I was only up there for one day on this trip, and it happened to be a Sunday so none of the crew were working. It gave me a good chance to have a poke around.
The problem with doing this is you start to look at things and realise that there is a better way of doing things, and that's exactly what happened.
First up - When drawing the house initially, I'd drawn in a rather Victorian looking garden door thing:
The purpose was that as you came in through the front door you would be able to see right through the house and out to the view on the other side. Probably the major reason that it was still there was that I quite enjoyed trying to draw it on Sketchup and didn't want to delete it.
The builder had left a gap in the wall he had built for the door, but wanted dimensions to take it forwards. This picture is looking in from the front door area looking towards the rear of the house:
The more I thought about it the less I wanted a door here. From a practical point of view the folding doors in the breakfast room would be invariably open during the day so this door would never be used. Secondly I didn't want to try to achieve anything too complicated without being there, and if it was a disaster then it would be a relatively expensive one. The final thought was that it was directly opposite the front door, and that's apparently a bad Feng Shui thing. I'm not a great believer in Feng Shui but some of the principles make sense in the terms of the feel of a place and I felt it was probably right in this regard.
So the first change to the plan was to ditch the door and stick in a normal window instead:
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) and then this photo turns up:
