Friday, December 14, 2012

Habitat House

Description:
We are building a habitat for humanity home for the Torson family.  This family consist of one person, Colyn Torson, a twenty one year old Computer Softwear Engineer. This house is supposed to be a two bedroom, two bathroom, home that is less than nine hundered square feet. Requirements of Colyn Torson included few/no windows in areas with prevailing winds, heater close to plumbing fixtures, windows facing south on the house, and his kitchen and dining together. These were accomplished when we designed the house. Most of our windows evade prevailing winds making the house able to insulate heat better. We combined the kitchen with the dining to make the room feel more spacy. And our heater is located inbetween most of the plumbing fixtures making it easy to transport water. Some of the design features that we incorperated in the house include Energy Star rated appliances. We also created a crawl space for extra room and it made everything easier to get water to. Even though it was tough to make the house green, meet the requirements of Mr. Torson, and meet the requirements of habitat for humanity, we created a design that pleased all.


Bubble Diagrams:



Sketches:




SitePlan:




Renderings:




Dimesioned Floor Plans:




Elavations:



Wall Sections with Labels:



Window and Door Schedule:


Room Schedule With Total Square Footing:



Electrical Plan:




Plumbing Plan With Key:



Calculations:
Water Supply Calc.

 I found, based on the distance from the water source and pipes, that the expected water pressure in the house will be 44.51, which is within the residential limits.


Storm Water Runoff
In the predevelopement, we found the Cf (runoff coefficent factor) to be 1.25 (100 year storm), C (runoff coefficent) to be .1, i(intensity) to be 3.05, and A(area) to be .5 acres. By using the formula Cf x C x i x A, we found the Q to be .2 cfs. The post developement was a little differnt. In the post developement, the i stayed the same at 3.05, and the acres stayed the same at .5. Also the Cf stayed the same at 1.25. The difference was the C. I had to take into account the roof of the house and the asphalt of the drive way. I found the C of each area and averaged them out.  After calculations, I found the C to be .1727. When I used the formula Cf x C x i x A, I found the Q to be .34 cfs.  In the end, we had a difference of .14 cfs.  To account for this change, it is best to use a ditch.

3 comments:

  1. Organization- 5/5

    Description- Good rundown of the family, codes, and sustainable design features. 5/5

    Bubble Diagrams-5/5

    Sketches- 5/5

    Site plan- good use of plantings. Might consider using plantings to block out the busy 10th street. 5/5

    Renderings- 5/5

    Dimensioned Floor Plan- The living room is very long and narrow, making it look smaller than it is. 5/5

    Elevations- The foundation is way too deep for the frost line. This is fine, but also needlessly expensive. 4/5

    Wall Section with labels- 5/5

    Window and Door Schedule- 5/5

    Room Schedule with total square footage- This is where your house’s main flaw lies. The garage eats up too much of your sq. footage. If you went with a detached garage, you could afford more room. Still, you had room to spare and could have widened the living room. 4/5

    Electrical Plan- 5/5

    Plumbing Plan with key- 5/5

    Water Supply Calculations- 5/5

    Storm Water Runoff calculations- 5/5

    Overall nicely done. Your simple design made even this tiny home look as big as it could. You could have taken more advantage of the extra area, and even sacrificed a detached garage for more room. You put in a lot of work here and it shows. 73/75

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