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by Mary Prince
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| The first floor features an open floor plan. This is the view from the front entry area into the living room. The dining area sits to the left just beyond the staircase, and the kitchen peeks out from behind. Double doors to the garden room lie on both sides of the fireplace. Family photos hang on the stairway wall. The first floor of the home and the two studios are wheelchair accessible. All doors are three feet wide, and the walls are concrete. Ted designed and fabricated the home's furniture, cabinetry, light fixtures, countertops and fireplace from copper, hardwood, soft woods, fabric, plastic, MDO (medium density overlay) plywood, nontoxic finishes and recyclable materials. |
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by Mary Prince
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| One of Montgomery's University of Vermont students relaxes on the couch. The sculpture over the Plexiglas case reads "Cinema Bijou." |
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by Mary Prince
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| Furnishings and colors create whimsy throughout the home. Old cane chairs and a mahogany top become a folding coffee table. |
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by Mary Prince
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| Montgomery repurposed a green ash tree that grew by the front door into this charming kitchen island counter. He had the tree sawn onsite and took it to a friend’s wood shop for planing and joining. Custom-built storage bins hold cooking magazines. |
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by Mary Prince
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| The cozy dining area segues to the unique copper staircase. |
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by Mary Prince
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| The master bedroom looks out to a garden room and an outdoor pond. It includes a small attached bath with copper countertops and a walk-in shower made of polycarbonate. |
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by Mary Prince
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| A feather-inspired light fixture made from copper tubing, brass chain and basswood hangs on the wall above the bed in a second-floor bedroom. It spreads out during use and collapses against the wall during the day. |
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by Mary Prince
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| The solar-heated garden room stays above freezing in winter and reaches up to 100 degrees Fahrenheit in the summer. It features a winter fish pond (fish and plants return to the outdoor pond in the summer), a green ash tree growing through the roof, a wooden deck floor with earth underneath, and a rock in the floor (symbiotic with the tree). The home was built, symbolically, around the green ash tree. A rubber membrane around the tree at the ceiling keeps water and air out and allows room for the tree’s growth. The room opens to the outdoor pond and a stone patio by Montgomery's studio. |
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by Mary Prince
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| The garden room chandelier is made from copper, fiberglass glazing and leaves from Pier One, spray painted with several subtle colors. |
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by Ted Montgomery
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| An outdoor pond is home to several fish and plants in the summer. Montgomery's studio sits to the left, and doors to the garden room lie on the right. |
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by Mary Prince
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| From the backyard and common green area, the home is visible (center), with an insulating berm of soil to the right of the overhang. Montgomery's studio is on the left, and the studio Sarah used is on the right. |
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by Mary Prince
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| Montgomery's 300-square-foot studio is a stand-alone one-room building with a small bath. Natural light floods this private sanctuary through recycled windows and glass doors. Radiant hot water heats the monolithic slab floors. CAD renderings of projects and a model of a planned phototropic project line the walls. Totally self-powered, the project’s five “petals” track the daily movement of the sun to generate electricity, and the "stamen" is a 1,200-watt vertical wind turbine. |
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by Ted Montgomery
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| Stone roads, walkways and driveways wind throughout the Ten Stones community. Montgomery's home features a metal roof with an insulating roof garden, and there's a widow’s walk from which there are partial views of Lake Champlain. The exterior walls are marine-use MDO plywood. Wood: Rice Lumber; windows and doors: Pella |
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by Mary Prince
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| This 200-square-foot, five-sided structure with a tulip tree–shape roof was Sarah's studio and is Montgomery's favorite home project. “It made my wife very happy, allowed me to create a roof unlike anything I had previously done and sits lightly upon the land with no permanent foundation, so it can be moved in the future.” All 144 letters of the first stanza of the E.E. Cummings poem “i thank You God for most this amazing” adorn the exterior: “i thank You God for most this amazing day: for the leaping greenly spirits of trees and a blue true dream of sky; and for everything which is natural which is infinite which is yes” |
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by Mary Prince
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| Sarah's studio is made of MDO plywood and heated with an electric heater. It has polycarbonate windows, bamboo floors, fabric draping on the ceiling and a desk with a cork top. |
Here are Ted's answers to your questions. I hope you find this helpful. Thanks Ted!
1. Copper fixtures - I have used clear lacquer on some. Works for a while...
2. Concrete - clear sealant as made by Scofield products.. http://www.scofield.com/concretestain_main.html
3. Deciduous trees - yes, there are over a dozen large trees outside the garden room expressly for the purpose of summer shading! In March, April, October, November and December, when the leaves are gone, I WELCOME the heat! It's a PASSIVE solar room after all...
Aloha, Ted