Here’s a great book designed to give homeowners floor plans that provide a custom home feel at a fraction of the cost.
I like this book because it gives the homeowner over 130 charming and open floor plans in a variety of styles. These range from tiny house floor plans to luxury home floor plans. The floor plans are presented in simple language along with easy to follow diagrams.
The book is called The Complete Home Collection by Rocky Mountain Plan Company.
Here’s an exerpt from the book:
what matters
ACCESSIBLE
Rocky Mountain Plan Company believes that your home should be your castle, your safe space to relax, make memories, and be yourself. That’s why we’re always thinking about you and how we can help you live your best life for a long as possible. We address accessibility from the very beginning, because smart design considerations can make all the difference as you age or face unexpected lifestyle changes.
Throughout the years, we’ve deigned homes for a wide breadth of clients who all benefit from thoughtful, accessible design. From young wounded veterans who want to enjoy a beautiful home attuned to their needs and raise a family, to empty nesters and aging baby boomers who simply want to reduce or eliminate stairs as they enjoy this exciting new chapter in life, accessible design can give you long-term peace of mind and independence in your dream home.
Many of our plans, particularly our ranch models, but quite a few of our two-story homes as well, are designed to support seamless aging in place. This means that the floor plans are optimized for all-on-one-level living, allowing for a stair-free daily routine from the time your step our of the garage to the moment you retire for the evening. In these homes, the master suite, kitchen, laundry room, and common living spaces are all situated on the main level, and many of our larger ranch homes include a second bedroom on the main level as well, perfect for visiting guests or allowing you to care for aging parents.
If a two-story home better suits your lot or current lifestyle, many of our floor plans are designed with elevator considerations in mind. As an example, a main level coat closet may be intentionally lined up with an upper-level closet, making it much easier to convert into an elevator shaft in the future.
We’ve designed several homes to be fully wheelchair accessible, and the Rocky Mountain Drafting Team can make any additional modifications to your favorite floor plan to comply with ADA standards or simply increase accessibility. The majority of our plans already have an open, breezy flow to them, with spacious kitchens open to living spaces, wide hallways, and ample bedrooms and bathrooms, providing not only better maneuverability, but a greater fluidity and lightness to your life.
SUSTAINABLE
Selecting and building a new home involves countless decisions and choices that affect not only our future lifestyle, but the environment as well. Fortunately, there have been tremendous advances in materials, building science, and in how we choose to live, and everything makes a difference, from using thicker, more efficient insulation and photovoltaic panels, to choosing to xeriscape or use LED lighting.
A well-designed home should work in harmony with its setting, as this is most beneficial for the natural resources of the planet, as well as for your energy bill. Site placement is a critical component of building a home in tune with the earth, optimizing natural light, airflow, and rainfall as well as preserving trees.
One of the most effective ways to save energy and reduce waste is simply by living smaller. Our plan collection includes many small homes with open layouts that live large on tiny footprints, along with plans that would work beautifully in a pocket neighborhood.
Our home designers are champions of green and sustainable design, with LEED certifications and deep passion and knowledge about how to make building more eco-friendly. If you’d like to find about how to make your home more efficient or optimize your project, the Rocky Mountain Drafting Team can advise you on materials and strategies to reduce your carbon footprint.
architectural style
Arts & Crafts
The Arts & Crafts home is one of comfort and character, with a cozy warmth that envelops your family for generations. This home style is based on a deep-rooted philosophical movement and a back-to-nature approach that originated in the British Isles in the 1850’s. English artists and writers including William Morris and john Ruskin were repulsed by the Industrial Revolution, believing that the assembly line degraded the dignity of the individual worker, and the mass-produced ornamentation of the Victorian era was stripping the soul from the family home and senselessly cluttering design.
Morris and his contemporaries took it upon themselves to build homes in harmony with nature’s unhewn beauty, championing handmade, heartfelt craftmanship and simplicity of form. The style and its greater purpose caught on throughout Great Britain, where the simple heartfelt houses were right at home amongst the twisting vines and wildflowers of the English countryside. Visiting American entrepreneurs brought the design concept back to the States, as the style and scale translated beautifully to the middle class family home. This led to the development of the American Craftsman Style. The Arts & Crafts home is attentive to making every detail matter, favoring hand wrought iron, stained glass windows, handcrafted furniture, woven tapestries, and wall covering often featuring nature themes and native flowers as motifs. Hearty fireplaces composed of hand-laid stone or brick invite the family to gather, and bay windows, dining nooks, and cozy living spaces bring all the comforts of home.
architectural style
Contemporary
In the loosest terms, contemporary simply means “in the style of the present.” As an architectural style, however, Contemporary design is defined as avant-garde: a style that pushes the boundaries and explores principles and forms outside of the traditional. Architects across the globe have taken may different stylistic approaches to Contemporary architecture, from using exclusively non-perpendicular angles, to eliminating all angles and using only curves and bulbous shapes. Each conceptual method is its own form of art…
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