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A Doghouse Like Her House
The winner with her houses
Photo: Mack Preston
Runner-up doghouse
Photo: Mack Preston
Runner-up doghouse
Photo: Mack Preston
Honorable mention doghouse
Honorable mention doghouse
Honorable mention doghouse
Honorable mention doghouse
Honorable mention doghouse
Honorable mention doghouse
Honorable mention doghouse
Honorable mention doghouse

1st Place Winner
Morgan in front of the Lutz, Florida, home that she re-created in canine scale for her chocolate Labrador, Sadie.

2nd Place Winner

3rd Place Winner

Honorable Mentions
1. Steve and Sheila Jones
Rock Spring, Georgia
A broad, shaded front porch offers the occupant of this doghouse a cool place to rest on hot Southern evenings.

2. Belinda Palmiter
Davisburg, Michigan
A veritable mutt mansion, with a wraparound porch and a two-bay garage that lifts to make a doggie door.

3. The Fox Family
Escondido, California
All the comforts of home, including shutters, clapboard siding, and a working gutter made from a length of copper tubing ripped in half.

4. Staci Parrish
New York, New York
Just like the real thing, Frowny's luxury red-brick high-rise includes a doorman, taxi stand, and rooftop garden.

5. Lauren and Michael Jackson
Erial, New Jersey
It's hard not to be charmed by a cozy canine Colonial, with window boxes and a bone-shaped cutout on the gable.

6. Kelly Hermann
Glen Gardner, New Jersey
A log—or is it dog—cabin, made out of spindles and shingles left over from the construction of a porch on the main house.

7. J.C. Davis
Raymore, Missouri
This doghouse-built-for-two is made with scrap siding and cedar trim ripped to size.

8. The Warren Family
West Richland, Washington
A faithful Queen Anne copy, from the witch's-cap turret down to the covered corner porch.

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History is filled with misunderstood visionaries, from Noah and his ark to Wilbur and Orville and their airplane to, most recently, Cheryl Morgan and the doghouse she built out of birch plywood, all-purpose putty, and shutter hardware.

We all know what happened. Despite the naysayers, their efforts paid off. The flood came, the plane flew, and Morgan, of Lutz, Florida, is the winner of This Old House's first-ever "Doghouse Like Your House" contest, a building competition inspired by a feature in our July/August 2005 issue.

Sure, Morgan's family questioned her sanity as she obsessively sawed, glued, nailed, and painted the perfect canine-sized replica of her brick, stucco, and shingle-sided house. Especially since Morgan, who had hardly any carpentry experience, did it with little more than a hammer, a bent jigsaw blade, and a level. "Most of the time, I used my fingernail to mark on the wood where to cut," she says.

Morgan framed the walls and roof with birch, used lattice strips and mortar-patching mix for the brick, all-purpose putty for the stucco, and safety skid tape for the shingles. The porch railings are made from poplar, and the windows are fitted with clear acrylic squares for a dog's-eye view. Summoning up the best of her creative skills, she used wall hooks and beads to re-create porch lights and smacked on some automotive pinstriping for the window panes.

Morgan's handiwork was put to the test in October when Hurricane Wilma sent tropical storm?force winds tearing through Lutz. Aside from a few shifted shingles, the house fared remarkably well. "The roof and windows didn't even leak," Morgan boasts. Noah would be proud.

The Runners Up

The detail on this flat-roofed contemporary is so accurate that in some views, we couldn't tell it apart from the real house. What's even more impressive is the fact that its builder, Mark Kasche, put this little puppy together in just 32 hours.

The box is plywood, the windows are glazed with polycarbonate plastic, and the chimney is covered in textured paper that makes it look astonishingly similar to the main house's volcanic-stone version.

Kasche, a contractor, says the materials ran him around $300. But if he were charging his regular hourly wage of $125, he says, "we're looking at a four-thousand-dollar doghouse." At that rate, beagle Pogo should be the envy of every other hound in the neighborhood.
A doghouse isn't merely a luxury in the unpredictable climes of central Maine. It's practically a necessity. So when Jasper finishes patrolling his mountain terrain, he retires to the rugged A-frame built for him by graphic artist Scott Stowe.

Jasper's shelter has a pressure-treated foundation, stained red to match the one on the main house, and 3 inches of fiberglass insulation packed into the walls, floor, and ceiling. The roof shingles and clapboards are the same as on Stowe's house, and he even put stone-look linoleum on Jasper's floor to match his own stone entryway.

"I've never done construction of any kind before," says first-time homeowner Stowe. We applaud his debut.

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