Please wait
800-636-0993Contact Davis FrameGo to Shopping Cart
Davis Frame Co.
Custom Timber Frame Home Models
Classic Barn Home Models
Timber Frame Homes Gallery
Timber Frame Plans
Timber Frame Store
About Timber Frame & Post and Beam Homes
About Davis Frame
eSIPS Wall and Roof Panels
Green Building
Find Your Local Rep
Contact Us
Timber Frame Blog
Login to
MY PORTFOLIO
Login
Register now and save your favorite pictures, home plans and more for reference every day as you continue to plan your new home building project.
Register for My Portfolio
Sign up for our
E-NEWSLETTER
Sign Up Details
"Chris Patch [Davis Frame Production Manager] was helpful, as he chamfered the foyer beam specifically for the light and was able to send the artist the exact dimensions so the great room lights fit perfectly in the space. The railing around the balcony is custom made/forged by a local iron smith. Can you tell that I LOVE our house?"
— Julie Allison
Home

Green Building

Timber frame and post and beam homes, today more than ever, are energy efficient and constructed with sustainability in mind while maintaining the outstanding beauty, aesthetics, and craftsmanship that signify what a Davis Frame Company timber frame home is. At Davis Frame Company, we're defining what green building means. With our energy efficient panels, use of BioBased insulation, small amount of building waste, and selection of low-impact materials, we're setting the standard on environmentally friendly building. On our company campus, we even burn the timber cuttings to heat our buildings using an extremely efficient wood stove.

How to Build a Green and Energy Efficient Timber Frame Home

From the types of wood to the site location, it is possible to build a green and sustainable timber frame home. The following information outlines some of the common solutions we offer to our clients who wish to include stewardship of the planet into their timber frame design plans.

Using Reclaimed Timber for your Timber Frame Home

Using reclaimed timber means using trees that were harvested long ago and used in buildings and barns. Aside from being environmentally friendly and saving the lives of today's trees, the beauty and unmatched characteristics of these weathered timbers can give your timber frame home a truly unique look.

timber frame homes pictures

On-Site Versus Off-Site Work

When building a conventional stick home, the materials at the construction site can be inefficient and costly as well as more wasteful. Many of the materials used for the home are shipped and the waste materials must be subsequently shipped away to landfills, usually at a premium cost to the client. When we build a home using the controlled environments of our shop, not only is there very little waste but only the required materials will be sent to the construction site and any scrap materials we create can be recycled or used to heat our facilities (see above)!

SIPS and Energy Star Ratings

In our timber frame homes and buildings we use SIPs (structural insulated panels). The use of SIPs has become widely recognized as being far superior to other methods for sealing and insulating buildings. When you build a Davis Frame timber frame home, your home automatically qualifies for an Energy Star Rating because of the use of the timber frame and SIP panels and is automatically exempt from the blower door test due to the incredibly high performance of our building process.

SIP installation on a timber frame home

BioBased Insulation

To complement our use of SIPs, we've incorporated BioBased insulation which uses soy-based technology to replace petroleum-based fill that is commonly used in SIP construction. We're extremely proud of this decision and have invested in a new building that enables us to custom make our own panels. Due to this process, a Davis Frame timber frame home can help reduce our country's dependency on foreign oil, utilize the renewable resources of soybeans grown by 681,000 American farmers, while at the same time creating a superior product!

Japanese tea house timber frame

Site Stewardship

If you live in the deserts of Utah, should you strive for a green and fluffy lawn? Green building can extend well beyond just your home. Your new timber frame house should form a symbiotic relationship with the land on which you live. Care for your site should begin during the construction process by disturbing as little of the ground and vegetation as possible. By preserving and planting native vegetation and grasses, less water, fertilizers, and chemicals are introduced into the ecosystem.

Using Solar Energy in your Timber Frame Home

Free light may be the best and simplest use of solar energy but the second best is to use it to heat water for your home. To best heat water, have solar collectors installed on the roof of your timber frame home or somewhere on the site close to the home. The collectors are filled with an anti-freeze fluid that runs into the timber frame house and passes through a heat exchanger. The heat exchanger then heats water that can be used to heat or supplement the heat source of the home.

One company that has introduced a solar heating solution that is within a reasonable budget is Viessmann, with the company's Vitosol 300 model. The U.S. even has an incentive program that offers a 30% tax credit for the purchase and installation of a solar system.


post and beam home pictures
 
oregon timber frame home picture

Durability of our Timber Frame Materials

When selecting materials for your home, choose high quality and durable materials. This can dramatically reduce the future expenses of your timber frame home. Select Energy Star appliances, good, solid windows and doors, and perhaps a metal roof, which is recyclable, and will last longer than its counterpart, asphalt.

Use Oriented Strand Board (OSB)

OSB is an efficient use of natural resources and does not rely on old growth timber, making it a good environmental choice for your timber frame home. OSB is a dense form of sheathing similar in some respects to plywood. To make OSB, chips of young growth and waste wood are saturated with an adhesive and then compressed under massive pressure to a fraction of the original thickness. The actual amount of adhesive is quite low and does not contribute significantly to the strength of the sheathing. Rather, it is the combined cross-grain of the compressed chips that make up the composite strength of the board.

Selection of Low-Impact Materials

The building industry is a major global consumer of raw materials, fossil fuels, and energy consumption. By carefully analyzing how the building process is completed and looking for ways to reduce consumption, we can take steps to protect our forests and wilderness for future generations to enjoy. Examples of ways to build with less of a footprint are:

  • using concrete that substitutes fly-ash for virgin Portland cement,
  • use of carpet, carpet pads, insulation, and even floor tiles that are high in recycled content,
  • and flooring materials manufactured from highly renewable resources such as bamboo or wheat by-products.

Many of these choices may seem small in comparison, but collectively they can have a significant and positive impact.

Timber framing and timber frame homes are a wonderful style of construction utilizing exacting mortise-and-tenon joinery and massive timbers to form the framework of a building. The actual timber frame is then left exposed on the interior of the home which allows for a breathtaking effect of open spaces and craftsmanship that is truly unmatched in today's modern building styles. For more information on building a timber frame home, please feel free to call or contact us to start your dream today! ocean timber frame home in south carolina