Tres Birds recently designed and built a cozy ADU in Boulder, Colorado. The new 800-square-foot home features a kitchen/dining space, bedroom, bathroom, and flexible loft space, which could be additional living space, an office, or a second bedroom.
Efficiently designed, the small home reuses and repurposes a number of materials. It’s made primarily of reclaimed bowling alley lanes and plywood. The warm toned 50-year-old bowling alley wood is used as a structurally independent mezzanine floor system and laminated together to create the east side timber frame window system. Gleaming reject tile from a Boulder artisan is used throughout the bathroom and in the kitchen.
The skylight is made from a dichroic glass panel left over from a past Tres Birds project. As the angle of the sun changes throughout the day and season, so do the visual effects within the living space, creating a vibrant show of colored light throughout. Window locations and roof overhangs were designed specifically to maximize natural light in the home while providing adequate shading for summer sun. In the winter, the continuous standing seam exterior is designed to be low maintenance and to quickly shed snow from its pitched roof.
The ADU scores well for energy efficiency. The envelope is tight and well insulated. Radiant floor heating and cooling keep the indoor climate comfortable. Lighting, security, HVAC, and the operable skylight can all be controlled by the occupant’s phone, integrating the systems and cutting down on energy waste. The home received a Home Energy Rating System (HERS) score of 33, not far off from Europe’s stringent Passive House requirement of HERS 20. For reference, a new standard home scores HERS 100 and an Energy Smart home scores HERS 85.
The home has been designated an “Affordable Accessory Unit” rental property by the City of Boulder Affordable Housing Program.
Material Used :
1. Facade cladding: Bonderized metal from Signature Services Roofing
2. Flooring: Polished structural concrete slab with regional river rock aggregate
3. Doors: Custom apple-ply by Tres Birds
4. Windows: Anderson Arch series in Douglas fir with aluminum cladding
5. Roofing: Bonderized metal from Signature Services Roofing
6. Interior lighting: Flexible LED Strip Light- Ultra Bright, from Aspect LED
7. Base cabinets: IKEA
8. Bathroom walls: Reclaimed artisan tiles from Boulder artisan
9. Stairs: Paragon Stairs
10. Door Hardware: Krown Lab (bathroom door)
11. Appliances: KitchenAid
12. Plumbing Fixtures: Kohler
13. Interior furniture:
Isamu Noguchi, Akari 10a, 1951
Sori Yanagi, Butterfly Stool, 1954
Charles and Ray Eames, Case Study Side Shell, 1948
Charles and Ray Eames, Case Study Table, 1952
Charles and Ray Eames, LCM, 1946
Tres Birds, 8 legged, 2010
14. Artworks:
Berger&Fohr, Poly Scrim, 2020
Berger&Fohr, Reality Is Subjective 01, 2019
Berger&Fohr, Reality Is Subjective 02, 2019
Gregg Deal, Indigenous Flag, 2020
Michael M. Moore, Worker Drone, 2018