The Borneo Post

Life in a silo house, owner familiar with it

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AS THE owner and operator of Port City Brewing Company, Bill Butcher is certainly familiar with silos, since he uses one at his business in Alexandria, Virginia.

But when his designer pitched the concept of a silo as a major component of a vacation dream home he was designing for Butcher and his wife, Karen, the couple said not so fast.

“We had an ongoing dialogue with (the designer) on design decisions,” says Bill. “And for the most part, they come up with great ideas. But when he suggested the silo we said, ‘Hmm, not sure.’”

Their designer, Mark Turner of Green Spur, a design-build firm based in Falls Church, Virginia, said the initial scepticism didn’t deter him.

“We’ve always been intrigued by silos,” says Turner. “So when you have a client who runs a beer factory with a silo on the side of the building, it’s a pretty easy sell.”

On the 89 acres the Butchers own along the Rappahanno­ck River in Marshall, Virginia, sits Turner’s vision: A simple, rectangula­r home with a front porch. It’s sheltered by a standing seam metal roof, and clad with board and batten sheathing painted green.

The main section of the home’s downstairs has a living room, dining room and kitchen combinatio­n. Upstairs includes a kids’ room with bunk beds, a guest room, the master bath, guest bath, kids’ bath and a kids’ sleeping loft.

The silo that houses the master bedroom upstairs and a den downstairs sits on one end and is connected to the main section of the house via a stepped- down entrancewa­y. The transition­al space works as a mudroom that includes a powder room and laundry room.

The silo itself came from Brock Grain Systems, which works out of several locations in the Midwest. A crew of silo erectors assembled it on site in about six hours. “They do the roof first, jack up the roof using what looks kind of like car jacks, add a fourfoot section, then jack that up and add another section till it’s done,” says Turner.

The den on the ground level of the silo is illuminate­d with natural light from the windows. On the second level, the windows are combined with an overhead custom fixture lit by LEDs. Minimal closet space is tucked behind the headboard of the bed. Walking through the space elicits a peaceful feeling, like strolling into a cathedral but with an added quirkiness factor raised by thoughts of grain storage.

“It may not look like it, but there’s actually quite a bit of storage space in the house,” says Karen Butcher, 49, a lawyer with Morgan Lewis, an internatio­nal law firm with an office in Washington.

The Butchers’ land is about a 90-minute ride from Washington. It’s south of Front Royal and west of Warrenton. The parcel extends to a peak overlookin­g the river, and early in the constructi­on phase, the land itself revealed what would be the biggest challenge on the job.

“We hit a lot of rock trying to get the footers in,” says Turner. “That was a challenge along with the distance to the site. It was hard getting our guys out there and the subs (subcontrac­tors) out there.”

The Butchers bought the 89 acres at the end of a dead- end road near Marshall when the real estate market was booming in the past decade. The deal included an interim house that they planned to use and then resell once they finished building their dream vacation house. But their plans soon changed.

“Sometimes life gets in the way,” says Bill. “We went ahead, hired an architect, had plans made in 2008 just before the market crashed. We had two little kids at the time and decided to put the whole thing on hold for awhile.”

In 2013, the Butchers saw a newspaper article about a house built by Turner. The designer grew up on a ranch in Wyoming and has a taste for rustic buildings inspired by barns and farmhouses.

“I like architectu­re that pulls on the heartstrin­gs of nostalgia,” Turner says.

The Butchers pushed aside the house plans they already had, and according to Turner, they told him to “do something cool.”

And what could be cooler than sleeping in a silo?

Opposite the silo, the openplan living area is lit by southfacin­g windows flanking the fireplace and providing a source of natural light for the mostly white kitchen.

“Mark is very good at spending the money in the right places,” says Bill, 49. “The kitchen cabinets are from Ikea.” Money was invested in the honed, black granite countertop­s, floors are whitewashe­d oak, and the appliances are GE. A central island and a walk-in pantry provide plenty of storage.

Three windows that face the woods are hinged and can be swung open when the weather cooperates, bringing the outside in with the assistance of a counterwei­ght- and-pulley system that the Green Spur crew invented on site.

Beyond the kitchen lies an outdoor firepit and beyond that, a unique outbuildin­g the family has dubbed “The Overlook.” “It’s a place to hang out. There’s a great feeling of seclusion out there,” says Bill. — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? When Bill and Karen’s designer pitched the concept of a silo as the major component of a vacation dream home he was designing for them near Marshall, Virginia, the couple at first were hesitant. But they soon changed their minds.
When Bill and Karen’s designer pitched the concept of a silo as the major component of a vacation dream home he was designing for them near Marshall, Virginia, the couple at first were hesitant. But they soon changed their minds.
 ??  ?? The rectangula­r-shaped home sits on 89 acres the Butchers own along the Rappahanno­ck River. It’s sheltered by a standing seam metal roof and clad with board-and-batten sheathing painted green. — WP-Bloomberg photos
The rectangula­r-shaped home sits on 89 acres the Butchers own along the Rappahanno­ck River. It’s sheltered by a standing seam metal roof and clad with board-and-batten sheathing painted green. — WP-Bloomberg photos

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