Construction Diary: A Maine Designer Builds His Family’s Home Completely by Hand

Andrew Frederick worked with healthy, locally sourced materials to DIY a woodsy compound for his wife and two kids.

Construction Diary: A Maine Designer Builds His Family’s Home Completely by Hand

Andrew Frederick worked with healthy, locally sourced materials to DIY a woodsy compound for his wife and two kids.

The house was designed to minimally interfere with the hilltop vegetation, which is what attracted the family to the site.

In the 1960s, Betsy Frederick’s grandparents’ property in Owls Head, Maine, was struck by lightning. It caused a fire that cleared a half acre on a small hilltop, close to where members of her family still live. Wanting to raise their two children there, Betsy, a midwife, and her husband, Andrew, who runs his design-build firm Croft (which makes carbon-sequestering prefab panels), located a site on the hill to create a new home for their family. Andrew relied on his architecture education and carpentry background to build it largely himself, by hand.

Andrew and Betsy Frederick’s Maine home comprises two volumes with clapboard siding treated with pine tar to preserve it. A deck at the rear of the home leads to floating walkways that hide plumbing.

Part of the go-it-yourself plan was to avoid labor costs, which would have eaten into the budget, but Andrew and Betsy also wanted to touch every part of the process to create the healthiest and most environmentally friendly home they could. That meant no paint and no diesel-powered machinery, among other criteria. Keeping the plan small at 1,040 square feet across two structures—one for living areas and another containing the primary suite, the two connected internally and with outdoor walkways—gave them a big advantage when it came time to build.

See the full story on Dwell.com: Construction Diary: A Maine Designer Builds His Family’s Home Completely by Hand
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