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30' Yurt Plan

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Old 01-01-2013, 12:37 AM   #1
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Default 30' Yurt Plan

I have a 30' Rainier Yurt (two doors) in storage and making plans for the build. Here is my latest floor plan. I am continuing to refine the layout and looking for feedback. I have only stayed in yurts over weekend (more like camping without the tent). My plans are to live in the yurt for retirement. I am sure there is more to consider than what I have shown.

Things that are undecided
- stove in the island or in the wall cabinet next to pantry or in place of sink
- kitchen sink on outside wall (under window) or in wall cabinet next to pantry; that puts plumbing on one inside wall.
- kitchen island; yes or no
- small kitchen vs kitchen shown
- full bath in yurt, vs. a bath house outside
- loft over bedroom and bath
- optimize layout according to feng shui design
- mud room/area inside or outside

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Old 01-01-2013, 01:49 AM   #2
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Hmm, before we can answer this, what part of the world do you live in? A warm climate or cold climate?
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Old 01-01-2013, 03:35 AM   #3
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My location will be Pacific Northwest, specifically northeastern Washington.
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Old 01-01-2013, 09:20 AM   #4
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One thing I see is that you might have a hard time venting that stove if it is in the center like that? I like the layout otherwise.
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Old 01-01-2013, 10:21 AM   #5
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I'm also playing around with floor plans. I'm liking the idea of putting the kitchen sink on the same wall as the bathroom, or really close to it, to simplify the plumbing. I also really like lofts. I haven't really drawn anything up, but my general thought right now it so have very few partitioning walls, and have them help to hold up the loft. I want to try and leave as much open space as possible. Just my two cents.
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Old 01-01-2013, 10:50 AM   #6
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We had a thread a while back about design tools for doing yurt layouts. Some were pretty intricate:

http://www.yurtforum.com/forums/buil...-tools-77.html
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Old 10-08-2013, 12:30 PM   #7
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Default Re: 30' Yurt Plan

I agree with Jafo ... like the layout, but how do you vent the stove? We couldn't figure it out when we built our 30-ft yurt, so we put the stove on a common interior wall with the laundry/bath space, with all vents running down through the floor via the common wall.
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Old 10-09-2013, 10:45 AM   #8
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Default Re: 30' Yurt Plan

Actually, coming from Western Montana, (we call it the banana belt of MT), I am a little concerned by what I see.

Maybe I am not right about all of this, but I am speaking from the experience of living in a house that had 2x4 walls, (sheetrock, 3.5" of fiberglass

insulation

, T-111, 12" of cellulose in the attic), and wood heat for 25 years. If you are north of Spokane, I don't think your climate is that different than the Bitterroot Valley.

The first thing that concerns me is the sink against an outside wall. Unless you are going to put a lot in

insulation

in that wall, and probably forego cabinet doors, think you may have a potential problem there.

You can run your pipes through the cabinets and hang curtains on the front of the cabinets (it lets lots more heat through than cabinet doors), where the pipes are running but it is still risky to put them against the outside wall behind the cabinets. Winter may not get you this year, but what about next year?

The bathroom is going to have similar issues if you don't move a lot of warm air back there.. I don't mind a cold bedroom if I have good blankets and someone to cuddle. I slept many years in a bedroom without heat, but the bathroom is different. Stepping into or out of a shower can be pretty chilly, and a fan might make it warmer, but also will chill you quicker.

I think I would go with the bathhouse attached to the second door. It gives you more room inside and you can insulate your bathhouse and keep your pipes and shower room toasty warm. You could also move your sink to an inside wall and insulate the piping very well under the yurt. High quality heat tape will last a long time if it doesn't have to turn on very often.

I certainly am not saying this is the only way to do it, but I have spent several sub-zero nights crawling around under a house trying to thaw pipes or fixing split pipes. I plan for the worse and the rest comes easy.

Avoiding cabinets against the outside wall may also help avoid mildew where there is not good air circulation behind them in the winter.

Plan for outlets that will let you mount a ceiling fan, and several fans that will circulate warm air under the loft area to help warm the lower bedroom.

Which town will you be near? I used to drive up... I think it is 395 going from I-90 in Spokane and then north through Kettle Falls. If I remember the highway number right (last time I drove it was in the early 1980s), on into Canada and meeting the AlCan pretty far north in the middle of BC and on to Alaska.

Nice memories of driving south this time of the year and watching the northern lights dancing across BC...

My thoughts, for what they are worth. Planning now is a really good idea. Good luck to you.

Rod
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