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About Us
A design & building firm that specializes in high performance, "green", buildings. We design and build extremely energy efficient homes that are masterfully crafted. Sustainable from conception to completion.
We believe that buildings should respond to their specific place, engage their inhabitants, and be inherent partners with the environment. Our designs develop out of a deep consideration for a landscape’s context, the pragmatic solutions of vernacular architecture, and the possibilities of modern technologies. We seek to manifest these concepts in our buildings, in a thoughtful, efficient, and beautifully crafted manner. Contact us for your next project.
Services Provided
Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs), Architectural Design, Building Design, Custom Homes, Energy-Efficient Homes, Green Building, Home Additions, New Home Construction, Passive Solar Heating & Cooling, Sustainable Design, Universal Design, Architecture
Areas Served
Alta, Alta Sierra, Cedar Ridge, Cherokee, Dutch Flat, Gold Run, Graniteville, Grass Valley, Nevada City, North San Juan, Pike, Plumas National Park, Rough And Ready, Washington, All of Northern California, Northern California for energy, Truckee, Lake Tahoe
Awards
Certified Passive House ConsultantLEED APBuild it Green Certified Green Building Professional
Category
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Business Details
Business Name
Atmosphere Design Build
Phone Number
(530) 615-7701
Website
Address
PO Box 1344
Nevada City, CA 95959
Typical Job Cost
$800,000 - 2 million
Typical cost for our construction projects. Design fees are based on scope of services and are seperate from our build costs.
License Number
CSBL 929812
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Credentials
8 Houzz Awards
4 Houzz Badges
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13 Reviews for Atmosphere Design Build
Newest first
Average rating: 4.7 out of 5 stars4.7|13 reviews
Work Quality5.0
Communication5.0
Value5.0
Orion Watkins Architecture
Average rating: 5 out of 5 stars
I’ve know Mela and Dave professionally for 10 years. They have been great mentors for me and were always willing to share their experience and expertise as I began to open my own firm. I have toured many of their completed projects and I’m in awe of the craft and ingenuity of this firm. Their passion and knowledge for passive homes really shows in each home they design and build. Every homeowner that I met along the tour expressed how much they enjoyed working with Atmosphere Design Build and how much they are in love with the beauty and comfort of their homes. Atmosphere Design Build is a talented, trustworthy and passionate design build firm.
December 4, 2022Last modified:December 4, 2022
We worked with Atmosphere Design Build on the construction of a 1986 square foot, two-story residence. The firm is at the forefront of high performance home design and construction. We were very pleased by the crew's attention to every detail from air sealing the floor, wall and roof assemblies, to the execution of precise metal cladding details and modern interior finishes.
Dave has cultivated a construction crew that cares about the importance of building for the long term. Every member is educated about how to frame without unnecessary lumber and ensure that all connections are sealed to minimize air infiltration. This holistic approach to construction pays off with lower heating and cooling bills for the lifetime of the building.
As a full service firm, you have the opportunity to receive design services in addition to a high level of construction. Mela treats each project as a precious opportunity to integrate design vision, comfort and a building that is well-fitted to the site. From an early stage, the consequences of design decisions on overall energy performance are considered. This is not typical of the average design firm and represents the genuine commitment of the firm to create buildings that tread as lightly as possible on the earth.
December 6, 2019
James ODonnell
Average rating: 5 out of 5 stars
In 2017 I purchased a decommissioned Nevada City firehouse with the vision of converting into an open living space and energy efficient home . Several people referred me to Atmosphere Design Build for the project. Mela, Jeff and the team at ADB were terrific to work with all stages on the project, from initial design, to materials and systems selection to working with county departments.
The resulting project is an extremely articulate and functional design. It features large interior elevations, East and West windows that support the flow of light from sunrise to sunset, and well insulated quite environment.
I'd recommend Mela and her team to anyone looking to design a modern energy efficient home.
April 25, 2019
I hired husband and wife team of Mela Breen and Dave Good at Atmoshere Design + Build to design and build a Certified Passive House (PH) with a slab-on-grade floor in snow country at 5,000 feet in the Sierras just north of Lake Tahoe. It was the worst and most costly mistake I’ve ever made. I ended up with a set of unfinished plans, a partially built foundation that’s wrong and pretty much useless, and a barn full of insulation that’ll be difficult to get rid of. I fired them in less than 3 months, before we were fully out of the ground.
The pressure was pretty relentless to get to permits in April of 2018. We were eight months into the design and already two or more months behind the original schedule, which was to be fully enclosed by Thanksgiving. We modified the schedule to complete the foundation and pour the slab by early September, 2018, and start the framing, roof and enclosure in May, 2019. They had other projects in progress and I much preferred to get my house right rather than just get it done.
Mela filed for permits with an incomplete set of plans in early May. Solar plans were omitted. Cal-Fire was omitted. The electric plan omitted the meter and the exterior master cut-off switch for the fire department. It only showed the house sub-panel and very few fixtures, lights and plugs. The site plan, pretty much an after thought, omitted a lot of conduits and pipes. Vanity items like a humidity controlled wine closet were incomplete.
The roofing plan called for an 8:12 upper roof designed to shed snow onto a lower 1:12 roof where it will accumulate, block the upper floor windows in winter, and increase the chance of water penetrations and ice dams. Mela was unconcerned. Cleats and snow fences were omitted; roofing structural detail was omitted. The plans call for 4” of styrofoam sandwiched between two plywood decks, but no where in the plans is it shown how the upper deck is supported or attached. The unvented roofing plan calls for 12” of blown-in cellulose stuck to the underneath of the lower roof deck. How to keep it stuck there is not addressed in the plans - e.g., some sort of levitation? Special framing around and through the trusses? The addition of an adhesive?
There were no control joints for the slab floor and there was no penetration plan for the floor and stem walls. A lot of sleeves were required for well, septic, electric, solar, and DHW. During the build, two penetrations were omitted and a third is undersized. Wing insulation underneath a three-sided wrap-around concrete porch was omitted and “ground gutters” underneath the eaves had scant detail. The bottom sill plate, wall sheathing, exterior cladding and door sills are all 1.5” above the concrete porch. When snow drifts or the porch is hosed off, the cladding and possibly the sheathing and bottom plate will get wet risking premature rot.
There were inconsistencies within the plans themselves. I’m still not sure if the walls are to be R40, that being the PH requirement I’m told, or R37 as most of the detail calls for? The WRB was shown in two or more places in the wall detail - against the sheathing in one place and over the rigid exterior insulation in others. Specifics were omitted - e.g., the type of caulk - butyl, silicone or latex, which matters when you have polyethylene, styrofoam, wood and cement to bond in different places. Sealing tape was generically described and fasteners for furring strips through 4” of rigid insulation were not specified. Roof underlayment, WRB, adhesive flashing and other membranes were generically described with few specifics or manufacturers named.
When I mentioned several times that filing for permits was premature, the answers were: “These plans are good enough for the County.” “We need to get permits ASAP.” “The builder makes these calls in the field.” “We can amend the plans later.” “We’re not going to start the walls and roof until next spring so don’t worry.” “Trust me.” “Dave knows how to build this house.” This being my first time building any house, let alone a certified PH, I believed the expert. With hind sight, I think they pressured me to get this project started so they could finance their own house and other projects.
The County issued permits about mid-July and after that, we could not get answers to any questions. Mela abandoned us within the first month of construction and moved on. She resented my questions; we were on our own. The plans were “finished” as far as she was concerned.
After filing for permits, Mela pawned me off on her husband, Dave. At the first formal meeting, he assured me he had the crew and time for my job and it wouldn’t interfere with his other projects. Then I got a lecture on “trust” and its importance to the building process. “This from a guy I don’t know and haven’t worked with?” I thought that was strange, but what do I know? This is my first time at building a house. I wanted a fixed fee to be able to deal with the bank; he wanted cost plus 20% (T&M) which was 5% higher than the going rate. He said there were too many uncertainties (“time necessary for his crew to unload trucks” is one uncertainty I recall) and every house is unique. It’d be too difficult to estimate accurately. He’d have to markup his fee by 40% to cover the uncertainties, where as he’d only markup 20% if we went T&M. I countered stating that he’s built this kind of floor, walls and roofs before; they’re standard PH design. “You must know the generic cost per linear foot of wall or square foot of concrete for these assemblies. Why don’t you give me those at a fixed fee and a range or line items with your best guess at what you’re uncertain of.”
We never discussed it much after that. Dave showed up on-site a few days before permits were issued with a contract, just when I was wondering if he was going to build it. His contract called for binding arbitration in Grass Valley at cost plus 20%. The scope had been limited to the foundation and slab only and the duration was to be 1.5 months. Dave said he’d alter the contract after his time freed up in the Fall. Considering the late hour and pressure to start, my lack of experience, limited scope, distance from his normal work area, and his unfamiliarity with local subs and suppliers, I acquiesced. I had no reason to distrust him at that point but I felt like I was being hustled.
Those feelings were accurate. After the contract was signed, we only saw Dave four times in three months before he was fired, and that was to collect money. “Where’s the GC?” became the standing on-site joke and I wondered why I was paying him anything at all. His two carpenters showed up a week after signing and started chalking the foundation. About a week after that an 18-wheel flatbed showed up with about 50 bundles of styrofoam board insulation. It was for the whole house (except the wing insulation) even though we knew we wouldn’t need 3/4 of it for another year. Whether this was Dave’s method of generating quick cash from his markup to use on other projects, I can’t say for sure, but I was not consulted and my cash flow was not a consideration. That insulation is still in the barn impeding ranch operations and I have no way to dispose of it yet. It’s costing me interest on the loan used to pay for it.
Meanwhile, the excavator had some free time and wanted to start on the electric and water trenches, and the septic system. Of course he had lots of questions. I told him to consult the plans. If that didn’t work, consult the GC. He couldn’t get answers and neither could I. No one knew what conduit the solar people needed or where the inverter should be located. No one knew where the meter was supposed to be, what kind of conduit was required or where to put splice boxes. The excavator, on-site supervisor and I spent a week tripping over ourselves to get answers. When none were forth coming, I started going directly to the source. The electrician and I started drawing our own plans. During that process we noticed that we were working from two different floor plans. Turned out the on-site supervisor had still another set of plans. “What a joke this is!” I thought. I asked about conduit for the septic and the reply from Mela’s assistant was “we thought you were doing the septic!” I was in shock; is this a government bureaucrat? After talking to the solar contractor I got an email from Mela: “Quit bad mouthing us with our colleagues.” Apparently I made the faux-pas of telling him that we were abandoned and tying to backfill trenches.
That was the last straw. “This is a real disaster,” I thought. “I don’t have an architect or I have an immature, clueless one. And we’re not much more than a month into the build! What kind of amateurs am I dealing with?” I was acting as GC by default and I had never built a house before! Yikes! I didn’t know what to do. I didn’t know how to get their attention?
About a week after that, the second carpenter quit ostensibly because the commute was too far. The on-site supervisor and Dave assured me this would only delay the project a week or two while they found a replacement. Two weeks later Dave admitted he had no replacement. After that, the on-site supervisor, who was an excellent carpenter but a little over his head and spending at least half his day on the phone arranging for materials and subcontractors (Isn’t that the GC’s job?), pretty much lost interest in the project. He started taking more time off and leaving early.
This was mid-September, about two months into the build. Meanwhile night time temps were into the mid-twenties, too cold to pour concrete without mitigating measures, and we were a good month or two from being ready to pour the slab floor. Dave insisted the pour could be done in a couple weeks; I was skeptical and wanted to pull the plug. By then I had learned that Dave’s time estimates were way, way overly optimistic and unrealistic. We decided to pour the garage slab and see what happened. Hairline cracks started appearing about a week later.
For the garage floor, the on-site supervisor came to me on a Monday morning towards the end of October and said they were pouring the garage slab the next day. Did I want a brushed finish as called for in the plans? We discussed it and concluded a smooth finish would be preferable. The next day I could not be on-site and babysit. On Wednesday morning I looked at the slab. Despite our discussion less than 48 hours earlier, I had a brushed finish! I was evidently in shock as he volunteered: “Oh, but it’s a light-brushed finish.” I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. Inclined toward the latter, I just left. It wasn’t even worth trying to find out what went wrong. The next day I told Dave to shut the job down. We were done.
No way were these clowns coming back in the Spring. I needed an on-site GC to supervise the whole process - e.g., septic, Cal-Fire, solar, interior design - not just to collect money and frame the house. By now I had learned that Dave loves to improvise and thrives on chaos. He will always be overextended and scrambling to make “fixes.” With unfinished plans and no architect, I was convinced this house was going to be designed on-site and improvised! Who knows what I’d end up with after spending 7 figures.
Dave showed up a couple days later with a final invoice and informed me the crew wouldn’t be returning in the Spring. The job was too far away and he didn’t have the resources. But he felt bad about abandoning me. He’d like to introduce me to a contractor-friend that was willing to take over as on-site supervisor. He had a crew and was closer to the site. While I respected his self-serving attempt at empathy, “there’s no way Dave is GC’ing this job next Spring or any other time,” I told myself. “He didn’t even get this incomplete project right.”
After the shut-down, I realized board insulation had been laminated to the exterior of the stem wall throughout. Consequently, a critical piece of air and water sealing tape, lapped from 2” down the stem wall, over the bottom sill and bottom of the sheathing could not be placed. Not only was this in the plans, it’s a pretty standard PH technique for sealing that critical seam. Given that this house has the seam 1.5” above the porch and more prone to water leakage, sealing the bottom sill is twice as important. With a PH the sequence matters; Dave and the on-site supervisor got the sequence wrong. The insulation shouldn’t have been laminated to the stem wall until after the bottom plate and sheathing were installed and taped.
After shut-down, a few more self-serving inquiries were made during the fall about a consulting contract to supervise another builder. But I thought, “there’s no way I’m giving Dave a contract with no responsibility or accountability for the final product, no matter who the builder is, how experienced, or how inexpensive.”
Mela made a few feeble attempts to hustle more money out of me too. “We’ll be glad to work with you to alter and simplify the design,” she offered - a design she screwed up. Besides, she had abandoned me once already; I wasn’t about to risk that happening again. Mela is stuck on low-angle, warm, unvented shed roofs and lots of metal siding. Hopefully that’s a passing phase, but it’s the design you’ll probably get. In snow country, while that can work when necessary, why create unneeded expense and risks; flat roofs are just not appropriate in snow country. In my opinion, Mela shows a lot of potential but she needs about five years more experience and the tutelage of a veteran architect who knows what’s practical and can teach her client relations. Once she’s settled on a design, she is extremely inflexible and resistant to change. You’re more likely than with other architects of getting “her house” instead of yours when all is said and done.
The only unanswered question in my mind is: “Am I the victim of just another set of overambitious amateurs so common in the building trades? Or are these two thieves?” I prefer to think the former, but only Dave and Mela know for sure.
My heart is still broken; I am in the second of the Five Steps of Loss and Grief. Not only did I lose my 20-year dream of building the most energy efficient, showcase house at this time in the northern Sierra to retire in, but I’ve spent over a quarter million on this project with very little to show for it. The Passive House dream is dashed. I had a gorgeous home site which is now marred with an incomplete foundation. I have a set of incomplete plans that no one locally, including Dave, can build correctly. I have a barn full of insulation I don’t want and can’t get rid of. If the foundation hadn’t been partially built, I’d start all over from scratch with a house designed for snow country - no flat roof, pressure tank inside the house, and a 6 inch or more step down to the wrap-around porch - that a local can build. I just hope this tragedy doesn’t happen to you.
February 22, 2019Last modified:February 22, 2019

Comment from Atmosphere Design Build:
Our goal is always to treat our clients throughout both the design process and construction phase with the utmost care and professionalism. That Mr. Rumer (the reviewer) has decided to abandon building his home, after investing so much thought and significant financial resources to bring it to fruition, is deeply disheartening and disconcerting.
Mr. Rumer hired our firm specifically for our knowledge in both designing and constructing high performance buildings. We worked in close collaboration with him over the course of nearly a year on the planning and design. The resulting design, we believe, is an expression of Mr. Rumer’s design program, specifications, and commitment to building a cutting edge, energy efficient home. As an architecture firm we certainly do bring a particular aesthetic point of view (which we believe is one of the reasons to hire a design firm). However, we primarily see our job as translating a client’s desire for a custom home in a way that is clearly unique to the specific site, spatial requirements, energy efficiency goals, and budget. That Mr. Rumer now feels like he was not adequately heard and that we were pushing an agenda is most definitely not the experience we want a client to have.
At each stage in the design process, Mr. Rumer gave us express permission to proceed to the next phase, including completion of the construction documents. A detailed plan set was submitted to the local permitting agencies. (The set incidentally was over 50 pages and the building department even specifically commented on its thoroughness). Mr. Rumer himself applied for the building permit and certainly was not coerced at any point to move forward with the project. It is true that there were details and specifications that were left off the permitting plan set (which is not an uncommon practice). Some were to be completed prior to framing and others were deemed unnecessary as this was originally planned as an inhouse, design-build project. Were there a few minor inconsistencies on the considerably detailed plan set? Yes. Of course we strive for flawlessness, but the minor annotation mistakes that occurred over the course of developing assembly details, were easily revised and didn’t effect buildability.
We strive for transparency and clear communication on both the design and construction end and did our best throughout the process. The location of Mr. Rumer’s project is several hours from our firm’s base in a rural location that required additional expenses by our firm and special effort from all our employees and subcontractors. As a result, at the time we were only prepared sign a contract to build the foundation. The agreement Mr. Rumer signed in advance and with full knowledge of this level of commitment was a cost-plus agreement, which was commensurate with the location and project. From the outset of the design process, we underscored that it was not a project we would be willing to build on a fixed fee due to the location and other particular conditions.
When we began work on the foundation, in the fall of 2018, we did have multiple projects under construction and struggled to source enough labor for his project. Initially Mr. Rumer had offered on-site housing for our employees during construction. However, just before construction began, he rented the house that had been offered causing our employees to have to travel long distances to work on his home. Despite these obstacles, Mr. Rumer and our firm still decided to proceed as it would allow for construction on a site with a high-water table to begin while the ground was still dry. We certainly did not begin construction on Mr. Rumer’s project to extract money from him – an accusation that totally contradicts our well-earned reputation for honesty and integrity.
Once construction commenced, it seemed like Mr. Rumer started to have second thoughts about his project. The stress of building can bring out strong feelings for some and it seemed like he suddenly found fault in everything. We tried to compassionately negotiate his discontent and provide professional responses to his concerns. However, we did conclude it would be untenable for our firm to continue leading construction beyond the foundation phase and recommended that he find another contractor to complete his project. We still remained committed to ensuring the overall quality of the project and were prepared to finalize design details and specifications and provide continued oversight and consultation during construction. There is still no reason that the project could not be completed as it was originally designed, or even scaled back as Mr. Rumer was discussing with us as recently as a month ago.
One of the primary objectives of our firm is to not only provide excellent service, but to be extraordinarily respectful of our clients’ investment during design and construction. We only work with a handful of clients each year and each relationship is precious to us. We do our very best to please each and every client while maintaining our own high standards. We profoundly regret that Mr. Rumer feels like we failed him and consequently is abandoning his dream of building his home as it is well-planned, buildable Passive House.
Mr. Rumer hired our firm specifically for our knowledge in both designing and constructing high performance buildings. We worked in close collaboration with him over the course of nearly a year on the planning and design. The resulting design, we believe, is an expression of Mr. Rumer’s design program, specifications, and commitment to building a cutting edge, energy efficient home. As an architecture firm we certainly do bring a particular aesthetic point of view (which we believe is one of the reasons to hire a design firm). However, we primarily see our job as translating a client’s desire for a custom home in a way that is clearly unique to the specific site, spatial requirements, energy efficiency goals, and budget. That Mr. Rumer now feels like he was not adequately heard and that we were pushing an agenda is most definitely not the experience we want a client to have.
At each stage in the design process, Mr. Rumer gave us express permission to proceed to the next phase, including completion of the construction documents. A detailed plan set was submitted to the local permitting agencies. (The set incidentally was over 50 pages and the building department even specifically commented on its thoroughness). Mr. Rumer himself applied for the building permit and certainly was not coerced at any point to move forward with the project. It is true that there were details and specifications that were left off the permitting plan set (which is not an uncommon practice). Some were to be completed prior to framing and others were deemed unnecessary as this was originally planned as an inhouse, design-build project. Were there a few minor inconsistencies on the considerably detailed plan set? Yes. Of course we strive for flawlessness, but the minor annotation mistakes that occurred over the course of developing assembly details, were easily revised and didn’t effect buildability.
We strive for transparency and clear communication on both the design and construction end and did our best throughout the process. The location of Mr. Rumer’s project is several hours from our firm’s base in a rural location that required additional expenses by our firm and special effort from all our employees and subcontractors. As a result, at the time we were only prepared sign a contract to build the foundation. The agreement Mr. Rumer signed in advance and with full knowledge of this level of commitment was a cost-plus agreement, which was commensurate with the location and project. From the outset of the design process, we underscored that it was not a project we would be willing to build on a fixed fee due to the location and other particular conditions.
When we began work on the foundation, in the fall of 2018, we did have multiple projects under construction and struggled to source enough labor for his project. Initially Mr. Rumer had offered on-site housing for our employees during construction. However, just before construction began, he rented the house that had been offered causing our employees to have to travel long distances to work on his home. Despite these obstacles, Mr. Rumer and our firm still decided to proceed as it would allow for construction on a site with a high-water table to begin while the ground was still dry. We certainly did not begin construction on Mr. Rumer’s project to extract money from him – an accusation that totally contradicts our well-earned reputation for honesty and integrity.
Once construction commenced, it seemed like Mr. Rumer started to have second thoughts about his project. The stress of building can bring out strong feelings for some and it seemed like he suddenly found fault in everything. We tried to compassionately negotiate his discontent and provide professional responses to his concerns. However, we did conclude it would be untenable for our firm to continue leading construction beyond the foundation phase and recommended that he find another contractor to complete his project. We still remained committed to ensuring the overall quality of the project and were prepared to finalize design details and specifications and provide continued oversight and consultation during construction. There is still no reason that the project could not be completed as it was originally designed, or even scaled back as Mr. Rumer was discussing with us as recently as a month ago.
One of the primary objectives of our firm is to not only provide excellent service, but to be extraordinarily respectful of our clients’ investment during design and construction. We only work with a handful of clients each year and each relationship is precious to us. We do our very best to please each and every client while maintaining our own high standards. We profoundly regret that Mr. Rumer feels like we failed him and consequently is abandoning his dream of building his home as it is well-planned, buildable Passive House.
Dorothy Henderson
Average rating: 5 out of 5 stars
It is rare that we get to write a review with such pleasure and admiration for our subject. Atmosphere Design Build (Mela Breen, architect, and David Good, building contractor, a wife/husband team) shepherded the creation of our Net Zero home with a remarkable blend of creativity and knowledge of their own, while also drawing on the expertise and competence of many professionals in our area. . In addition to her deep commitment to sustainability, Mela brought consummate artistry and down to earth practicality to every aspect of the design. Dave is a certified Passive House builder and brought a wealth of knowledge and a great spirit to all aspects of managing the construction of our house. The home that they produced not only achieves incredible energy efficiency, but provides us with a beautiful, healthy abode, that is remarkably easy to live in. We feel very fortunate to have worked with them and give them the highest recommendtation.
January 26, 2018
Doniece Montanelli
Average rating: 5 out of 5 stars
We found this company on Houzz and called them since they were in our area. We are now getting to the completion of our project which involved new build with 3 car garage, mud room and a 1500 sq foot apartment above.
Working with Dave and Mela is an absolute pleasure! Their quality of work both in design and craftsmanship is everything we could want. The whole crew they have working for them are a great bunch. Having both architect and builder in one business together makes the communications go very smoothly.
We would not hesitate to recommend them and hire them again. In fact, we plan to!
November 9, 2015
David and Mela were wonderful to work with. Not only did they have creative, practical ideals, but they were waste and safety conscious. They discussed their ideas in very clear ways and were flexible with their planning. My husband and I finally feel that our deck is at last safe, attractive and functional.
jgirdler
May 18, 2014
I hired Atmosphere Design build a few years ago to help me remodel my partial log home and could not have been more pleased. The ability of this company to provide both the design and construction services ensured that my expectations from the conceptual stages through to the construction completion were not only met but exceeded.
Their experience retrofitting log homes proved invaluable in tackling the complexities of the remodel, and the quality of craftsmanship and attention to detail was superb. My budget was rather limited given the extent of the project, so they offered to collaborate with me on many of the construction aspects. By me providing some of the labor we were able to offset some of the costs and complete the project as initially envisioned, on time, and on budget. Their commitment to incorporating Green building techniques and materials allowed for logs from my property to be incorporated into the construction, providing a very personalized end product. In addition almost all the materials from the demolition were salvaged and reused on the project to the extent that a dumpster was never needed.
I really enjoyed working with Atmosphere Besign Build as a company and as individuals and would certainly hire them again.




March 17, 2013Last modified:March 17, 2013
m breen
Average rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Mela and Dave took an old summer cabin in the high Sierra and transformed it into an energy efficient, modern and stylish family cabin that everyone loves. Very few would have had the fortitude. They did. It was a difficult project with a beautiful outcome. They kept an eye on energy, beauty and function.
March 13, 2013
Dave and Mela were an excellent team to work with during our kitchen remodel. Visualizing what you'll end with is a big help for making all those minor adjustments to the plan, and their flexibility with the myriad of people types that we all are was easy. The end result was awesome!
As a team their breadth of knowledge and focus on sustainable design [Passive] is a big plus when making such a significant investment. I'd work with them again and absolutely recommend that you should too.
March 1, 2013
Mela at Atmosphere Designs is a genius. She has great vision in her design work and an attention to detail in everything she does. Her work is unique and her ideas very creative yet practical. She is also a pleasure to work with, fun, witty and professional. We are thrilled with the work her and Dave did on our house and would recommend them in a heartbeat.
February 15, 2013
Atmosphere Design Build is fantastic! Mela helped us think through our needs, priorities, and budget and arrived at a great design suited to our lifestyle and aesthetic. We absolutely LOVE our house! In addition to being a great design for the way we live, Mela helped us arrive at a design that is very efficient, using passive solar in the winter, and good shading in the summer so that our house is always very pleasant with minimal need for heating/cooling. Working with Mela is always a pleasure- she is professional but really fun to work with as well. I unequivocally recommend Atmosphere Design Build!
February 14, 2013
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Frequently Asked Questions
How is Atmosphere Design Build rated?
Atmosphere Design Build is currently rated 4.7 overall out of 5
What services does Atmosphere Design Build provide?
Atmosphere Design Build provides the following services: Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs), Architectural Design, Building Design, Custom Homes, Energy-Efficient Homes, Green Building, Home Additions, New Home Construction, Passive Solar Heating & Cooling, Sustainable Design, Universal Design, Architecture
Where does Atmosphere Design Build provide services?
Atmosphere Design Build provides services in the following areas: Alta, Alta Sierra, Cedar Ridge, Cherokee, Dutch Flat, Gold Run, Graniteville, Grass Valley, Nevada City, North San Juan, Pike, Plumas National Park, Rough And Ready, Washington, All of Northern California, Northern California for energy, Truckee, Lake Tahoe
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Professional Categories in Nevada City
Nevada City Driveway Installation & Maintenance · Nevada City Fence Contractors · Nevada City Fireplaces · Nevada City Glass & Shower Door Dealers · Nevada City Handyman · Nevada City Flooring Contractors · Nevada City Kitchen & Bath Fixtures · Nevada City Lighting · Nevada City Paint & Wall Coverings · Nevada City Siding & Exteriors
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