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This Hill Country home was
designed by Kenneth Graves, Architects of San Antonio. Red Suspenders
Timber Frames designer Tim Chauvin worked closely with the architects
to blend the log and heavy timber elements with the high tech aerated
concrete block used for all the walls of the home. This southwest inspired
design blends in well with the arid and hot Hill Country environment.
The formal entry is
tucked in between wings to both protect it from the wind and the sun but
also visually leads the visitors to the front door. All exterior walls
are faced with stucco and the roof is raised seam galvanized steel
The entry porch is curved
in plan. The roof is a conic section that required some intricate math
and joinery. The heavy timbers are supported by log columns topped with
substantial corbels. The log rafters support smaller log purlins that
tract the curve of the roof. All logs in this home are Southern Yellow
Pine and were peeled by hand. The logs were kiln dried slowly in our kilns
to limit shrinkage and checking. The finish is hand applied white wash.
The grand entry doors
complement the stone floor, heavy timbers and log rafters.
The foyer features several
peeled log ceiling joists. Timber headers top each doorway and the entry
portal in the left of this photograph has two massive log columns, graceful
corbels and a massive header beam.
Passing through the
entry portal and turning right you enter this beautiful hall that has
numerous log ceiling joists. The handmade wooden doors stand out beautifully
from the stucco walls.
The living room ceiling
features some massive log rafters. The hipped roof meant that several
logs had to join at compound angles. The scribed intersections were crafted
in such a manner that the smaller jack rafter looks as though it is a
branch of the larger hip rafter. The timber portal to the dining room
is visible in the center of the photograph.
The dining room portal
has two massive log columns supporting corbels and the timber header which
in turn supports the log ceiling joists.
A timber header above
the breakfast counter leads the eye into the kitchen which sports peeled
log ceiling joists like many other rooms in the home. The white washed
pine cabinets match the logs.
Another view of the kitchen shows that each log was carefully selected for its location in the home. We hand selected logs that were much the same diameter and showed similar knot patterns for each room.
The natural log bed,
rustic armoire, stucco kiva and log ceiling joists give the Master Bedroom
a distinct southwestern feel.
The great room French
doors lead onto a back porch that features a grand log roof system supported
by log columns and corbels. The hip sections once again feature great
log rafters joined at compound angles. As the front porch does, the back
porch has peeled log purlins that support a pine board ceiling.
The back porch overlooks
a pool surrounded by natural Texas limestone. A small waterfall flows
out of the main pool to a smaller one and provides nice background music
for a day in the sun.
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