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Patio houses like these rub shoulders on small
lots,
but still retain detached privacy
In fact, as this project proves, they can offer far more privacy -
both from the street and from neighboring houses - than the typical
single-family house built at densities of from four units per acre up.
These 2,083 sq. ft. houses, for example, are built on lots of just
6,000 sq. ft. - at a net density of roughly four and one half per acre.
But because each is enclosed by a wall, every square foot of the lot is
usable.
The project is Garden Terrace, a 23 unit community being developed by
Bahl Homes in Mountain View, Calif. The high cost of the five acre
site (it was the last remaining R-1 land in the area) plus current high
development costs posed an increasingly prevalent problem: how to make
higher density palatable when you're selling expensive ($70,950 to
$82,950) houses and your market is accustomed to the privacy of larger
detached homes.
That the zero lot line concept can solve that problem is evident from
the plans and photos on these pages. It lets you recapture the
front yard for privacy, and it allows every room in the house to look
out on - or open onto - private outdoor living space.
AWARD OF MERIT
Award of Merit winner in the merchant-built category of the 1974
Homes for Better Living awards program, sponsored by the American
Institute of Architects in cooperation with House & Home and
American Home magazines. Custom home winners appeared in May,
multifamily winners in June; and remodeling winners in August
Descriptions next to drawings and photo
Rear patio and pool
(Above and below) create a mini-vista for the master bedroom (photo,
right), family room and one secondary bedroom.
Site plan (left) and photo above show the slightly curved sidewalks
and staggered fencing that help minimize the stark, walled-in look that
is the biggest problem with patio-house design. They also give a
private feeling to the project's public street. Floor plan shows
how zero-lot-line concept opens entire interior living area to the
outdoors.
Vaulted ceilings, like the one seen in the photo at right, simulate a
two-story look and provide a greater feeling of spaciousness for the
single-level plan. This view is from the living room looking
through the dining room to the enclosed side patio. |