Home by Design: Transforming Your House into Home FROM THE PUBLISHER
Sarah Susanka looks at the key design concepts behind all well-designed homes. With these essential ideas, she empowers homeowners to transform a house from mere shelter into a comfortable home filled with character and beauty. In Home by Design, Susanka presents the 27 key concepts that can be applied to any home -- no matter what the style or size. Using 30 of the best designed homes from around the country, Susanka brings these concepts to life with 150 powerful and inspirational examples -- from something as simple as placing a rug under a table to defining one room from another with a framed opening or archway. Home by Design gives today's homeowners a new way to "see" their house and create the home they've always wanted.
SYNOPSIS
Extending her innovative way of thinking about residential design, the author of The Not So Big House and Not So Big Solutions frames her "architect's toolbox" for creating user-friendly homes in 150 examples with color photos and floor plans. Susanka treats the quality as well as quantity of space and light. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
Acclaimed architect Susanka, who spawned a virtual cottage industry of home books favoring quality over quantity (The Not So Big House; Not So Big Solutions for Your Home; etc.), now turns her eye to 30 key design principles that produce a home. Seeking to capture the "elusive quality of home," Susanka uses beautiful photographs and helpful floor plans to discuss how "the interrelationships between spaces, walls and ceilings, and windows... shape our experience." It isn't the external architecture that matters, she says, but the interior. All homes provide shelter and footage; the goal is to enhance the quality of living. To do that, Susanka employs important tricks of her trade, explaining the rationale behind everything from window positioning and reflective ceilings to achieving symmetry, keeping in mind the overarching themes of space, light and order. Blessedly free of complex jargon, the book stresses that size doesn't matter, but construction does. Susanka's philosophy is simple: good architectural design is as important as good nutrition, and a savvy understanding of your surroundings lets you craft a better place to live. To illustrate her points, the author cites 28 of the best-designed homes in the U.S., from a tiny California cottage to a lavish Minnesota manse and a remodeled Kansas City abode. Susanka's generosity with tips (e.g., a bold use of color can add depth and solidity; aligning a doorway with a window directly across brightens the area) will be a boon to readers, who will wind up getting an architectural education in the process. 60 b&w line drawings. (Mar.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.