|
BY NANCY O'BRIEN
EDITOR
NORTH RIVER
- Way up on the side of a mountain overlooking the Hudson River
and the Adirondack Mountains, Tony Malikowski and Linnea Newman
are having their new home built in a very old fashioned way.
The couple,
who currently reside in Chestertown, had been looking for the right
home for several years and are finally building what they want in
North River. Malikowski is a high school science teacher in Indian
Lake and his wife is a veterinarian, specializing in poultry. Her
job with a large pharmaceutical company takes her around the country,
working with poultry companies like Tyson and Perdue. Malikowski
is also a cross-country ski racer and a white-water-rafting guide,
making the North River location ideal for these pursuits.
"This
will be our family home," Newman said. The couple is in the
process of adopting two children from Poland, and Newman said once
the children come, she will stop working and become a stay-at-home
mom.
The house they
are building is being done in the centuries-old post and beam or
timber frame tradition. Newman said the number one reason they chose
a timber frame home is the energy efficiency you can achieve. "It
looks pretty, but with this frame, your insulation isn't interrupted
by studs," she said.
|
"You have a big sandwich of insulation in the walls." Newman
said the walls of a timber frame home can provide a R-23 or R-24 insulation
factor, as opposed to R-16 to 19 that most stick frame homes have.
Malikowski
said they also chose timber frame because they like the airy interior
that goes with it. The beams of the frame will be exposed in the
finished home. Newman said they chose North Woods Joinery in Jeffersonville,
Vt., to create the frame because of price.
"This
type of construction can be extremely expensive." She said.
"We chose North Woods because the price was pretty darn close
to that of a custom stick-built home."
North Woods
site technician Jeff Kidder was at the house as the unique frame
was being constructed.
"It's
just beautiful, and it's very, very sturdy," Kidder said. "In
the olden days, timber frame was the way things were built. Then
people started hiding the frame behind Sheetrock walls. Now it's
popular to have the beams exposed."
The hemlock
frame is all wood and there are no nails, lag bolts or metal fasteners
of any kind, Kidder said, just one-inch shaved oak pegs.
|
| "It adds
a lot of character," he said. "This is where houses began,
when construction started."
The handcrafted
frame was crafted according to a traditional, centuries-old method
and transported to North River where it was raised by general contractor
Dana Cole of Indian River. Cole will complete the 2,400-square-foot
home that will include what Newman called a "monster"
screened-in porch to enjoy the outdoors without black flies.
|
Malikowski said
his wife had a lot to do with the design of the house.
"We wanted
an Adirondack Great Camp look to the house," he said. They
plan to have the house stained dark brown like the Great Camp at
the Santanoni Preserve in Newcomb and hope to move in by summer.
|