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A LOG HOUSE THAT WILL SERVE EITHER AS A SUMMER CAMP OR A COUNTRY HOME
Published in The Craftsman, March, 1907.
EXTERIOR OF LOG HOUSE, SHOWING DECORATIVE USE OF THE PROJECTING ENDS OF PARTITION
LOGS.
SO many people like log houses for summer homes that we give here a design that
would harmonize with the most primitive surroundings. At the same time it is
so carefully planned and so well constructed that it could be used as a regular
dwelling all the year round. While the lines of the building are simple to a
degree, all the proportions are so calculated and the de-tails of the construction
so carefully observed that, with all this simplicity and freedom from pretense,
there is no suggestion of bareness or crudity. It is essentially a log house
for woodland life, and it looks just that; yet it is a warm, comfortable, roomy
building perfectly drained and ventilated and, with proper construction, ought
to last for many generations.
As the first step towards securing good drainage and also saving the lower logs
of the wall from decay, there is an excellent foundation built of stone or cement,
—according to the material most easily and economically obtained, —and this foundation
is quite as high as it would be in any dwelling built of the conventional materials
in the conventional way. But as the appearance of such afoundation would spoil
the whole effect of the house by separating it from the ground on which it stands,
it is almost entirely concealed by terracing the soil up to the top of it and
therefore to the level of the porch floors. The first log of the walls rest directly
upon this foundation and is just far enough above the ground to prevent rotting.
By this device perfect healthfulness is secured so far as good drainage is concerned,
and at the same time the wide low house of logs appears to rest upon the ground
in the most primitive way.
The logs used in building should have the bark stripped off and then be stained
to a dull grayish brown that approaches as closely as possible to the color of
the bark that has been removed. This does away entirely with the danger of rotting,
which is unavoidable when the bark is left on, and the stain removes the raw,
glaring whiteness of the peeled logs and restores them to a color that harmonizes
with their surroundings. The best logs for this purpose are from trees of the
second growth, which are easily obtained almost any-where. They should be from
nine to twelve inches in diameter and should be carefully
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