BridgeView Design Build

Where Quality & Design meet.

 
Porch Design         The Plan         The Details

The new screened-in porch, which is accessed via the family room overlooks nearby treetops and offers the family (including 7-year-old Regan Morche') a place to unwind. French doors lead to a small deck for grilling.
Problem:
Most days, the sun-drenched deck
was too hot to lounge on.

Solution:
Create a three-season
porch for more
usable living space.
Here's how.
Often even the best-laid floor plans can be improved upon. When Colleen and Ed Morché first built their Arlington, Virginia, house eight years ago, they made it to their dream specifications: heavy on Arts and Crafts style, big enough for their budding family, and with a raised deck in back for relaxing on lazy afternoons. There was just one problem. “The deck got so much sun that we barely spent any time out there,” says Colleen. “The heat was just too much.” And as the three kids got older, the house was starting to feel smaller. So the Morchés decided to extend their living space by ditching the deck and adding a screened-in porch in its footprint.
Porch Design Solution: A sun-drenched deck goes under cover - Brian McCracken, Builder
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