PREFAB: Stillwater Dwellings
We all love the idea of prefab homes – the simplicity of ready-made, to-go houses, and yet most of the time when we sit down to really study the plans with respect to our own lives and dreams, there’s just something lacking. We want prefab-style homes, but designed exactly to our lives and needs. If you’re like us, then you might enjoy checking out a new prefab designer: Stillwater Dwellings, based out of Seattle, WA. This new firm has many traditional prefab homes ready to go, but also allows you to design your own from their pre-designed modules.
Stillwater Dwellings has a special interchangeable series called sd-i. They describe the process of designing a home just like playing with legos. After reviewing the materials and process, it is — in fact — that easy and just as fun. If you’ve ever built a new kitchen from Ikea cabinets, this is way easier. Their method is an A-B-C step process . Step A – choose your living module from one of six options. Step B – add a connector module that is designed with a universal connector, so they all fit together. Step C – choose your bedroom modules(s), with options for extra offices, mudrooms, bedrooms and garages. If you want two floors, you can stack the modules. You can even pick your interior finish from three options – Fundamental, Natural and Contemporary.
Each home will feature a butterfly roof line, light shelves, plate steel entry canopies and efficient layouts that emphasize both indoor and outdoor living. Eco-friendly indoor materials include FSC-certified wood, bamboo, marmoleum, recycled glass, Trex decking, low-VOC paints and more. The homes also have high-efficiency lighting, high-performance insulation, passive cooling design, Energy Star appliances, and high-efficiency water fixtures. Homes are built in a controlled factory to minimize waste and maximize quality.
The designers of Stillwater Dwellings wanted to focus on a number of things with their homes. They wanted quality, contemporary prefab homes that weren’t expensive. These homes will run from $130-199 per sq ft, which is fairly reasonable, and they seem to be very open and upfront about all the costs associated with building a Stillwater home.
This entry was posted on Monday, April 6th, 2009 at 2:41 pm and is filed under Architecture, Just Interesting, Landscape Architecture, Urban Design. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.


