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Concrete at Home by Fu-Tung Cheng

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Concrete at Home

by Fu-Tung Cheng Innovative forms and finishes for floors, countertops, walls and fireplaces

From best-selling author Fu-Tung Cheng, the recognized master craftsman of residential concrete design, comes Concrete at Home, the follow up to his ground-breaking Concrete Countertops.

In this new title, Cheng shows you the anything-is-possible flexibility of concrete, and gives you the step-by-step guidance and confidence to form, pour, and polish your own distinctive countertops, floors, walls, fireplaces, and more.

Part design study, part instruction manual, Concrete at Home is packed with hundreds of photos that give you insight into Cheng’s work. If you’ve never experienced or considered the warmth and beauty that can be coaxed from this seemingly ordinary material, Concrete at Home will open a world of possibilities

From the author: The Ahwahnee Hotel sits in a meadow at the northeastern end of Yosemite Valley, CA. Built in 1926, it is one of the crown jewels of the National Park system. Nearby, El Capitan, a 4,000 ft. granite carapace, rises straight off of the valley floor while Yosemite Falls, a white ribbon in slow motion, cascades down. In the distance, high over half-dome, clouds return home. I first saw the Ahwahnee one late spring day in 1981. I had wandered onto a trail through a stand of Douglas firs, and came upon the entry to the hotel. Under a redwood timber canopy, cars pulled up, valets opened doors, and women and men in fancy clothes stepped out. Curious, I followed them into the lobby.

When I entered -- first thing -- the floors caught my eye. They were buffed and waxed to a worn-saddle finish. Broad expanses of veined color were cut-in with beautiful incised patterns, as though etched with a tool. Stone? I wondered. I bent down for a closer look, but couldn’t figure out how they were made or of what they were made. Finally, I was amazed to realize, these floors are concrete.

When I stood to look around, I saw concrete everywhere, used as I had never seen it used before. I had to know more, so I signed on for the guided tour. We were told that the structure, to reduce the vulnerability to fire, contained little wood. Concrete had been cleverly adapted as finish material to the floors, fireplaces, walls, and beams.

But what really impressed me was how the concrete work merged with the artwork. In the foyer, bold geometric designs reminiscent of Native American baskets and Santa Clara burnished pottery, were inlaid into rust-colored acid-stained floors. In bands on the immense concrete beams, in the drapery, in the ironwork -- native graphic designs resonated with the architecture. (Our guide, with some irony, reminded us that the native people who once roamed the valley and inspired these designs no longer made their home here.)

Each time I visit the Ahwahnee, I am refreshed. Strangers become community there, share the pleasures of great meals in a setting of great design, and enjoy the largess of the commons and the common decency of good government. I am inspired by nature and the nature of human creativity. I head out, eager to pursue the elusive balance between art, architecture, and concrete at home.

A History of Innovation Although concrete in some parts of the Ahwahnee was made to look like wood and stone, concrete’s history has more to do with innovation than imitation. Architects, designers, and builders have been experimenting with concrete’s structural and sculptural qualities for more than a century. Today, you’ll find countless examples of their work in any major city -- cast columns balustrades, Art Deco façades, and tableaus.

In California, where I live, we’re fortunate to have concrete homes designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, Rudolf Schindler, and Bernard Maybeck -- three architects known for their innovative use of the material. Rather than mask concrete’s natural tone and texture, these pioneers preferred to let the material speak for itself, retaining the marks of form boards, the modularity of cast blocks, and the obvious mass of solid, walls. Having this heritage of well designed work in the neighborhood definitely made an impression on me that influenced the outcome of many projects throughout this book.

Combining Art and Architecture When I first traveled to Europe, I was surprised at how much I loved all the stuff on buildings that I was taught to detest in art school. Expecting much form and little function, I wasn’t at all prepared for the beauty I encountered in Bernini’s fountains or Gaudi’s undulating concrete walls. I realized that centuries of culture could and should be crafted into buildings.

Understanding the Past to Create the Future I’ve often wondered why so many look to the past for design inspiration. What vital ingredients are missing from today’s houses? I think it’s the soulful, the simple, the elegant; a quality of craftsmanship, design, and respect for materials that we associate with work from other eras.

Today, we associate these qualities with the styles of the past, but rather than simply mimic the style of the past, we have an opportunity to invigorate our contemporary homes with expression and creativity on contemporary terms. Christopher Alexander’s A Timeless Way of Building eloquently encourages us to rediscover the “pattern language of designing and building instinctively” and not allow ourselves to drift “...in superficial trends and style, without a cultural guiding hand.”

Thinking of style as an assortment of possibilities rather than as a prescription or recipe from the past is actually quite freeing, and it’s suddenly much easier to understand how concrete might fit in just about anywhere.

In our own work, we try to take the time to find new ways to use this age-old material in the context of the architecture and find the way toward soulful, personalized, well crafted design that evokes the same feelings of comfort and value found in homes built hundred of years ago.

Softcover, 9-1/4 x 10-7/8 in., 224 pages, with color photos and drawings Published 2005, ISBN 1-56158-682-X


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