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TIMBER FRAME HOMES SPRING 2004
 By Judith Landau

If you are planning to build a new house, you probably have an image of the one you want to build and lots of opinions about how a good house should function. You can even see parts of the house in your mind’s eye. Nevertheless you may still find it difficult to accurately describe the house to someone else.

The ability to visualize in three dimensions is a challenge for many of us. Trying to describe the sizes and shapes of rooms can be frustrating. Like the proverbial blind person assigned to the task of explaining what an elephant looks like, you can describe the relationship between the kitchen and the living room and the feeling you want to achieve in the vaulted great room. What may be problematic is explaining how the whole house will look when all of your ideas are combined and assembled under one roof.

From rough sketches to CAD renderings, designers are using the tools necessary to turn your timber frame house dream into a reality.


Working with a Designer

The relationship between you and your designer begins with a dialog. You describe your ideas and answer questions about issues you may not have considered.

A designer takes your answers and begins to build a design program. This includes information about your building site, your wish list and the projected budget for your project.

The first sketches of your house may be a few primitive shapes that you and your designer draw in the dust when you meet at the building site the first time.

No matter how ideas are exchanged, the essential ingredient is clear and accurate communication.

A designer can give form and substance to your ideas by making a few sketches that show how the house will look from different perspectives.

They can also provide a floorplan that maps the rooms and explains how they will relate to one another.

When the basic form of the house and the functional plan have been agreed upon, a designer prepares all the graphic details and

written instructions that are needed to explain how the house is to be constructed.

Timber frame home designers use a variety of graphic media to communicated with clients, contractors and building officials.

Today, the visual description of your new timber frame home is likely to progress from pen or pencil sketches to sophisticated three-dimensional digital drawings.

New computer programs that model solid forms are particularly helpful for those of us who are “three-dimensionally impaired.”


Designing in 3-D

Computer graphics have revolutionized the way design and construction information is communicated. AutoCAD and computer drafting programs, created specifically for architectural design, allow designers and drafters to assemble a virtual, three-dimensional model of a building.

A model can rotate on screen so both the interior and the exterior of the house can be viewed from many different perspectives. These programs are particularly useful in the development of a timber frame home design because they allow frame components to be viewed at the same time the architectural plans are being developed.

Martin Musson, a timber frame design technician, explains that the image of a 3-D solid model that appears on a computer screen is actually a section through a virtual building. “Imagine,” says martin, “that behind the screen, inside the computer, there is a whole timber frame structure even though only one “slice” of it is visible to you.”


Designers today can use sophisticated three-dimensional drawings to communicate with clients.

How it’s Done

Layout tabs isolate the views of the frame that will be used by the timber frame fabrication shop. Some 3-D views of the frame will be included in the construction documents to describe the structure to your contractor and building department officials.

Timber frame companies, whose tools include specialized timber joinery equipment, use computer programs that are designed to insert joinery information

into the drawings.

The joinery instructions imbedded in the drawings are read by a computer Numerically Controlled (CNC) machine that mills timbers and prepares them for hand finishing.

Other companies draft building plans and shop drawings using two-dimensional drafting programs. In the fabrication shop, joinery is drawn directly on the timbers and then cut using portable power tools.


The Pros

Fast, accurate communication is undoubtedly one of the greatest benefits of the computer drafting programs.

Files can be e-mailed allowing current information to go quickly and easily shared with everyone who is working on the building project.

In skilled hands, computer-drafting programs produce work that is predictably accurate. This is a tremendous bonus for timber frame craftsmen who must install a precut timber frame on a pre-built foundation that is likely to be many miles from the

timber frame production facility.

Also, changes to computer-generated construction documents are much easier to make than changes to hand-drawn plans.

For example, if the correct command is given, a change made to a 3-D drawing or solid modeling plan in one place automatically makes revisions to other parts of the plan that are affected by the change.

Whereas construction documents drawn by hand or in two-dimensional AutoCAD programs may require many pages of plans to be redrawn.


The Cons

Regardless of the many, well-documented benefits of computer drafting programs, try to remember that a computer is only a tool.

Without a doubt, a word processor can record words much faster and with greater clarity than most people can write by hand. But regrettably, the computer does nothing to improve the content of the writing.

For this reason, roughly drawn pen and pencil sketches are still the best way for designers and clients to communicate when they begin working together to plan a house.

A sketch that looks unfinished suggests that the plan is evolving and can easily be changed.

Whereas the crisp, straight lines of an electronic drawing may give the false impression that the work on an undeveloped plan is complete.


People who choose to live in a timber frame home enjoy the benefits of modern technology as well as the satisfaction of being surrounded by the beauty of natural timber. A 21st-century timber frame home can combine energy-efficient building products and cutting edge technologies with skillfully crafted natural materials.

It’s only logical that the process of designing a modern timber frame home incorporates hand-drawings that please the eye as well as the latest innovations in computer-assisted design programs that ensure accuracy.


Judith Landau is a founder and co-owner of Timbercraft Homes in Port Townsend, Washington.