A Copper Alliance Member
- Applications
- Resources
- Find Suppliers of Copper
- Technical Reference Library
- Publications List
- Automotive
- Building Construction: Architecture
- Building Construction: Fire Sprinklers
- Building Construction: Home Builders' Marketing Materials
- Building Construction: Natural Gas
- Building Construction: Plumbing
- Electrical: Energy Efficiency
- Electrical: General
- Electrical: Power Quality
- Electrical: Telecommunications
- Industrial: Bronze Bearings
- Industrial: Cast Products
- Industrial: General
- Industrial: Machined Rod Products
- Industrial: Mold Alloys
- Properties / Standards
- Seawater
- Soldering / Brazing / Welding
- Special Publications
- Statistics / Directories
- Seminars, Workshops & Training
- Market Data
- Standards
- Properties
- Properties of Wrought and Cast Copper Alloys
- Properties of Copper
- Low Temperature Properties of Copper
- Cryogenic Properties of Copper
- Typical Uses of Copper Alloys
- Copper Compounds
- Microstructures of Copper Alloys
- Corrosion Protection & Resistance
- Fabrication Practices
- Powder Metallurgy
- Metallurgy of Copper-Base Alloys
- Questions?
- Consumers
- Education
- Environment
- Publications
- Newsletters
- Publications List
- Automotive
- Building Construction: Architecture
- Building Construction: Fire Sprinklers
- Building Construction: Home Builders' Marketing Materials
- Building Construction: Natural Gas
- Building Construction: Plumbing
- Electrical: Energy Efficiency
- Electrical: General
- Electrical: Power Quality
- Electrical: Telecommunications
- Industrial: Bronze Bearings
- Industrial: Cast Products
- Industrial: General
- Industrial: Machined Rod Products
- Industrial: Mold Alloys
- Properties / Standards
- Seawater
- Soldering / Brazing / Welding
- Special Publications
- Statistics / Directories
- About CDA
Consumers
- Copper in the Arts
- Copper in Your Home
- Electrical & Communications Wiring
- Plumbing, Heating & Cooling
- Archtecture, Lighting & Decor
- Environment & Health
- Cookware & Decorations
- Do It Yourself
- Innovations & Technology
- Home Planning Series
- Top Ten Wiring Hazards Threaten Life and Property
- CDDS Make Sense of Home Networks
- The "Green" Metal Is Made to Last
- Is Your Electrical Wiring Too Hot?
- Taming the Tangle of Wires in Your Home
- High Power Jobs
- Whole House Audio
- Installing Home Networks
- Lightning Protection
- Code Reduces Risks
- Rewiring Your Home
- Solar Home
- Saving the Planet
- Size Matters in Cords
- The Top 10 Reasons to Call an Electrician
- Wired Networks
- AFCI Technology
- Las Vegas Boomer Show Home
- Beware of Old Wiring
- Barrel-Vault Roof
- Copper Fuel Gas Systems
- Copper for Faster Networks
- DSL High Speed Internet
- DSL or Cable?
- Home Energy Gobblers
- Fatter Wiring
- Glossary of Electrical Terms
- Home Communications Wiring Upgrades
- Right Connections
- Home Technology Terms
- Home Telecommunications Networking
- Live/Work 2001
- Understanding a Home's Electrical System
- Older Homes New Wiring
- Plug for Digital Communications
- Generators
- Protect from Power Surges
- Upgrade Wiring
- Mapping Electrical Circuits in Your Home
- House Wiring “Bundles” Could Be a Fire Hazard
- “Wired” Homes Still a Dream for Many
- Search for Nation’s Oldest Copper Plumbing Continues
- Tech Home “Report Card” Gives Homebuyers Clout
- High-Tech Wiring Is Best for High Definition
- Keeping Pace with Code Changes
- Home Fire Sprinklers Save Lives
- Yesterday's Puffs of Smoke Are Today's Pulses of Electrons
- Copper Accents Design Trends
- Portable Electric Power: Tips and Tricks
- Power Quality Comes Home
- Home Sweet Digital Home
- Home Networking in the Kitchen
- Keeping Warm - and Cool - with Copper
- CDA Offers Free Home Communications Wiring CD-ROM
- Gauging the Difference
- Structured Wiring Boom Creates Job Opportunities
- FAQs - Frequently Asked Questions
- Copper Links
- Copper News
- Copper & Human Health
Copper Tops Barrel-Vault Roof on Showcase Home
October 2001
When it comes to homebuilding design, “tradition” and “innovation” often exist at opposite ends of the architectural spectrum. Finding a balance can be a struggle, but tucked into a steep, wooded hillside lot in one Atlanta suburb, a gently curving barrel-vault copper porch roof finds harmony somewhere between design history and novelty.
The copper roof, and the house it is attached to, were commissioned by This Old House magazine and designed by Jeremiah Eck Architects of Boston for the 2002 International Builders Show. The house showcases new products, materials, interior design trends and architectural innovations for the magazine’s readers and was on display for the estimated 70,000 homebuilding industry professionals in February.
Although the house incorporates many innovative and even imitation products in its construction—such as a recycled-rubber “slate” shingle for the main roof—the project was dubbed the Timeless House by the magazine. “It’s really all about making new construction feel familiar,” says TOH Building Editor Alex Gant. “This house distills so many elements of older, classic homes.”
One of those “timeless” elements is the porch roof made up of solid copper sheets. Long regarded as a premier construction material in homes as well as commercial and public buildings, copper lends an important touch of authenticity to the project, Gant explains, and serves as a counterpoint to the novel and imitative materials used elsewhere. “Our first choice for this roof was copper,” she adds.
When installed in October 2001, the roof was as coppery-bright as a new kettle, but its shine soon faded, and eventually it will adopt a familiar blue-green color, or “patina.” Because of this weathering process, copper roofs are among the most durable, lasting 100 years or more.
“Copper has a fantastic patina all its life,” according to the architect. “Bright when it’s new, a very attractive brown as it begins to oxidize, then 10 to 15 years out it gets that soft, lovely green color that you see on the Statue of Liberty and on many roofs.”
Asked if he had considered maintaining the bright finish, or treating the copper to more quickly achieve an “aged” effect, Eck feels those options would have only increased the project’s cost and would not have been worth the effort. While barrel-vault roofs are not yet common in home construction, he says, his firm has been asked to design others, and he expects to see more, with today’s emphasis on complex rooflines.
With five bedrooms and baths, a home theater and a designated “party room,” the 4,200-square-foot home is valued at $935,000. The solid-copper sheets used to create the roof, along with other copper products including plumbing pipes, rain gutters, chimney canopies and decorative accents throughout the interior and exterior of the home, were provided by the Copper Development Association, a trade organization representing the U.S. copper, brass and bronze industry.