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December 31, 2007

Tanglewood – in the beginning

Filed under: General — Tags: , , — Alan @ 2:14 pm

Tanglewood Conservatories was founded by the husband and wife team of Alan Stein and Nancy Virts in 1993.

Beginning in a 3,000 square foot warehouse, with little more equipment than a “contractors” table saw, the company began to design and assemble stock windows and doors into “conservatory-styled” home additions for customers in the Washington, DC area.

Alan had already been involved with numerous building projects when two of his customers requested he build them a “conservatory”. After researching manufacturers of prefabricated systems and finding none suitable, he decided to build them himself.

Several successful projects later, Alan and Nancy, by now enchanted with the concept of “crystal palaces”, decided to rename the company Tanglewood Conservatories and pursue their new passion. Nancy’s sense of connection between music and design stood behind her choice of the name which was taken from the well known music center.

Fifteen years later, the company occupies 40,000 square foot of space and employs 30 craftsmen, designers and staff. Our commitment is to design and build the best conservatories in the world, architecturally and technically, to build Tanglewood into a world-class company and to consistently deliver the best experience possible to our customers.

Our passion for these beautiful buildings, our desire for excellence in their design and construction and our love of new and engaging opportunities, has continually led us into deeper waters.

The initial concept of using “stock” parts from outsourced suppliers has long ago given way to a relentless drive to become a vertically integrated, well-controlled modern manufacturing company. At the same time, our desire to continually develop new products and approaches and to explore the use of new materials and techniques remains stronger than ever.

Current new endeavors include the design and construction of traditional cast iron and steel conservatories and greenhouses.

December 27, 2007

Conservatory Donation update

Jok Walsh and Michael McCrea of the Maryland based Caroline County Historical Society are still looking for someone who would like to purchase the conservatory donated to the society by Tanglewood Conservatories last year.

Jok says that the society is involved with the preservation of 23 building and historic sites in the Caroline County area and would like to use to money to create a capital projects fund.

“We plow every cent we’ve got into our projects”, he says. “We don’t have any money in the bank account. This constitutes the biggest gift we’ve ever gotten.”

The donated conservatory is already boxed and ready to go. It measures about 13 feet wide by 22 feet long and is about 13 feet tall at the ridge of its hip roof. See our blog from November 30th to see the specifications in complete detail.

Walsh spoke to reporters covering the story at length of Tanglewood Conservatories’ quality and name recognition in the conservatory business. “They make a very high quality product that is sold all over the United States.”

“Hopefully, this donation will give us a bit of a nest egg”, added Michael McCrea. The Caroline County Historical Society will possibly hold an auction for the conservatory in the near future.

Please call Jok Walsh, the Executive Director at 410 479 4188.

December 25, 2007

Holiday Wishes

Filed under: General — Tags: — Alan @ 10:14 am

I’d like to wish everyone a very Happy Holiday and New Year. May 2008 be a year filled with health, happiness and growth for all of us.

Tanglewood will be closed for the holiday beginning on Monday, December 24th. We will reopen on Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008.

See you all next year!
Alan

December 23, 2007

Greenhouse conservatory project

Filed under: General — Tags: , — Alan @ 4:01 pm

Nancy and I recently attended a party at the newly completed home of the client who’s greenhouse conservatory is pictured on our website page: Dome Palmhouse

It is an amazing home with each room being finished differently in various exotic woods. Even the windows in the different rooms are completely different. One room has steel casements, another mahogany triple-hungs etc. You might think that this effect would be one of disharmony – and it could have been, but this holds together very well due to the skill of the architects, Custom Design Concepts Architecture, in McLean, Virginia.

There was a beautiful two-story, round, walnut-paneled library with an old-world looking steel balcony that is lined with bookshelves and has a domed ceiling painted with images reminiscent of the great classical frescos.

John Kiernan of Blue Line Studios in Warrenton Virginia is the artist responsible for the work. A former police officer turned painter he has studied many years to become a master of faux finishes and “reality” murals and in 2005 he was inducted into “Salon”, the International Society of Decorative Painters.

Check out John’s website at www.bluelinestudios1.com.

I’m going to post some more pictures of this amazing conservatory soon. It was the first project that Tanglewood undertook which has an exposed decorative steel superstructure inside. In the meantime you can get a preview by looking at “Our Portfolio”, page #10 on our website.

December 19, 2007

Visitor comment

Filed under: Conservatory Projects — Tags: — Alan @ 9:07 am

Blown away…#11…too much!!
Got a true emotional feel from that one….that’s not easy, I don’t believe.

Even the flyover states read the NY Times once in awhile.

Thanks, Gang!

Larry Dolan

December 15, 2007

ICA & CA awards

Filed under: General — Tags: — Alan @ 11:41 am

Next week is the deadline for entries for the Arthur Ross awards given out by the Institute of Classical Architecture & Classical America. This year’s Ross Awards jury will be chaired by Allan Greenberg.

The purpose of the awards are to “celebrate excellence in the classical tradition” and are given out in recognition of “the achievements and contributions of architects, painters, sculptors, artisans, landscape designers, educators, publishers, patrons, and others dedicated to preserving and advancing the classical tradition”.

The Institute of Classical Architecture (ICA) has as its mission, the advancement of classical and traditional ideals within the design and building trades. This is a wonderful organization and a great resource for anyone with an interest in the classical traditions of architecture, urbanism and the arts.
They have a terrific website which highlights their many outstanding programs.
The presentation of the Ross Awards will be on Monday, May 5, 2008 at New York’s historic University Club.

December 11, 2007

Common HVAC Mistakes Made When Designing Indoor Swimming Pool Enclosures and Conservatories

Filed under: General — Tags: , , — Alan @ 3:07 pm

Common HVAC Mistakes Made When Designing Indoor Swimming Pool Enclosures and Conservatories.

Here are some common issues that need to be carefully planned for when building a swimming pool that will be enclosed within a conservatory.

1. Don’t try to control the room environment without a dehumidification system. One of the biggest misconceptions is that exhaust fans and make-up air systems can be used to maintain a proper level of humidity inside the room. Fluctuations in outdoor temperature conditions and humidity levels make this nearly impossible. Also, the wintertime cost of operating a ventilation-only system will be far higher than a system with HVAC.

2. The dehumidification system must be properly sized. This includes the two different aspects of the system – a) the capacity of the equipment itself and, b) the air turnover rate. Adequate air movement is essential to maintaining the conservatory structure (wood, steel etc.) and finish over time.

3. Installation of the proper ductwork. The ductwork in a conservatory pool enclosure is somewhat like the arteries in our bodies with the HVAC equipment itself being the heart. No matter how “good” the heart is, if the arteries are “bad”, the conservatory building will be “unhealthy”. The ductwork will usually be larger than expected, so it is important to plan for it in the conservatory design concept phase.

4. Don’t try to use the swimming pool itself to heat the pool enclosure. This is impossible to do as there will be no way to control the humidity level which will be a very big problem especially in the winter.

5. Don’t try to “overbuild” the conservatory pool enclosure using moisture resistant materials in an effort to avoid having to deal with the humidity control issues. A well designed HVAC system will control the environment to the degree that conventional materials can be used.

6. HVAC systems using more than 5 rows of evaporator coils do not remove any more moisture and are very difficult to clean.

7. The company that is to provide the system should stand behind their work; the design of the system, the components and the installation work. Some companies will offer a money-back guarantee on the system’s performance. It should state that if the design details and ductwork design are followed, the pool temperature and the room temperatures maintained at the recommended levels, the system will perform as specified. Humidity levels should never exceed fifty to sixty percent.

8. Make sure that you allow enough space for the mechanical equipment. Frequently the mechanical spaces are the last to be considered in the design process since they are not “living” spaces. If enough space is not allocated, the equipment can be hard to install and service later on.

9. There must be adequate air flow on the surfaces of the roof glass. It’s easy to think that because warm air generally rises, the roof of the conservatory will be warmed, but the nooks and angles of the roof will also trap humidity and moisture which will condense, drip and eventually deteriorate the structure.

10. Make sure that any unconditioned enclosed spaces adjacent to the main conservatory space such as dropped ceilings, soffits etc. are well conditioned and ventilated as moisture will easily find its way into all these areas, condense on building structure and damage the conservatory building.

December 6, 2007

Swimming Pool Enclosure considerations

Filed under: General — Tags: — Alan @ 12:10 pm

One of the uses of conservatories that are becoming increasingly popular these days is that of an enclosure for a swimming pool. A beautifully designed and constructed glass building can make for one of the most distinctive pool houses one could imagine. There are many wonderful historical examples of conservatories that you could easily see enclosing an elegant swimming pool or indoor spa.

However, as enticing an idea as this is, there are certain issues that must be considered if the project is to be successful and these should be addressed as early in the design process as possible as they can have a substantial impact on the way that the finished room will look and function.

For now, I’d like to talk about the heating, cooling and humidity control systems, in the trades known as the HVAC (heating, ventilating and air conditioning) system. The scale of the system that will be required to adequately handle the needs of a swimming pool enclosure usually will require substantial equipment and ductwork.

We recently designed an ornate “old-world conservatory” for a swimming pool enclosure on a new home near Detroit, Michigan. The duct work for the system was sized by the company providing the HVAC. One of the components that they specified was 30” diameter supply air pipes arranged in two rows around the perimeter of the roof cupola. One was to move the air up into the roof and the other down into the main part of the room. This was a very appropriate solution from a strictly functional perspective.

The problem was that ductwork of that size and at that location was going to be very hard to “conceal” in our “Old-World” conservatory design. The good news was that we knew the requirements in advance so that we could use some creativity to figure out how to incorporate these elements into the whole design without destroying the effect we were trying to achieve.

Next time… “The Ten Most Common Mistakes When Building an Indoor Swimming Pool Enclosure”.

December 3, 2007

continued cool new conservatory projects

Filed under: Conservatory Projects — Tags: — Alan @ 10:31 am

Continued…

Not long ago while working with a client on another very unusual greenhouse project (which I will get to later), the client asked Nancy and I if we had ever built one like it before that he could go see. His project was for a large greenhouse near Boston that utilized the look and glazing techniques of the historic Conservatory of Flowers in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco.

He wanted to make sure – that as he put it, he wasn’t going to be the “guinea pig” for our latest new “great” idea – that the system we were proposing would actually work.

My answer was only that doing the unusual, even if it means inventing entire new systems is something which we do all the time at Tanglewood, and in this sense, we had done what we were doing for him many, many times before – even if we had never designed and built a conservatory anything like the one we had designed for him. Totally unique, which of course was what he really wanted, he just had to feel comfortable with the idea, which he then did – sort of!

Later on, as his project progressed, he and his builder made several trips to Tanglewood to see his conservatory being “born”. It was great for us to watch his entire attitude change as he began to see with his own eyes and then understand what goes into each of our projects and how his was such a perfect fit for him even in ways he never understood before. (I’ll get some pictures of this amazing conservatory project up as soon as I can).

Right now for example, we are designing and building two unique projects at Tanglewood. One is a small conservatory for customer in Montana that is completely clad with copper on the exterior and is beautiful stained mahogany on the inside. The roof, the casement windows, the doors and even all the exterior ornamentation (pilasters with Corinthian capitals) are being made out of copper, a Tanglewood first.

The other conservatory is an ornamental “old world” pool enclosure for a job in Mississippi that is completely constructed out of steel and aluminum. Steel windows, steel doors, decorative steel roof members and ornamental aluminum trim inside and out, another Tanglewood first. (Photos of these will be coming soon also.)

Mehmet, my counterpart in the design process, as well as many others here at Tanglewood constantly resist attempts to rehash old design ideas, even if for economy sake, some reuse is called for.

My goal is not to engage in this very difficult design and building approach just for the sake of being different, but be able to bring a very high level of creativity, inventiveness and sensitivity to bear on each project that Tanglewood designs and builds, whether large or small, expensive or not. In that way, the end result will be a completely unique yet logical and appropriate response to each of our clients individual needs.

When people look at one of our finished conservatory projects, they usually see the wood, glass and steel building that has appeared, but it is only the final result of our efforts. What is more difficult to portray is the creative process that has lead to that result and how appropriate a response it is for that particular client.

More on all this later…

December 2, 2007

Cool New Conservatory Projects

Filed under: Conservatory Projects — Tags: — Alan @ 12:51 pm

We just returned from sunny Florida where we spent two days photographing a really cool conservatory that we built a year or so ago.

This was a very unusual project that featured a simulated cast stone façade using a material call GFRC (glass fiber reinforced concrete), a deeply stained mahogany interior and a copper shingled dome that was painted with a sky and cloud scene inside.

The design was quite unusual but turned out to be the perfect expression of our client’s vision and needs. This is a freestanding – almost Moorish looking conservatory, set in a sculpted garden park with a large Koi pond on one side and a manicured green on the other. Paths wind through the lush South Florida wood past sleeping lions and Greek gods and formal fountains abound. The conservatory is the dominant element in the whole scheme which is quite spectacular. I will have some images on our Flickr site soon and later on our website in the Our Portfolio section.

What is typical of this completely out-of-the-box project, is that it is just one of the many completely out-of-the-box conservatory designs that is typical for Tanglewood. Many are only “conservatories” in the loosest sense of the term, but they are all great architectural renditions of someone’s dreams, vision and lives.

Continued…

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