Subtitled "Designing and Building a House Your Own Way," this is the book for anyone thinking about building their own home. It is comprehensive, detailed and covers subjects I have never before seen covered in home building books, like how to make a small house seem bigger, incorporating ergonomics and accessibility, doing your own drawings and scale models, making contracts that work, and working effectively with professional designers and builders. With detailed diagrams and photographs, this is the most thorough overall guide to building your own home I have ever seen (and I've seen a lot!).
I had a great week in L.A. last month. Got to see some good friends, got drunk at a wedding, and saw some great buildings like Bolton Hall in Tujunga. I was driving around with my friend Oakley listening to Dead Moon and he was talking about how these guys built their own house... got me motivated to read up on building your own house. This book is a great start. Sam Clark started out working on lots of unconventional building styles, and he retains the considerations for energy use and cost, but also gives some cred to traditional methods. Anyone who thinks about building their own house - freedom from rent!- will be happy to read this book...
I was disappointed so much of the book was spent on what I considered common sense - chapters and chapters about "you will need to consider this" on points I can't imagine someone not considering when designing. Like what a room will be used for. Where to put doors. At least half the book is spent on such (to me) inanities, when one chapter with a few lines on each subject would suffice. That said, when it finally got down to business, it was a very good guide. I was presented with a lot more to consider by the building details than all the build-up leading to it. For anyone serious about designing or building a home, this is a good reference. Just ignore the first half or it.
Very good solid guidelines to build a house yourself. Not contracting it out to a professional, but actually doing the work yourself. I had read thsi as a library book and found it so useful it is now on my 'to own' list. Even if engaging in non-stick frame construction there are excellent basic principle of any construction project, from addition to full home, that are great to keep in mind. In my case the pieces on roof, foundations and estimates are the most useful.