Saturday, December 29, 2007

Flooring and Details

So when the project was just a thought in our minds, we had hoped to refinish the floor throughout the house. We love the original fir floor though it had obviously seen better days. Fir is an extremely soft wood and is susceptible to great damage if not sealed correctly. After multiple parties and the forces of our cats' claws, it was apparent that our floors needed some help.

Upon closer inspection, however, we found that our floors had been sanded to the end of their useful existance. So we decided upon bamboo as a replacement material. It was a close match in color with even more vibrance. It's a sustainable building material and should withstand the force of our most out of hand dance party.

Here's the old floor (notice the water stains and general disrepair)



Here we are down to the subfloor, I repaired some squeaks and made sure that everything was holding up well.



And then the new floor installed!



Corner Border Detail:



And finally I put in the recycled glass tile backsplash. Now to grout.


Friday, December 7, 2007

Looks like a Kitchen

Countertops installed!



And the blue tiles will be our backsplash. They are recycled glass tiles produced locally. Some of them are stained glass bits, some are Sky Vodka Bottles mixed with window glass. Pretty great.

Here's the new view from the dining room. You can see our beautiful new pendant fixtures and the shiny fridge.



Next is our "super cabinet" fully stocked!



Our DISHDRAWERS (which I intend to use tomorrow.)



Finally, here is the other countertop installed at the wash sink. Which is currently leaking, but I'll fix that tomorrow.

Monday, December 3, 2007

The Trash Debacle...

Ok, so we all know that this has been a huge learning experience for Julie and I. Lesson #139: if it's too cheap to believe, you might not want to believe it.

So we've had a huge pile of trash sitting in the backyard for a while now. Old lath, sheathing, flooring, linoleum, and the old back door. It made for some fun bonfires and the scrap wood came in handy as i built things.

But finally we near the end of the project and it's time to clean up the mess. The roofers were coming last Wednesday with a big dumpster so I wanted to get the trash hauled away on Tuesday. In retrospect, I should've just negotiated an additional cost to the roofers to haul it away. Their crew has been extremely motivated and efficient. And they already had a dumpster coming.

BUT we decided to keep our money even more local and hire one of the "We'll haul your trash" trucks which we see parked on the neighborhood streets all the time. These are pickup trucks with high plywood sides and spray paint to display the phone number. Sure, a little sketchy, but it seems simple enough. Couple of guys, a truck, take the trash to the dump... Right? Wrong!

Julie negotiated a price with the guy. They came to look at the pile and then brought the truck around. After loading the first truck load, the owner came by and renegotiated the price. I agreed with him that the original bid was ludicrously low and agreed to a higher price (still a good deal for me). Long story, short: It took 5 loads in the truck and he finished around 11PM. By the end, I felt pretty bad for the guy (who had bitten off more than he intended). But the reason I hire people is to use their experience to understand what a job entails.

So in the end I pay the guy and head to bed. The next day is when things get weird.

It turns out that the worker I paid, decided not to share this money with the owner. They had a confrontation later that night, and the worker pulls a gun. Thankfully nothing happened there, but when the cops show up at his house he makes a run for it! Predictably, this ended with a night in jail...

So I got to talk to Officer Cooper this afternoon to verify that a job had occurred. Crazy!

Next time, I may get a dumpster and hire some guys myself.

On the brighter side, I'm putting up the ceiling in the breakfast nook and praying that the rain stops soon. My basement flooded a few times this morning and I spent much of the day dealing with that. Also the roof work came to a standstill due to the downpour.

Also our cool new pendant lights came today. Exciting!



And we ordered the lights for the nook:

Thursday, November 29, 2007

A Buzz of Activity

When we last checked on our intrepid builder, the cabinets were finished and we were waiting on countertops.




Stil waiting. The 2-3 day estimate that Lowes sold us turned out to be a 2 week estimate from the countertop vendor. So we've asked, informed, and threatened and everyone is aware that Dec 6 is the drop dead date for countertops. They assure me that it won't be a problem. I sure hope so. That gives me two days to install the stove, dishwasher, and faucets and get it all working before our party on the 8th.

So I've moved on to other parts of the project. The first job was to finish installing the oven. It's done and it works and it's beautiful! I ran a full cleaning cycle. Unlike my old oven, that worked, the inside got hot, and the outside stayed cool. Awesome!



Installed the pot filler faucet over the stove. This was my favorite new addition. No more carrying pots full of water from the sink to the stove, no more finding a glass to add just a bit of water to steam/saute. It's fresh, filtered water right at the stove.



The roofers are here. Day 0 consisted of the masons coming to look at the chimney. We all knew that the chimney was falling down and in need of massive repair. These guys came in, set up and twenty minutes later had tuck pointed the whole chimney with new morter, waterproofed the brick and fixed the shoddy job that the furnace installers had done with the chimney pipe. Awesome.

After a little snafu anent skylight specifications we're moving forward there too. I've framed the skylight openings and the roofers are going to have everything they need by Tuesday to finish the project.



The roof tear down was amazing to watch: shingles raining down on all sides of the house as a crew of 5 just went to town! As expected, we found some rot in the fascia and soffit boards. Carpenters are fixing that right now.

I missed the most exciting bit of the day but Julie watched. They attempted to weave a huge crane load (plywood and felt) from the street onto the roof. Over one set of wires and under another set! In the end it couldn't be done and I'm watching the poor roofers carrying 4x8 sheets of plywood up ladders. Better them than me, but I still feel bad.

The windows and sliding door are fully installed now and the insulation is complete. I'm finishing the last electrical and plumbing bits tonight.

So we're actually right on schedule for a December 8 Birthday Party. Wish me luck!

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Up and Down



So the cabinets are in. Level, Plumb, Stable and they all fit! YAY!
Only a couple of little glitches but over all they went right in. Now I need to wait for countertops (which Lowes said would take a couple of days and the vendor said will take a couple of weeks). Enter Julie, who will do her best to get a lot of money taken off of the bill. Thanks sweetie!

In the mean-time I'll be framing the breakfast nook ceiling for some skylights, getting a new roof, and working on the breakfast nook walls.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Walls & Floors

Julie and I spent a half hour at Lowes picking paint colors. We started out agreeing on "orange" but on completely different ends of the spectrum but wound up agreeing on a great color.

Here I am painting:


Then i put in the bamboo flooring. I love pneumatic nailers!

Check it out:

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Walls!

Check it out:

New Garden Window going in
Garden Window

View from the inside


Amazing new patio door
Patio Door

Ready for the final coat of mud and time to paint
Walls nearly done

You can also see our new casement window. Much better than the first window.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

It's really happening!

So here's where my mistakes start to catch up to me. I am learning as I go along and so I'm bound to screw some things up.

First, we hated the double-hung window that we ordered. We wanted a tall window and wanted it to match the age/style of the house. So we ordered a 26" x 48" double hung window for the wall over the prep sink. What we didn't realize is that when the window is closed, the center stile is directly in front of your eyes. So instead of looking out the window at the yard/tree/deck, you are constantly looking at a window frame. Yuck!

So we're biting the bullet, selling that window and ordering a new one. The new window is a left-hinged casement window with no frames in the middle. It's also a little bigger and will help put the window more infront of the prep sink.

The nice park about doing this myself is that i'm saving $1500 on labor, so if i spend $200 extra on parts, i'm still doing fine. And I'm getting better at putting the windows in, shimming them, and making everything fit.

Second big mistake, is that we have been aware of the lead times of various items but didn't take enough care to schedule their arrival at the right time. Some of this is salespeople who wanted a sale pushing us to make a purchase and us not pushing back enough to set the schedule rigorously. Part of it is the delays in construction (due to vacation, unanticipated design time, etc.

So that means that my cabinets arrived yesterday and I won't be putting them in for a week or so. But they have to live somewhere!

Here they are, stacked in my spare bedroom. You can see my dresser in the background. Oh well.

Cabinet Pile
Cabinets!!

This gives me the motivation to finish everything quickly and get these installed. At least they look great and I'm excited about the final product.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Friday, September 28, 2007

How it's done.

So when I tell people that I'm building my kitchen by myself and explain what it entails (framing walls, shingling, installing windows and doors, putting in flooring, installing cabinets and countertop, putting in new electrical, lighting, and plumbing systems), the most common question is "How do you know how to do all of that?"

I've struggled to come up with the correct answer but I'll try it here:

The easiest answer is that I don't know how to do it. I'm winging it. But that response usually elicits a response of shock and fear and I can see them planning out their careful decline of my next party invitation as they wait for the house to crumble around me.

As I try to explain that I am able to figure things out many people wonder whether my engineering background makes it easier. Again the answer is more complex than a simple yes or no. The engineering background doesn't specifically help. I studied and practiced electrical distribution system engineering. Even the residential electrical system installation is only tangentially related. I have no structural, civil, or plumbing experience. But the same traits that made engineering come easily do help me figure out construction. I am logical, organized, and patient. The ability to confidently (read: without mistakes) do simple math does help.

Before
After

But here is the secret. It is the secret to so many things. It is, honestly, the secret to my engineering career. Almost every bit of information you need is available if you know how to ask the question.

The trick is the lexicon.

In construction this consists of knowing what things are called and using the correct word. Joist and stud are common but the trick is to know: subfloor vs. underlayment, sheathing vs. siding, ledger vs. beam vs. header, post vs. column, sill plate and sole plate are the same thing, house wrap vs. felt, king stud vs jack stud vs cripple stud, blocking. I also spend my time being observant. I'm watching a house down the street get built (faster than my kitchen but they have 7 guys working). I ask questions and I try not to be afraid of sounding stupid. And I've learned a ton. The difference between laminate and 3-tab shingles, solid and engineered flooring, rough opening and all of the other measurement of windows, vertical and plumb and level.

Framed a new window and repaired rotten sill plate and poor construction

In engineering, I learned to pick up on the important words. I would often get frustrated that anybody in the world could do my job if they knew how to listen for the right words. When I would need to do something I would listen for the right clue and I could go learn how to do what I needed. I don't believe that I was EVER required to invent from the ground up for the first time. The trick then is to know where to look to see how someone else solved the problem. Occasionally you are able to improve the method. Perhaps in my next career path I'll get a chance to create substantially more inventive solutions. I hope so.

I spent 5 years doing electrical engineering at the county. Now some will argue that this is not the most difficult engineering setting imaginable and they would be correct, but the theory extrapolates to almost any field. This is not to diminish my abilities as an engineer. I passed my schooling with flying colors and I am an excellent problem solver, extremely intuitive to knowing when my answer is close or not, trained in the subtleties of electrical systems along with the engineering accoutrements of economics, statistics, higher level math.

Anyway, the best answer to the initial question is that it all just makes sense. Water goes where the pipe is laid, poo goes down, walls work better when they are vertical and measure twice, cut once.

And in the end all that matters is: can you swing a hammer and actually hit the thing for which you are aiming?

My new 48 x 48 glider window

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Vacation and Framing Windows

Ok, I know that it's been a while but this time I have an excuse. Julie and I took a two week trip to go to Illinois, Spain, and Germany. Wild Traveling times!

Julie and I in front of the Pergamon Museum, Berlin

But now I'm back. Cabinets, Windows, and Doors are all ordered and on the way. So now I'm framing the walls and putting in the new electrical and plumbing work.

Here's a fun picture of why I love Julie's VW Golf. I could even see the side mirror! And it's like Mr. Rumsfeld says: "You go to Lowe's with the car you have, not with the car you want to have".

VW golf with something like (20) 2x4s and some plywood.

The goal for this weekend is to order our appliances and make a final decision on sinks, countertop, and flooring.

I plan to be finished by October 31. Good Luck!

Friday, August 24, 2007



Ok, I've been a very lax blogger. Sorry about that. Here's some photos showing the deck in progress. The top decking is all but finished (the board next to the hot tub is giving me some issues...) And then I just have some more trim to do. I'll add that to my punch list and finish it while I'm waiting for cabinets/counters/windows/doors to arrive.

Almost finished! Almost finished!



Stairway Finally a way to get to the basement safely!



Looking down the stairs I love that landing at the bottom. I may have to do some more work to get the board spacing even



Scooter in Red! I also took some time to re-paint my scooter

Plans finished!

You wanted it, you've got it. Here is myh latest (final?) draft of kitchen design. I think that everything fits and goes together and there is a place for everything and i didn't forget about plumbing. Check it out!

Friday, August 3, 2007

So I sprained the instep of my right foot playing frisbee the other day! It looked like a purple softball for a while. Now the swelling has gone down but it still looks like this:

Sore Foot

This isn't helping me on the building front. It is helping me to take a moment to slow down, however. So I'm finishing the design and sitting in front of my computer researching windows and doors with my foot on ice up in the air.

Julie's sister is in town so we finally cleaned up the house including the relocated kitchen in our dining room. So here's a picture.

Relocated Kitchen during construction

What's amazing is that this very busy kitchen is already an improvement over the old kitchen. We both like it better!

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

So here is my boss:

Julie

Here I am trimming joists:



And here's the result:

Taking Shape

I got the top decking all installed and started trimming.

Decking installed

On other fronts, we picked our sinks and fixtures and have started researching flooring options. Oh and we're redesigning some layout options. It is a difficult space. Julie and I really enjoy cooking together and so we need to be able to both fit in the tiny kitchen and not feel as though we're always on top of each other. I'm trying to preserve the window views and even increase the feeling of openness. So there are a lot of variables to play with.

Monday, July 23, 2007

So we had someone come in to give us an estimate for sanding and refinishing our fir floors. We had high hopes of beautiful new floors glistening up at us. Unfortunately, the floors are done. They have been sanded through and can no longer be refinished. It's time to replace them. So now we're looking at bamboo flooring. It's not what we originally wanted but bamboo is lovely and sustainable and feels great under one's feet so we're excited.

Today is the day: moving everything out of the kitchen to start the demo!

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Sorry it has been so long since my last post.

I'm making good progress. Fixed the cripple wall, re-sheathed the house, attached the ledger and dug foundations (thanks Kong). Then I put up joists (thanks Kyra)!

Joists in Place

Julie and I have also been making decisions left and right. We're going with a sliding vinyl patio door now and have the following appliances picked out:

Fisher-Paykel E522B Refrigerator
New Fridge.
Fisher-Paykel GC913SS Gas Cooktop
20,000BTU Wok Burner in our new gas cooktop
Fisher-Paykel Dishdrawers
Dishdrawers!
Frigidaire Oven
Convection Oven
Grohe Faucet
New Faucet
Pot Filler Faucet
Pot Filler Faucet over the stove!