OUR BLOG
Maximizing Natural Light in Winter
Winter light in the Pacific Northwest is not generous. It arrives late, leaves early, and often hides behind cloud cover. If you are building, renovating, or refining your home, this season will expose every lighting weakness.
What Keeps Us Cozy in the Winter
Winter exposes every weakness in a home. Drafts appear. Cold floors become unavoidable. Heating bills spike. Real comfort is not about cranking the thermostat. It is about how a home performs. Thermal comfort sits at the center of sustainability, durability, and human well-being. When a house is designed and built to perform in winter, it works better all year long.
Thermal Comfort Design for Homes in the Pacific Northwest
Thermal comfort refers to how consistently warm, stable, and draft-free a home feels throughout the year. In the Pacific Northwest, where winters are long, damp, and low-light rather than extreme, thermal comfort depends less on high-output heating and more on thoughtful design.
Material Warmth in Interior Design, Creating Comfortable, Biophilic Homes
Material warmth in interior design uses natural materials, light, and biophilic principles to improve comfort, wellness, and long-term performance. In the Pacific Northwest, where darker seasons and damp conditions shape how homes are experienced, material choices play a critical role in supporting both physical comfort and mental health.
Solstice Reflection, Designing for the Darkest Day of the Year
The winter solstice is the shortest day and the longest night of the year. It is also when residential design is tested the hardest. When daylight fades early, and interiors carry more of the emotional load, a home either supports comfort or quietly works against it.