Design is an Approximation

When you start drawing, it should in a sense be from memory, not trying to recreate exactly something you have seen you like, but recreate the feeling and emotion of your "scrapbook" collection. Try to push yourself to get as many ideas on paper as you can. Don’t try and solve the whole problem at once, just play with it for now.

The first step in starting “for keeps”is to create what is called a “bubble diagram” by arranging circles with the names of your rooms by position on site and their relationship to each other. These bubbles are not to an exact scale but try to adjust the bubbles to the sizes and proportions of the rooms as best you can imagine. Do not proceed to next phase until all relationships are acceptable for site orientation and room placements.

The next step is to sketch your floor plans. Start with crayons or magic markers, no mechanical pencils yet, sketch with broad strokes, don't get hung up trying to fix flaws, you are searching for only one good idea to hold onto. I work in fits and starts. I like to let it rest, come back to it in half an hour or even two hours later with fresh eyes. In design you continue to work by a process of elimination, take as many wrong turns as needed until you “recognize the solution“. Design is much more trial and error than invention.

Your final step for now is to sketch your elevations. Your first sketches should ignore the floor plan completely. Sometimes it is better to start with the elevation before the plan because you want to create a style. You should still be working with magic markers or the like. Next start to integrate the floor plan by sketching in the critical elements of your house, the porch or dormers or entry. Now challenge the design for the first time by applying scale to your “concept” sketches, wall heights and windows should be to scale, room dimensions, etc. Does it still "feel" right?

Things to Ponder:

1. Have you "tested" the design against your shopping list? Do your room descriptions still fit? Are the images and emotional feel all that you had hoped?

MY FAVORITE RESOURCES

1. Historic neighborhoods, look beyond the peeling paint and disrepair, look beyond the gingerbread for proportions, or design elements, look for cues and clues.

2. The Public Library

    

 

T.R.A.C.E. Backwards

Free Lessons
Design Your Own Home!

Education
Conversation
Approximate
Revise
Trace

 

Home Quick Planners
& Model Kits

The hardest part can be organizing your plans and visualizing your completed home in three-dimensions. Here are two products which can help.

 

SmartDraw

SmartDraw is the easy design software that helps you create perfect plans in minutes. SmartDraw includes thousands of ready-made graphics that you simply drag-and-drop to create your drawing. It's fast and easy! FREE trial download!