
AGRA DOLCE | a deconstructed farmhouse
a tale of building a life | and a house | in Italy
workshop visits
One of the things I’m really enjoying throughout this process is getting to visit so many workshops of the artisans who are working on the different elements of the house. It’s at the stage now where many details are needing to be addressed…
end of an era
…Well maybe not an era, but we’re at least coming towards the end of the first part of the building contract - the part that covers the full structural section.
more of a floor
The next layer of concrete was poured yesterday. This was to cover the pipes and tubes for the plumbing and electricity that had woven a spider’s web over the entire foundation.
it’s the inside that counts
They say that it’s the inside that counts, and if that applies to houses as well, then we’re much further along than it may seem.
things found and made
One of the parts of this process that I’ve really looked forward to is deciding on the details and furnishings of the interiors. As the rooms are taking shape and a next phase now is beginning after the structural part is coming to a close, I find myself visualizing the spaces a bit clearer.
it’s a funny thing, time
It’s funny how time can get away from you. Sometimes it feels like just inching along and other times like you could swear it was only a week ago since you last wrote a blog post when it’s actually been over a month!
in the (future) garden
Another meeting that happened in these past few weeks was another visit to the vivaio to sit down with the landscape designer to see their initial ideas and then to view the plants and trees in person to make final yay or nays.
a week of progress
In the last week the work has continued moving forward. Since the concrete pour for the final roof section was finished last week, the curing period was complete and the supports removed. Then the walls for the main bedroom all went up. These were the final exterior walls to be finished so the house is now practically the shape that it will be from now on.
roofs and walls
This past week has been one of those periods when the progress on the house is quite visible. The week began with the final wooden shuttering and ceiling tiles being put in place for the final roof section.
antiques & junk shops
One of my favorite things to do is scrounge around at an antique market or junk shop. And although I’d happily find either one anywhere, here in Italy I love it even more as there are so many interesting (and usually old) objects to find.
on-site visits
After yesterday’s general summertime update I thought I’d write about more of the logistics that have been taking place with some of the on-site visits of many people involved in the project.
summertime
Although this summer (and year) are completely strange and new for everyone, the summertime here in some ways has remained the same. There are still beautiful sunsets, fields of sunflowers, and plenty of outdoor dining into the long evenings.
july updates
…A few days ago I had one of those moments where I felt a bit overwhelmed with the number of plates spinning at the same time in regards to this project - but at the same time realized none were completely time-sensitive.
sourcing stone
…On the way home, we stopped in Carrara which is on the way, and is of course one of the most famous marble quarries in the world. The mountain in an of itself it a spectacular site, and the quarry opens up like a gleaming white cavity on the side of the slope.
firing the clay
The clay from the lot that I’d worked into a little votive shrine for the entrance wall of the house has finally been fired. After a friend told us that we could just find one of the ceramichisti to fire it for us, we went to the only one we’d seen around the area just to ask.
not going anywhere
This house is not going anywhere. I think I’ve said that more than once during this process. As have a few other people who have seen it. Not meaning “not going anywhere” as in not moving forward, but “not going anywhere” as it certainly will not be moving around.
life of a cork
You may remember this cork. It was the one from the bottle of prosecco that I popped at the end of the final closing. Around the table of the lawyer, we shared plastic glasses and a “salute!” to signing the final papers and embarking on this new adventure (officially).
emerging structure
Since reopening the country last month, it’s been a steady forward motion on the site. After the last construction update on here when they’d finished most of the structural columns, and begun part of the cage of the roof, the work continued to race ahead.
the destiny of clay
Back when the first diggers came to break the land and clear a big hole for the building site we found layers of pure grey Umbrian clay clumped within the clots of old field. It was still pretty muddy…so the clay was just seen as swaths of light grey smeared within the warm tones of freshly dug soil.
cosi veloce
Although life seems to be slowly returning, the project is anything but slow. It’s been going full-speed ahead since this past Monday when the restrictions on construction were lifted, and the phrase that keeps getting repeated by us, the architect team, and mostly anyone who have received the updates this week is “cosi veloce!” how fast!