
house, we started
several projects immediately — we replaced our roof, removed the scruffy edges on the extra carport (aka «winnie hole»), added hardwood (red oak) floors in the living room, dining room, kitchen / den, and laundry room to match the floors in the back half of the
house, screened and recoated the hardwood floors in the back half of the
house, replaced the two sliding glass doors from the kitchen / den out onto the porch with French doors, removed doors between the kitchen and dining room and between the den and entry way, painted the
wood panelling in the den, painted the cabinets in the kitchen, replaced the old cabinet hardware, replaced the sink and range / hood, replaced a single wall oven with a double one, added granite tile kitchen countertops, added a beadboard backsplash, replaced a few light fixtures, added a chair rail in the dining room, added crown moulding in the living room and dining room, and painted lots of rooms.
The
house had been vacant and in foreclosure for
several years after it was built in 2006, but Layla looks forward to loving it back to life... one (
wood) wall at a time!
In our Heber
House Master Bedroom we layered
several wood tones — light beams, dark bed, a dark antiqued
wood bench and white - washed nightstands — and then chose a mirror that ties them all together.