Skip to main content

Model Homes

Print Version
 Rebuilding & Restoration>Innovations & Education>Model Homes>
LaHouse - Summer, 2008
The LSU AgCenter's Louisiana House - Resource Center
The LSU AgCenter's "LaHouse" is designed to stand up to hurricane-force winds, swarming insects and harmful humidity. This family-type home is designed to showcase innovations in home construction for Louisiana’s sub-tropical climate.
GoingUp GoingGreen Pints Graphic
Going Up, Going Green in Ascension
Three new Louisiana-style homes are being constructed to the National Green Building Standards created by (NAHB) and the International Code Council (ICC). This demonstration project is called “Going Up, Going Green.” Each home demonstrations one of three levels of Green Building Standards and energy efficiency. The homes also demonstrate best practices for raised pier foundations, a popular architectural style in Louisiana and much of coastal Southeast United States.
URBANbuild3 House
Sustainably Integrated Design: URBANbuild 3 House
This house, completed in May 2008, is one in a series of prototypes designed and built by Tulane University's URBANbuild. This house meets the new 3-feet advisory base flood elevation, and is built for 140 mph winds, which exceeds the wind-resistance requirements of the state uniform construction codes for this area.
LaHouse Building Systems Diagram
LaHouse - Building Systems
LaHouse showcases four types of construction: Standard 2 x 4 Framing, Advanced 2 x 6 Framing, Structural Insulated Panel Systems (SIPS) and Insulating Concrete Forms (ICF).
Pier Foundation at LaHouse
LaHouse Foundation - Flood, Wind and Water Resistance
LaHouse has a flood protection level 3 feet above Base Flood Elevation, using three elevated foundations on the house and dry-floodproofingon the non-residential building (garage/classroom). Wind and moisture protection are also addressed.
Aerial shot of LaHouse showing roofs
LaHouse - Roof
The roofs at LaHouse are predominantly hip-style for greatest wind resistance. Both metal and simulated clay tile are demonstrated with high-wind installation.
LaHouse Walls - Wind Shear and Uplift Resistance
LaHouse - Walls
Walls at LaHouse are wind and water resistant. Sheathing and hardware contribute to shear, lateral and uplift resistance. Layering and taping of housewraps and flashings provide resistance to water and moisture penetration. Drainage planes exclude water that penerates exterior finishes.
LaHouse - Formed Window Flashing
LaHouse - Windows and Doors
Windows and doors at LaHouse are selected and sized to meet the cojde-specified design pressure rating for a 130 mph wind zone. Where windows and doors are not impact rated units, they are protected by shutter, panels or screens. Windows and doors are flashed so water drains to the outside, not into the wall cavity.
LaHouse Safe Room/Master Bedroom Closet
LaHouse - Special Hurricane Resistance Features
LaHouse has several features for flood and wind and water resistance that are not captured in the building component descriptions. These include a Safe Room, Dry Floodproofing, anchoring of the flat roof of the breezeway, porct protection and closets, ground sloping away from the foundation, back-flow protection and elevated utility systems.
1