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Rosslyn Redux – Page 10 – Reawakening a home, a dream and ourselves

Blog

  • Icehouse Coving Progress

    Icehouse Coving Progress

    Icehouse Coving Progress (Credit: Geo Davis)
    Icehouse Coving Progress (Credit: Geo Davis)

    Back in mid February I mentioned a small coving workaround that was taking shape. A small discrepancy between as-built conditions and the construction plan presented a challenge/opportunity for our coving progress.

    There are ledgers along the north wall and south wall top plates that… [result in] a 1-1/2” step near the top of the wall… [but], our construction plan (A402, detail 4) does not account for this plane discrepancy. I’m endeavoring to integrate the step structurally into the cove construction. Although this structural element creates an added challenge, I actually think that it might contribute to a pragmatic solution. (Source: Ciphering on Icehouse Coving – Rosslyn Redux)

    And today I have some good news to relay: structural integration for coving in the icehouse’s vaulted ceiling area is now complete. The photo at the top of this post shows it wrapping around the north, west, and south walls at the height where ceiling and the north/south walls meet. In the photo below you can see a close-up of the north wall where a new horizontal ledger has been installed and the “shelf” has been fastened underneath.

    Icehouse Coving Progress (Credit: Eric Crowningshield)
    Icehouse Coving Progress (Credit: Eric Crowningshield)

    Rereading that last paragraph, I’ve stumped myself! To clarify, let’s start out with the original detail from the construction plan.

    Icehouse Coving Detail v2 (Credit: Tiho Dimitrov)
    Icehouse Coving Detail v2 (Credit: Tiho Dimitrov)

    The most notable discrepancy with as-built conditions was a horizontal ledger that had been installed on the north and south walls. Secured to the top plate, this ledger provided alignment and bracing for all of the new rafters that were sistered in back in 2006/7 when we salvaged the collapsing roof. The detail had performed well over the last decade and a half, and we had no intention of altering it. But we did need to accommodate it in our construction plan.

    In the sketch below, several tweaks to my earlier “cove ciphering”, allowed us to simplify, streamline, and better support the coving “shelf” that extends out from the walls. (See horizontal 2×8 in image below.)

    Icehouse Coving, Umpteenth Iteration (Credit: Geo Davis)
    Icehouse Coving, Umpteenth Iteration (Credit: Geo Davis)

    The next step will be to encase the 2x8s with trim (dimensional poplar) that will meet up with T&G nickel gap paneling on the ceiling and walls as shown above. Cove crown will be installed beneath the shelf, and an aluminum track will be installed in the corner of the shelf to secure LED strip lighting. Updates soon, I hope!

  • Tulip Time 2023

    Tulip Time 2023

    Springtime is tulip time, a dramatic chapter in gardners’ succession blooming cycles. With snow drops, hyacinth, and daffodils fading, colorful tulip blooms take center stage. And this year’s tulip time does not disappoint.

    Tulip Time (Photo: Susan Bacot-Davis)
    Tulip Time (Photo: Susan Bacot-Davis)

    Signs of springtime are abundant lately. It’s asparagus time. Also ramps, apple blossoms, dandelions, fiddleheads, tulips, nettles,… And lily of the valley unfurling dramatically. An entire army of terpsichorean twirlers synchronized, slowly unfurling, mesmerizing. (Source: Lily of the Valley Unfurling )

    With especial thanks to my bride Susan Bacot-Davis for her moody photos, I offer you three intimate portraits of our current tulip time. Like festive gala gowns these goblets of pigmented petals dazzle and dare us to imagine springtime maturing into sizzling summer soon…

    Tulip Time (Photo: Susan Bacot-Davis)
    Tulip Time (Photo: Susan Bacot-Davis)

    So much confidence and coquetry in these precocious summertime previews. And yet these blooms are delicate, susceptible to swings in temperature and downpours.

    Tulip Time (Photo: Susan Bacot-Davis)
    Tulip Time (Photo: Susan Bacot-Davis)

    The tulips make me want to paint,
    Something about the way they drop
    Their petals on the tabletop
    And do not wilt so much as faint…
    (Source: A.E. Stallings, “Tulips”, Poetry Foundation

    Tulip Time (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Tulip Time (Photo: Geo Davis)

    Tulip time now, and iris time soon…

  • Friend or Foe: Dandelions

    Friend or Foe: Dandelions

    It’s that remarkable season of reawakening, spring, glorious springtime! And more than all of the other blooms that announce the season of unslumbering, Dandelions remind us that nature is nourishing and vibrant and brilliantly colorful.

    Routinely dismissed, even abhored, as an annoying weed, dandelions are for me a welcome harbinger of warming temperatures, greening environs, several seasons of blooms and fruit and vegetables. And yet dandelions remain mostly symbolic representatives of reawakening, vivid reminders of the abundance we’ll soon celebrate.

    Friend or Foe: Dandelions (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Friend or Foe: Dandelions (Photo: Geo Davis)

    A decade or more ago Tom Duca introduced me and a gathering of Essex area friends to The Teeth of the Lion: The Story of the Beloved and Despised Dandelion by Anita Sanchez. His enthusiasm for her enthusiasm about dandelions made an impression on me that afternoon. I planned to read it, but it slipped off my radar. Until now. I’ve located a copy that is presently wending is way to me. So, soon I’ll be able to amplify my understanding (and presumably my appreciation) for dandelions.

    But even before educating myself I’ll comfortably come down on the side of dandelions bring friends. Yes, I know that many might consider them an invasive scourge peppering the perfection of an otherwise green lawn.

    Friend or Foe: Dandelions (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Friend or Foe: Dandelions (Photo: Geo Davis)

    But I do not share this disdain. Rather, dandelions evoke childhood wonder and enthusiasm for spring a perennially optimism inspiring season for me. Simply put springtime is seasonality’s metaphorical morning. And rambunctious riots of dandelions are one of the most exuberant symbols of the season. Persistent, yes, but in so many cases we’re able to recognize the merits of persistence. Why not dandelions?

    We know too that dandelions are a forager’s friends, Nature’s nourishing gift of vitamins and minerals after months of hibernal stinginess. I’ve enjoyed tender dandelion greens in a spring salad mixes from the store, but I’ve rarely made the effort to harvest these spicy freebies from the yard. It’s an embarrassing oversight I intend to remedy. Soon. And dandelion wine? So many experiments to explore…

    Friend or Foe: Dandelions (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Friend or Foe: Dandelions (Photo: Geo Davis)

    So for now, I’ll optimistically file dandelions as friend (and not foe) despite the proclivity of so many among my gardening aficionado cohort to vilify and endeavor to extirpate this sunny sojourner. If designation by and large comes down to bias, I’ve now made mine known. Caveat emptor. And once I’ve made it through Sanchez’s book I’ll be able to update this post with a meatier installment justifying my somewhat sentimental declaration that dandelions are our friends. Stay tuned…

  • Bathroom Window Installed

    Bathroom Window Installed

    North façade progress. Yes, it’s only a bathroom window, but it’s 1/8 of the fenestration on this elevation AND this aperture allows the bathroom to enjoy natural light for the first time in many months.

    Bathroom Window Installed (Photo: R.P. Murphy)
    Bathroom Window Installed (Photo: R.P. Murphy)

    And since the three non operable windows have already been installed, we’re actually halfway to the finish line. Of course, there’s still plenty of window trim to be installed, but…

    Bathroom Window Installed (Photo: R.P. Murphy)
    Bathroom Window Installed (Photo: R.P. Murphy)

    The closeup above shows that we have another identical window still waiting to be installed in the mechanical room. But little by little this side of Rosslyn is starting to approach Tiho’s the architectural rendering.

    Bathroom Window Installed (Photo: R.P. Murphy)
    Bathroom Window Installed (Photo: R.P. Murphy)

    And a quick glimpse inside the interior of the bathroom where Eric and Matt are installing the garapa paneling offers some hint of the measure of progress that a single window installation can afford.

  • Make this Place Your Home

    Make this Place Your Home

    Looking down from my United Airlines window shortly after takeoff from Burlington I’m able to discern Rosslyn’s waterfront and backland, recognizable despite distortion caused by the crazed, milky portal bless. My eye-in-the-sky perspective of Essex, New York (and our Adirondack Coast “home sweet home”) tickled a lyric into my mind, and before I knew it I was humming Phillip Phillips’ catchy tune “Home”. With belated apologies to the stranger seated beside me, I hummed most of the lyrics, but it was impossible not to voice the refrain: “‘Cause I’m gonna make this place your home…”

    Make this Place Your Home (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Make this Place Your Home (Photo: Geo Davis)

    This song is catchy. An earworm. And for me it’s one of many that has woven its way into my subconscious because it resonates with our Rosslyn relationship.

    Hold on to me as we go
    As we roll down this unfamiliar road
    And although this wave (wave) is stringing us along
    Just know you’re not alone
    ‘Cause I’m gonna make this place your home

    Settle down, it’ll all be clear
    Don’t pay no mind to the demons
    They fill you with fear
    The trouble, it might drag you down
    If you get lost, you can always be found

    Just know you’re not alone
    ‘Cause I’m gonna make this place your home

    (Source: Phillip Phillips, “Home”, by Drew Pearson and Greg Holden)

    That’s the gist, although it does revisit those lyrics to prolongue the catchy tune. It’s that last line that gets me. “I’m gonna make this place your home”.

    I recently talked to part of our dynamic crew working on the icehouse rehab about the circumstances — at least a couple of the most significant circumstances — that contributed to our decision to purchase Rosslyn back in 2006. For now let’s just say that it was an inflection point at a singularly challenging time for us. It was an “unfamiliar road” with troubles aplenty dragging us down. And, in many respects, the challenges continued, some worsening, during the first couple of years after — and in no small part because of — purchasing Rosslyn. But this pledge (mine to Susan, and Susan’s to me) to persevere in order to “make this place your home” became our mantra. And it worked!

    “Settle down,” the lyrics urge, as if homemaking (I prefer “homing” to homemaking for reasons explained elsewhere) ensures analgesia in troubled times. Yes, the trouble “might drag you down” but “you’re not alone”. Together we could fend off the demons. Together we would make Rosslyn our sanctuary.

    Phillips first performed the song [“Home”] on the [American Idol] season’s final performance night on May 22, 2012, and then again on the finale after he was declared the winner. (Source: Wikipedia)

    Almost six years out of sync with our purchase of Rosslyn, we unfortunately weren’t able to crank up Phillips’ song to boost our morale in times of need. But when the song began to blanket the airwaves a few years after we finally completed most of the most significant work on the house and boathouse, it instantly felt familiar. It conjured the tribulations we’d navigated as well as the strength we’d found — and rely upon to this day — in our union.

    As we explore what life might look like after Rosslyn — an inevitable if not imminent consideration — we contemplate what it will take to transform a new property into our sanctuary. But this time we understand home and homeness a little bit differently. To “make this place your home” we simply need to be together. Coming home is returning to my bride after time apart (as I did last night after a week away.)

  • Column Flanked Vestibule

    Column Flanked Vestibule

    Tucked into the folds of the icehouse rehab scope of work some accomplishments stand out more than others. The garapa paneling in the bathroom, for example, has been a long, slooow labor of love many months in the making. Many stages and many hands have shaped this initiative, so anticipation has been building for many months. The column flanked vestibule (and the bookmatched ash threshold upon which they rest) is different. I’ll try to explain why this installation is momentous for me.

    Justin Installing Column​s (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Justin Installing Column​s (Photo: Geo Davis)

    [Let’s start with the] architectural salvage [of]… Greek Revival columns that we salvaged from Rosslyn’s future dining room back in 2006 in the early days or our renovation project. (Source: Architectural Salvage: Repurposed Columns)

    Icehouses didn’t historically rely upon columns for structural support, of course. They were utilitarian buildings purpose built to preserve ice cut from lakes, ponds, and rivers during winter to ensure access to ice (and cold storage) during more temperate seasons. Icehouse design was practical. Embellishments like Greek Revival columns would have been impractical, perhaps even frivolous.

    But, needless to say, Rosslyn‘s icehouse rehabilitation is not an historic preservation project. It is an adaptive reuse project. It’s heart and soul is relevance to us today. Think dynamic, multipurpose, vibrant. Think simple and minimalist, but beautiful. Think inviting. Think whimsical. Straddling an unlikely divide — home office (though I prefer the connotations of study/studio) and recreation/entertaining space — the icehouse we’re conjuring into existence will blend productivity, creativity, wellness, and the largely outdoor lifestyle that we favor.

    Why, you might well ask, would we need two imposing columns inside the diminutive icehouse? While the question is reasonable, perhaps *need* is not the most appropriate evaluation. After all, adaptive reuse of a utility building originally constructed to fulfill a highly specific (and outdated) function obviously doesn’t *need* handsome embellishments for structural support. And yet the opportunity to re-integrate these historic Rosslyn elements into an otherwise utilitarian barn has presented a whimsical challenge that at some level echoes the unlikely marriage of work space and recreation hub we’re imagining into existence with this newest rehab project. (Source: Re-tuning Columns)

    Just as fusing work and play in a single space might initially seem incompatible, designing a column flanked vestibule inside an icehouse might evoke concerns of incongruity. Fair concern. And final judgment will be for you to make once we reach completion.

    Peter in Column​ Flanked Vestibule (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Peter in Column​ Flanked Vestibule (Photo: Geo Davis)

    And so as we stride toward completions of the icehouse rehabilitation I draw your attention not only to the finally repurposed columns that once supported a beam in Rosslyn’s dining room. Now let your eyes drift down to the floor, to the bookmatched ash threshold crafted byPeter from some of our homegrown stump-to-lumber hardwood. Yes, it’s breathtaking. And, yes, the charactered grain forms a large stylized heart (and an enormous grin!)

    Columns, threshold, and header are finally coalescing in a long envisioned “spatial transition from the more intimate entrance and coffee bar into the loftier main room”. Witnessing this accomplishment after so many months of planning and anticipation filled me with joy. It affirmed hopes and plans, it rewarded a risky design decision, defining and framing two functionally distinct spaces without losing the transparency and porosity. It instills a playful unlikelihood in an otherwise mostly predictable environment. It filters light dramatically, adding sensuous silhouettes to an otherwise geometric linearity. It delineates without restricting. It is a suggestion. It is poetry.

    And, although there’s more work to be completed before a final assessment is justified, I am immensely pleased with the column flanked vestibule. Thank you, Peter. Thank you, Justin.

  • OG Bobcatting

    OG Bobcatting

    Exciting update from one of Rosslyn’s wildlife cameras when I awoke this morning. Not sure why, but I always get especially enthused when we document a Bobcat. The sequence of three images captured at 2:29am appears to be the same bobcat we photographed a few months ago. Still healthy. Strong. Well fed.

    Bobcat, May 10, 2023 (Photo: Rosslyn Wildlife Camera)
    Bobcat, May 10, 2023 (Photo: Rosslyn Wildlife Camera)

    I’m struck by the fact that we capture bobcat photos and witness bobcat tracks, but I’ve never actually come across a bobcat at Rosslyn. Elsewhere, yes. But it would seem that our Lynx rufus representatives are especially stealthy, keen to avoid human encounters. Susan prefers it that way. But these photos do incite a persistent yen to meet — safely, respectfully — one of these regal neighbors some day.

    Bobcat, May 10, 2023 (Photo: Rosslyn Wildlife Camera)
    Bobcat, May 10, 2023 (Photo: Rosslyn Wildlife Camera)

    Thank you, John Davis (@wildwaystrekker) and Tony Foster (@anthonyfoster335), for siting and creating this trail last winter. Susan and I thoroughly enjoyed our cross-country skiing outings on thus new loop back in February and March. And it’s abundantly clear that our wild neighbors are fans as well!

    Bobcat, May 10, 2023 (Photo: Rosslyn Wildlife Camera)
    Bobcat, May 10, 2023 (Photo: Rosslyn Wildlife Camera)

    In this third photograph a small sapling appears to have sprouted along the downhill side of the trail. Do you see it camouflaging the front legs of the bobcat? It took me a moment to determine that’s what I was seeing. The disparity between the stout forward striding front leg and the strong but slender rear extended front leg — likely an incongruity exaggerated by the angle more than actual physiological discrepancy — initially drew my attention. But the darker mottling, especially on the forward leg, perplexed me. An injury? Atypical fur patterning? A skull and crossbones stocking?!?!

    No. A sapling. And a handsome, healthy bobcat.

  • Hot Tub Wiring

    Hot Tub Wiring

    Many new and exciting thresholds crossed today. Supi, Calvin, and Tony started the stone hardscape project. Peter and Justin installed the columns and book matched ash transition upon which they rest. We finalized the shower glass order, and we *almost* finalized the coffee bar countertop stone. Eric arrived at the halfway point in the bathroom garapa paneling. And Brandon started installing the wiring for the hot tub. What a day!

    Brandon Wiring​ the Hot Tub (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Brandon Wiring​ the Hot Tub (Photo: Geo Davis)

    It’s pretty exciting yo be one step closer to our first soak in Rosslyn’s icehouse spa! Brandon and his assistant will be back first thing tomorrow to wrap up the preliminary wiring so that the slab can be poured later this week. Hot tub, wiring, concrete slab, and then… we’ll be one giant step closer to soaking our bones and celebrating.

    Brandon has been for a couple of years as the electrician for the boathouse gangway / waterfront rehabilitation, the deck rebuild, and the icehouse adaptive reuse. He’s been a tremendous asset, problem solving mystery after mystery, and shoehorning his work into challenging intervals throughout all three projects.

    We can’t wait to celebrate another finished project soon!

  • Lily of the Valley Unfurling

    Lily of the Valley Unfurling

    Signs of springtime are abundant lately. It’s asparagus time. Also ramps, apple blossoms, dandelions, fiddleheads, tulips, nettles,… And lily of the valley unfurling dramatically. An entire army of terpsichorean twirlers synchronized, slowly unfurling, mesmerizing.

    Lily of the Valley Unfurling (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Lily of the Valley Unfurling (Photo: Geo Davis)

    Lily of the valley (Convallaria majalis)… is a woodland flowering plant with sweetly scented, pendent, bell-shaped white flowers borne in sprays in spring. (Source: Wikipedia)

    Lily of the Valley Unfurling (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Lily of the Valley Unfurling (Photo: Geo Davis)

    It’s still too early for the perfume that this ground cover will waft across the deck and into the screen porch, but anticipation smells almost as sweet! And the vibrant pageantry, Nature’s unsubtle choreography, is enchanting, even slightly hypnotic. Believe, these sylvan dervishes chant, believe and spring will swirl into summer once again.

  • East Door Installed

    East Door Installed

    Rosslyn’s icehouse looks a little different this evening. The east entrance door was installed by Peter, subtly transforming the most visible elevation of the building and finally illuminating the entrance hallway with natural light after months in a “cloistered” work environment without any natural light.

    East Door Installed (Photo: Geo Davis)
    East Door Installed (Photo: Geo Davis)

    Although there remains some additional shimming and trimming (plus removing paint from the window panes), the public facade of the icehouse is finally coming into focus. However, another element will appear about a month from now, a familiar element for those already accustomed to this facade. I’m going to keep mum for now, but a fun surprise soon!

    East Door Installed (Photo: Geo Davis)
    East Door Installed (Photo: Geo Davis)

    The much anticipated exterior change is only half the news. The interior is transformed! Sure, the overpainting tempers the impact of this new door, but it’s already recasting the interior in natural light. And a welcome evolution this is. You might recall that all windows and doors were closed in with insulated paneling months ago to ensure a warm, weatherproof work environment during the winter. Well, it worked perfectly, but everyone on the team is longing for natural light. At last the entrance vestibule is illuminated from without. I’m looking forward to starting my day in the icehouse tomorrow morning to see that it looks with the sunrise bathing the interior…

  • Backlit

    Backlit

    Reinventing Rosslyn’s icehouse as a hybrid home office and recreation/entertaining space has taken center stage intermittently since last summer (planning board and permitting) and continuously since last autumn (deconstruction and reconstructing). In fact, it sometimes feels like the icehouse rehabilitation has eclipsed just about everything else. This evening’s snapshot, our icehouse backlit by setting sun, appears to show the building emitting a halo of light. It kind of captures the vibes of this project in recent months!

    Backlit Icehouse, May 5, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)
    Backlit Icehouse, May 5, 2023 (Photo: Geo Davis)

    Backlit, Haiku

    Old icehouse backlit;
    sunsetting a prior use,
    moon rising a new.

    I’ve talked plenty about this project metaphorically backlit against the ideas of historic rehabilitation and adaptive reuse. And I’ve examined ways in which this latest chapter in a slow rolling renovation that’s been ongoing in one capacity or another since 2006 is backlit by our lifestyle choice to leave NYC and relocate to Essex. But I haven’t really developed the literal, visual impact of this charming building — my “Multipurpose Man Cave” — offset by the sun settling into the Adirondacks.

    Backlit Rehab

    But this deserves some ink. As too sundown and the gloaming as observed from the soon-to-be-complete icehouse terrace, patio, hot tub,… Still an unphotogenic construction site, there are never these moments, like this evening, when I get a glimpse of how things might look and feel by midsummer.

    For now, no more ink. Just a backlit snapshot of Rosslyn’s icehouse rehab looming large, glowing, dramatic.

  • Multipurpose Man Cave

    Multipurpose Man Cave

    Mowie surveying the “multipurpose man cave” (Photo: R.P. Murphy)
    Mowie surveying the “multipurpose man cave” (Photo: R.P. Murphy)

    In recent years, the terms “she shed” and “man cave” have wiggled their way into our everyday vocabulary. Maybe not ubiquitous, but both can be uttered without explanation. I’m generally disinclined to adopt these here-today, gone-tomorrow buzzwords. Too trendy. Too contrived. Too something, though I’m not 100% certain. Today I’ve decided it’s time to pop the bubble and swim in the mainstream. It’s time for a test drive. Today’s icehouse rehab is tomorrow’s “Multipurpose Man Cave”!

    In the photo above, Pam’s dog Mowie survey the multipurpose man cave (likely thinking to herself that’s it’s a multipurpose dog house…)

    It’s funny how our differing perspectives influence our ways of seeing, understanding, defining, and describing. We’ve always referred to Rosslyn’s icehouse as “The Icehouse”. We probably still will.

    But maybe not. Maybe “Multipurpose Man Cave” or “Multiuse Man Cave” or “Multiuse Retreat” or “Multipurpose Oasis” or “Flex-use Sanctuary” or “Stand-alone Studio”… Probably none of these, but each conveys something notable. Once rehabilitation is complete and the former utility barn is reborn, it will be a home office and entertainment space hybrid where productive and playful can cross-pollinate!