Picture This
/There is a story behind every piece of stone, cabinet, roof tile, or ceiling feature, much like a chapter in a very long novel.
Read MoreThere is a story behind every piece of stone, cabinet, roof tile, or ceiling feature, much like a chapter in a very long novel.
Read MoreOn the floors, limestone borders surround parquét wood floors. Finely finished arched casings limn the doorways and plaster walls. And outside, one person with a good eye shapes and levels the pool surfaces.
Read MoreWe’ve been spending quite a lot of time on the classically inspired ceilings from the solid beam and stucco treatments on the balconies, the coffered style with intricate moulding of the grand rooms, to the intersecting half barrels of the groin ceilings spanning the portico.
Read MoreThere is no one “finished phase” in construction, but many that happen along the way—with some tasks running concurrently, some starting, and some finishing. For now, we’re in the long phase of millwork and cabinet installations…
Read MoreWhile construction and build out of the the main house continues, the surrounding retaining walls are getting the stone veneer applied far ahead of any other landscape construction work.
Read MoreSome people say that windows make or break a house. Placement, symmetry and proportion are all paramount in the architects vision, certainly in classic Roman-Italian architecture, so we as builder-collaborator play an intricate role in helping to “get it right” from selection of core materials to executing the finished detail.
Read MoreThere has definitely been a feeling of solidity and permanence to all of this work — building something of lasting quality has kept us focused and optimistic about the future, even if it seemed as if the world had been crumbling around us.
Read MoreSome time ago we posted framing photos on Instagram with the rhetorical question, “Isn’t framing beautiful?” More broadly, the rhetorical question should be “Isn’t building beautiful?”.
Read MoreWe’re seeing the installation of the last of the large steel beams that will support the roof and allow for an expansive central room on the upper floor. Once installed, framing will continue on the roof sections, as well as finishing the framing detail and components of the walls and openings.
Read MoreWorking on the steel structure during the hot summer months, the top floor is exposed to a lot of sun and the heavy reflection from the pan decking means wearing protective clothing and plenty of sunscreen.
Read MoreAs the steel structure rises, there’s a changing relationship with the surrounding landscape. Standing by three slender Italian Cypress trees, one was afforded expansive views of the valley and a good spot to assess progress some 30 feet below. Now, the construction is at eye-level—and soon we will be looking up at a fully formed structure.
Read MoreHere’s a look at the basement and ground floor steel frame mostly completed. With the summer heat upon us, it’s hot work down here as the guys finish bolting and welding connections to allow the next level of the steel frame to be constructed. Corrugated steel floor decking will be in place soon, so that framing, HVAC, electrical, and plumbing components can begin in parallel. And that‘s when things really heat up.
Read MoreWith the arrival of the steel beams and girders, this is the first day of the installation. If all of the pieces fit together without a hitch, we’ll have two floors and a roof-frame erected in the next two months. There are parts of construction that are detailed and slow to show progress, but steel erection happens rapidly and the transformation of the job site is quite dramatic. This building, is quite literally, on it’s way up.
Read MoreIn a month or two this site will be transformed from a concrete form to a rising steel structure. Connector plates and bolt-downs are in place and detailed checks are being made to ensure when the steel columns and beams get erected, they fit nicely together. And with all of the plywood forms removed, we can now transfer the elevation control lines to the concrete walls using our transit device and a good eye.
Read MoreBuilding this full size mockup helps us know what’s required for the installation process of the exterior materials. There’s also an important decision to be made. It’s time to choose from four different stone veneer treatments.
Read MoreThis is the first of two very active days where several large sections of the foundation were being poured utilizing a truck mounted boom pump and a continuous delivery of concrete by more than 80 trucks.
Read MoreGuildcb.com showcases the work and people behind Guild Craft Builder, Inc., a premier custom homebuilder and general contractor in the San Francisco Bay Area.
By Project:
In The Woods
On A Hill
In Town
Foothill
Mid-Peninsula
By Title:
The Cornices and The Eaves
Our Endless Summer
Modern Stone
2022 Review
Light Well
On Good Form
Picture This
On the Surface
Ceilings are Looking Up
Close to the Work
Puzzle Piecing
Spot On
Unmoveable
Underneath the Arches
Can’t Touch This
Upstairs Downstairs
Going Green
It’s Hot Up Here
This One’s for The Doers
Olives Among Oak
Beams and Columns III
Here, There and Everywhere
Beams and Columns II
Beams and Columns I
Ready for Steel
Look Up
What’s Inside is Out
The Making of a Mockup
The Big Pour
One Word: Rebar
Modern Takes Shape
Heads Down
Going Underground
A Sign of Things to Come
Mediterranean Modern
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