Conover Commons Cottages
Projects


Pocket Neighborhoods
Third Street Cottages
Danielson Grove
Conover Commons Cottages
Conover Commons Homes
Greenwood Avenue Cottages
Salish Pond Cottages
Backyard Neighborhood
Umatilla Hill Neighborhood
Woodlands
Spring Valley
Wyer's End

New Residential
Aldermarsh
Buck Mountain
Buck Mountain Bunkhouse
Sprucehouse at Woodlands
Blue Sky
Dungeness
Green Tower
Keystone Prairie
Orcas House
Saratoga
Skaboose and House
Sandy Point House
Chautauqua
Arnn Hill
Gilann Ridge House
Gilann Ridge Cottage
Songbird House
Crab Point Cottage

Residential Renovation
Additions to a Post-War Box
Towerhouse
North Bluff Addition
Poet's Corner
Meydenbauer House

Conference/Retreat Centers
Whidbey Institute:
   
Thomas Berry Hall
   
Pavilion
   
Chinook Farmhouse
   
Iona House
   Woodland Sanctuary
Tahoma Zen Monastery

Mixed Use
Second Street Project

Description

Developed in joint venture with the Cottage Company, this community is the first built under the City of Redmond's Innovative Housing Code, which gives incentives for developing size-limited homes. The first phase was completed in 2005 and has twelve 1000 SF cottages gathered around a garden courtyard. The buyers include a mix of professional couple, empty nesters, single women and single-parent families.

We've carefully designed the site and each home to balance an inviting sense of community with the need for privacy. As in our other garden court neighborhoods, residents walk from the garage door to the front door, passing through a shared courtyard, private garden gate, and room-sized front porch increasing the chance interactions among neighbors that are the seeds for community.

This project received a BuiltGreen 4-Star rating and Energy Star certification, which covers everything from stormwater management, to high-level insulation, to jobsite recycling. Trees taken down on the site were milled for use as flooring, front-porch beams and columns. The commons building, used for potlucks and meetings, uses whole logs for it's supporting structure, and has 100% of it's electricity supplied by photovoltaic panels on the roof.

The American Institute of Architects/Sunset Magazine gave Conover Commons it's 2006 Western Home Honor Award.