Saturday, June 23, 2007

The state of the estate

They took the scaffolding away today. We are both very happy to have it gone.
As you turn the corner onto our street, the house makes quite a statement...


We both really like the shadows that are thrown by the angled windows, and the degree to which both the blue and the grey change in light vs. shadow...



Yesterday Sam put up our new numbers. We hope that by the end of next week we'll have our outdoor lights as well.


We're both very happy with how it's looking. The remaining (as-of-yet-unbuilt) piece above the 'old' house will also be grey, which will kind of balance the color scheme from the front.


Today, Sam built a welding table. He welded it! I don't have any pictures of that yet, but stay tuned!!

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

One Year Ago Today



You've come a long way, baby!

Friday, June 15, 2007

Before... and After

This is a Cliff Notes version of what's happened since late February. I hope to get you up to date, dear reader, so that I can continue posting as we go forward with our project. By necessity, a lot of fascinating (and from Sam's perspective, some frustrating) details are left out, but I hope you'll get a sense of the magnitude of everything he's accomplished in three short months.

We'd been getting the exterior of the house ready for plastering. We're going to be using a synthetic stucco in order to get the deep colors that we want. The exterior of the house has gone from this, covered in paper and chicken-wire...


... to this, with two base coats of plaster on the new structure, and a fresh coat of beige stucco on the old. The old stucco needed to be re-covered, so that it will grab the final, colored layer better.



In the kitchen, we'd been here. The new cabinets and countertops had been installed...


And then Sam put up the matching siding, and a black granite backsplash. I love our kitchen.


Sam was anxious to get the garage bathroom done, because once it became functional, he planned to tear out the last working bathroom in the house (the master bathroom). He needed to do that because new footings need to be poured... and he needed to do that before he could start building the new structure for the stairwell and the cupola above the existing house.
So since I last posted we went from this garage bathroom....

... to this.


Isn't it cool??? The shower is smoothed concrete, and Sam made the countertop out of concrete, too. Then he edged it with aluminum.


He made the sink out of a stainless steel bowl!


He laid all the nifty rubber flooring...


and did all the plumbing...

He also did the magnificent paint job all by himself- although Michelle helped to design it. I get to claim credit for finding the matching shower curtain, and the shower curtain track. Of course, Sam installed it!


In getting the back of the house ready for the plasterers, Sam had to finish the back deck and the walls of the back of the house.



He got some help hauling the big glass doors up to the second floor.


Once they were installed, it started looking pretty neat back there.




Sam is getting so many nicks, cuts, and bruises that I don't even document them all. But a good whack to his head made me pull out my camera. When we say 'blood, sweat and tears' went into this remodel, we're only exaggerating about the tears! (you can click on the picture to make it bigger, and get a good look at his nasty cut.)

The view 'outside' one of those big glass doors:


And then there is the garage, which is, of course, the main reason we got into this whole project in the first place! In the time that the blog has been 'offline' we've gone from this....



... to getting all the drywall up, and installing some overhead storage...


... to getting the drywall mudded, and everything covered, ready for painting...

...to a base coat of white, and lights installed. (The lights are kinda nifty, in that you can turn them on or off from pretty much anywhere in the garage.)


Then, however, he added some color!



At this point, although there was still a fair amount of construction stuff in there, and things weren't as organized as they eventually will be, Sam had a fully functional garage. Prince that he is, he immediately took advantage of this fact by fixing my brakes!




Sam is still working on forgiving me the fact that my car was the first one up on the lift. Later that evening, we put the truck up there, just because it was so cool that we could!


There was still work to be done on the garage, though. Sam worked for a couple of days finishing the concrete floor...



... and then applying a special epoxy under the lift, so that oil spills will clean up easily.



Hmmm... he also put a nifty yellow stripe around the dark grey, but I can't find any pictures of that right now. I'll take one and post it later!

Now that the garage bathroom was done, he could tear out ours. So he did. Here's the door that used to lead to our bathroom.


And here you can see the green wall, that was part of our bathroom. Other stuff 'missing' from this part of the house: storage cabinets, the guest bathroom, and several walls. You can see that behind where Sam is standing, the floor is missing, too.


I like this next picture because on the right you can see part of our lovely kitchen, and on the left the destruction that we're living with!


It's rather interesting to stand in the kitchen and be able to see clear through to the bedroom, and into the backyard beyond.


Next Sam tore out all the old cast iron plumbing, and a bunch of other plumbing, and replaced it all with shiny new copper.



Then, since tearing up the floor and tearing down the walls wasn't quite enough, he tore down the ceiling!

And that is the Cliff Notes version of what's happened over the past couple of months. As I mentioned in a recent post, he's put up the huge support beam in the living room. And the plasterer guys are doing their thing as I type this. These are the colors we're doing: the blue on the far right, and the grey.


Check back soon to see how it turned out!

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Shameless self-promotion

Here's the deal: Sam & I entered a contest for home-remodeling blogs. If you vote for us, we could win it! If we win it, we get $5000, and all kinds of bragging rights. Think of the party we could throw! And you know Sam deserves a party, after all the hard work he's done.

So, if you enjoy reading about our adventures, would you take a moment to click on that orange button on the right, and vote for us? And could you maybe tell all your friends, and family, and colleagues, and other people you know to do the same? We'd really appreciate it.

Of course, if you start web-surfing at that site, and find some other home-remodeling blog that you'd rather vote for, that's cool, too.
I think.

Monday, June 11, 2007

the beam team

As of last week, this is what the house looked like on the outside. As you can see, the construction over the new foundation is pretty much finished. The next big step is to start the construction over the 'old' house... on the left in this picture. To that end, Sam has done a lot of demolition inside the house (not covered in this post!), will soon be pouring more foundation, and just this past weekend, he lifted in to place a huge (650lb.) beam which will bear much of the weight of the new structure. I was working this weekend, so I found out he was going to do this when he called me to tell me that he had put a hole in the roof.



By the time I managed to get home, he had managed to get the beam in the living room, and lift one end of it up.


The beam team: Sam, Sam's buddy Junior, Michelle, and me. Sam used the come-along attached to the rafters to winch the beam up- Junior steadied it...



In these pictures it looks like this moved pretty quickly. It didn't. The beam was heavy and the whole process was kind of scary. The calmest of all of us was Sam. Michelle and I were responsible for putting in the supporting vertical beams that you can see on the far right.



Then, we had reached the end of the come-along, so some other means of lifting the beam had to be devised. Naturally Sam had a moment of inspiration, and shortly came back from the garage with...


A jack. He started jacking the beam up.





Of course, the jack wasn't very tall, so we had to rest it on several pieces of wood. Each time the beam was lifted higher, Junior would hold it, and we had to reorganize the wood pieces to be able to fit the jack in, higher. Luckily, Sam had two jacks.




And then, about 2 hours after I got home, it was up! We weren't done yet, though. It had to be pushed to the left a bit, then lifted into some metal brackets that Sam had nailed there.


So Sam climbed onto the roof, and whacked at it with a sledgehammer a bunch of times, moving it a fraction of an inch each time until it was pushed in far enough...

And then we were almost there.


In this next picture, on the left you can almost see the metal bracket the beam had to get into. On the right, under the beam, you can see how they've lifted it by placing smaller pieces of wood underneath...


And here it is, in place!


This beam spans the entire width of the living room. Since I've fallen behind with the blogging, this is the first time you can see where Sam removed half of the ceiling in the living room! You can also see the ad hoc supporting post he built so that the rest of the ceiling wouldn't cave in. Once that was connected to our new beam (which happened later that day, but I don't have a picture), we were able to remove that post.


In the meantime, it was a pretty impressive thing. And this lived there, propping up the living room ceiling, for a couple of weeks!



All done! Time to take a break, and to admire the handiwork!


Once we were done, the four of us went out for some barbecued ribs.
Next: the house gets some color!
Also soon: I slowly but surely will bring you up to date on what's happened over the past 3 months. I'm hoping to do that over several posts. So we'll be time traveling between the present and the past for a bit. I hope that's ok.

It's good to be back!