Timber Home Living - December 2008

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Timber Home Living - December 2008

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Planning an Eastern Timber Home | East Meets West | South County Post & Beam



Eastern Timber Home Plans
"East Meets West" | June 2008 | Timber Home Living
by: Holly O'Dell | photography: Rich Frutchey


Planning an Eastern Timber Home | Timber Home Living:

South County Post & Beam HomeEast Meets West: Known for its ability to create serene spaces, Japanese architecture features many desirable factors: natural materials, a strong connection to the outdoors, numerous windows, asymmetrical details, verandas and modest roof pitches. For Ken and Susan Bouvier, all these elements organically and effortlessly blended in their Asian-inspired home in South Kingston, Rhode Island. “The location and dimension of the house led the way,” Susan notes. “It was almost as if the house dictated what was appropriate.”

Such synchronicity was the norm from the moment the Bouviers decided to build. Ken, who owns South County Post & Beam in West Kingston, Rhode Island, first considered Far East-influenced architecture for his home after his company built a traditional post-and-beam Japanese teahouse for a client. Ken and Susan had already purchased a 6-acre parcel situated on a knoll and brimming with mountain laurel shrubs. “After studying the architecture and considering the site, it just seemed like we should put the two together,” Ken recalls.

The couple used South County’s in-house team to design and construct their 2,900-square-foot 4-bedroom, 3-bathroom timber home. They wanted the Japanese influence to be present in both the shape and overall layout of the structure, along with the relationship of the main roof and shed roofs to the wrap-around veranda. They had no trouble accomplishing their goals. “At the first design meeting, one of the designers did a doodle based on my ideas,” Ken says. “When the home was built, we went back to that sketch, and it looked really close to the finished product. It’s nice to see something like that happen. It means you’re onto something good.”

Undeniably, the thoughtful design details contribute to an overall feeling of openness, tranquility and lack of pretention in the finished home. The primary framing is Eastern white pine with a natural finish, chosen to enhance the Japanese-style architecture. “It’s fairly small for timber framing,” Ken explains. “We wanted it to be not only light in size but also in color.”

The Bouviers used a multitude of other wood species, most of which came from within a 25-mile radius. They selected native white oak for the exterior framing, hand-split Western red cedar shakes for the roof and Western red cedar siding. A matching set of split white cedar logs on either gable end of the living room helps define the space, while red maple is stunning in the kitchen cabinetry, interior doors, stairways, treads and balusters. Exotic woods like paduk and wenge make a strong statement in the master suite, while bamboo flooring pervades the main level.

Other features that evoke Far East sentiments include sliding shoji screens; original art and antiques from Asian countries; an exterior railing that mimics a Chinese pattern; and the use of bamboo, Japanese ferns and stone pathways in the landscaping. The living room, which models a Japanese farmhouse, is a favorite of both Ken and Susan’s. “It has nice proportions,” Ken says. “The vaulted ceiling is comfortable without the feeling that there’s too much space.” Adds Susan: “We have a beautiful perspective of the outside and can look far over the veranda, into the valley and back up to a stone Buddha. It’s an expansive view with no break in the vision.”

For the Bouviers, all the features blend flawlessly to create a home that’s just as much a feeling as it is a dwelling—appropriate for an architectural style that emphasizes balance and serenity. “The house is more of an experience,” says Susan, who oversaw the home’s interior design. “Rather than coming across as big or bold, it subtly suggests peacefulness.”


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Timber Home Living - December 2008

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