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Sometimes it is not easy to find a builder willing to take a timber frame job, Steve admits. "At first blush it is a challenge because very often builders will say, 'Well gee, I've never done that,' and they might not want to get involved.
"But I've also found that just sitting down with the builder - if he's a good builder used to doing custom work - he'll have no problem figuring out how to do a timber frame," Steve says. "In fact, most of them kind of enjoy doing it."
The Evanses' wait was worth it. Their three-bedroom, two-and-a-half bath Arts and Crafts style home has warm Douglas fir timbers with matching interior trim, and an open floor plan with cathedral ceilings that, Ian says, "create the sensation of a space that is much larger than the square footage would suggest".
Stepping from the front porch into the wide, open foyer allows a skyward view of the house's roof timbers, as well as the second-floor hallway with double balconies. One balcony overlooks the foyer, while the other perches above the great room in the back of the house. Two bedrooms and a bath are off the second-floor hall.
On the first floor, one can walk three directions from the foyer: to the right and the guest bedroom, to the left and the breakfast nook, or straight ahead into the main hallway. The main hallway leads directly to the light-filled great room. The right side of the main hall also provides access to a walk-through closet to the master bedroom.
To the left of the foyer, the breakfast nook opens to the kitchen, which has a pink granite-countered island and snack bar area. The kitchen, in turn, opens to the great room along the home's rear, offering both a cozy seating space with a raised fireplace and a dining area.
Most of the first-floor rooms have access to a mahogany deck that wraps from the front porch to the back of the house. A separate large deck off the great room also can be reached via the master bedroom.
"The house flows very nicely because of the way they have the front hall foyer and the dining / great room and kitchen," notes Steve. "It forms a nice visible circle area."
Clean, Simple and On-Budget
The home's many French doors and Loewen windows give the first floor an open, airy feel. The windows include a Heritage grillwork that reinforces the Arts and Crafts styling, as do black iron light fixtures. "I wanted Arts and Crafts; it blends modern and traditional," Janet explains. "It has clean, simple lines using wood as opposed to glass, metals, or plastics."
"Our highest priority was to get the house we really wanted," Ian says. "I don't like to compromise." But the couple also had a strict budget. To keep items they considered important, such as their high-end, brushed stainless steel kitchen appliances, they delayed doing landscaping and installing the driveway. They also saved money by choosing a gas fireplace with cultured stone surround instead of a wood-burning fireplace with a stone chimney.
The couple also did some of their own finishing work. Their biggest project was staining 26 bundles of the cedar shingles needed to finish the gable ends of the house exterior. It took one full weekend, eight family members, and 32 gallons of stain to complete the project.
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To keep costs in check, the homeowners took on some projects themselves. They stained all of the home's exterior shingles - with help from willing family members.

Soaring ceilings give the home an expansive feel, although its square footage is not large. Stacking windows in the tall gable wall adds visual interest.

A skylight punctuates the ceiling between roof rafters in a second-floor bedroom. Tapered knee braces arch gracefully between posts and beams

Wood trim in the master bedroom echoes the wood in the home's timber frame. |