1960s ranch style exterior update
Parker Watson
3 years ago
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eightpondfarm
3 years agoRelated Discussions
Update Curb Appeal for 1960's Ranch?
Comments (24)I moved some of the photos from the album the OP linked to. This home looks to be custom built for the lot. Notice the design philosophy where the posts blend right into the trees and are hardly noticed. Why would anyone want to "beef up" the posts or glue trellises to them? It looks like some of the posts have started to be painted white to match the window and door trim for some reason. This is an easy fix and the posts can be repainted to blend. If you start messing with the posts in front of the house then you have created a monster with the posts along the garage not matching. There is no reason to start hacking the support posts out as some are suggesting, both from a design perspective and from an engineering standpoint. This home was designed to 'cocoon' the inhabitants and blend in with the natural surroundings. The FLW philosophy believed a home should work with the surroundings not just be plopped down. This home embraces that philosophy. I am very curious as to whom is the architect here. It looks like there may have been tiered steps and a platform going up into the garden in back that have now been removed and replaced with a new sloping walkway. Before doing any other modifications a professional should be consulted for guidance....See More1960's Ranch Update Suggestions
Comments (5)Thank you for the comments! We are planning on pulling out all the landscaping along the front of the house. I completely agree that it is way too large. I think seeing all the brick on the right hand side of the house and not being able to see it on the left is part of what is making it hard for me to visualize. My husband's work schedule should allow us in the next week or so to start pulling out the bushes and I can't wait! As much as I would like to take out the trees in the front yard (they are HUGE pine trees) we are going to have to wait and save up to have them professionally removed because of their size. The windows that my husband wants to enlarge are on the end of the house where it is all siding and then on the driveway in the below image where it is all brick. The windows on the front he wants to widen more then lengthen because of the brick placement. I hadn't really thought about removing the shutters completely, so now I am curious to get them down and see what it looks like. I'm not opposed to painting the brick. Which is why I was wondering if I should paint the siding and the brick the same color. Is it better to leave the brick as is and adjust the siding and front door color?...See MoreUpdating exterior of 1960's ranch
Comments (7)Since you are replacing the siding, consider adding thicker trim around the windows as opposed to shutters. I am not sure that board and batten siding will be an improvement. It is a siding that tends to be country to my eye, and your style inside doesn’t convey that at all to me. I would play around with a photo of your house to see how it would look. All the examples shown have some other architectural details that step up the interest such as a porch or dormers, and I think the board and batten may not give you the appeal you anticipate. I like the idea of a more attractive door for the garage. Look at a range of styles; I have seen ones with windows in a column down one side that might suit your home, a single door rather than the two doors in the photo link below. Consider replacing the screen door with a different style. I think a single panel without the dividing line in the middle is a more updated look. Or alternatively, use a roll up screen that pulls across when needed and is out of sight when not. Updated light fixtures will help as well, by the garage, front door, and on the post. The one on the post should be at the end of the walkway, which might benefit from coming down along the drive a bit so that if a car is parked in front of the garage, the walk is still accessible. Once all the exterior fixes are done to the building, then widen the walkway and steps and center the steps on the door, being sure that there is a large landing at both the top and bottom. Remove the pots around the steps now since they are making a narrow space feel smaller. If you want a pot to either side of the steps, plan space for that when you are redoing the steps. I would enlarge the bed around the tree as in Yardvaark's sketch using more of whatever the current plants are if they seem happy. It is difficult to get new plantings established under a maple tree due to root competition, so I wouldn’t plan to change out what is currently there. The beds along the front of the house are currently far too small front to back and so look pinched, and I doubt that anything currently there is worth saving. I would repost about the landscaping when the exterior work on the house and entry path is done. To get good suggestions for landscaping, we need to know where you are generally and your USDA growing zone along with your goals for the yard beyond curb appeal (if any) and how much you enjoy spending time gardening. Some photos of front plantings you find appealing will help as well....See MoreNeed exterior design help for this 1960s split level ranch
Comments (5)Interesting - I like your theory about someone homesick for New Orleans LOL. As mentioned above, porch cant really be removed without leaving scars - and an overhang much deeper than the rest of the house, which would look funny. Can the balcony be used, does it make sense to open up a room to it? Part of its oddness is that its obvious that there is no door and cant be used. Whats going on under the porch, behind the hedge? Some kind of patio? You could remove the hedge, expand that and make it into useable attractive outdoor living space - framed in a border of flowering fragrant shrubs, 1 or 2 well placed ornamental trees (ie short, placed toward the side of the house), intermixed with perennials/bulbs. You could leave a few of the evergreens - its just the solid wall of them that is so unappealing. What are the rooms on the lower level - would any of those benefit by opening up to a patio? .... or maybe it could be an actual courtyard and by that I mean a professionally designed walled space which fits architecturally with your house.... not an ugly cheap privacy fence from Menards! But then that gets to be expensive too - probably more than just removing the darn thing! Otherwise, maybe just swap out the frilly iron work for something simpler/more linear, with strong horizontal lines as is fitting for this style/era. Also changing all the white to something less high contrast - would help de-emphasize it....See MoreParker Watson
3 years agoCelery. Visualization, Rendering images
3 years agoCelery. Visualization, Rendering images
3 years agoeightpondfarm
3 years agolast modified: 3 years agoParker Watson
3 years ago
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