
Additions Portfolio
Family Room home addition, Chester County
The interior - the family room - is a wonderful blend of traditional and contemporary design. The fireplace surround is copied from an early 1800's design book. The flanking cabinetry, designed and built on-site, draws from the styles of that period but is put to much more modern use housing TV, video, and stereo equipment.
Winter 2003 Newsletter
Spring 2004 Newsletter
Design by Peter Zimmerman Architects
Cabinet design by Restore 'N More

Adding Up and Out home addition, Lancaster County
Spring 2007 Newsletter
Summer 2007 Newsletter
Fall 2007 Newsletter
Winter 2007 Newsletter
Design by Cox-Evans Architects

Something Old, Something New home addition, Lancaster County
The custom cabinetry incorporates every modern convenience, yet the hand-rubbed "distressed" finish gives it that old-world look. High-tech lighting, energy-saving appliances, and stress-skin insulating panels combine to provide the best of both worlds. And what really brings a warm glow to this "old" room is the thoroughly modern remote-control gas-log fireplace. Designed to mirror the cook top's enclosure, the fireplace can trick the most seasoned "wood-splitter" into pulling up a chair and propping his feet in front of the fire.
The remarkable design of this post-&-beam kitchen addition was tremendously successful because of all the proper elements being in place: The owners, whose vision and open-mindedness and enthusiasm inspired everyone involved in their project; the architects, who not only heard what the owners wanted but were able to communicate it through their design; and the craftsmen who skillfully executed the vision and design down to the smallest details.
Design by Cox-Evans Architects

Mirror Image home addition, Chester County

Style & Accessibility home addition, Berks County
The large country-style kitchen features granite counter tops, custom wrought-iron rat-tail hinges and drawer pulls, deep-drawer storage for bulky pots and pans, random-width vintage flooring, and separate pantry and foyer rooms (not seen in photo). The work spaces, cabinetry, hardware, appliances, and fixtures were selected or designed with the client's arthritic condition in mind, thereby minimizing the impact on stiff, sore joints. The cabinets beneath the sink and the stove top each have provision for pulling up a stool so the owner can sit at either. All of which goes to show you don't have to sacrifice style for comfort.
Design by Cox-Evans Architects

Not too big, not too small, but the details add up to a grand home addition, Lancaster County
Stone, used to face the chimney's exterior, was salvaged from a local barn foundation; it matches the house's stone. Random width, ship lapped, wood siding; every piece scribed to fit the irregularities of the abutting stone chimney and the house walls. The porch roof replicates, in every detail, one found on a not-too-distant mill.
Inside, vintage wood ceiling joists, including a massive summer beam, that were salvaged from the historic but now demolished Mountain Springs Hotel in Ephrata. Real plaster walls. Vintage oak flooring; many boards measuring 15" wide. Vintage brick fireplace hearth. And the piéce de resistance; a new fireplace surround with doors, custom-made and painted to appear 200 years old, including vintage wrought-iron hinges.

