Category: Ruminating

Discussions on the blog itself, the remodeling process, and life events. Basically, not working on the house.

Whoops

Just a heads up that my WordPress theme died and now the site looks dumpy. Even though I haven’t been posting, I try to keep things working. I’ll hopefully get it straightened out soon.

In the meantime, let me tease you all with some projects we’ve been working on and I intend to write posts about: the front yard, the basement stairs, the basement exterior walls, the back yard concrete demo, and if we can get our act together, the garage!

Stay tuned. I haven’t forgotten about this thing.

Update! I found a new theme that at least works similarly to the old one. I’m not huge on the menu bar being on the left, and it doesn’t have the same options as the old one, but I’ll take it.

Upstairs

If you aren’t a regular reader or weren’t paying close attention, you might not even notice that an entire calendar year separates this post and the previous one. What can I say? I fell off the blogging horse. What happened in the past year? Is the house done? Well, I’m not going to cover a whole year of work, but the big development is yes, just one week after the last post, we moved upstairs.

One of the reasons I didn’t post right away when we moved is that people want to see pictures, and honestly, right after you move in things aren’t staged and pretty. It took us time to work through bins and boxes, unpacking things we’ve had in storage for years, getting new furniture, etc. We didn’t even have our new stove until March, with that space occupied by the old white stove from downstairs.

The contractors were only sort-of finished. They were still working on trim, the electricians didn’t want to come back because they didn’t think we were ready and we had to argue with them to get them to come back and finish up. We’d planned to have Sarah’s family over for an after-Christmas get-together, with her brother and sister-in-law flying in from Colorado and staying with us. The day they showed up was the day the electricians finished and Sarah’s family helped us move upstairs when they got here.

The list of projects yet to complete is ridiculous. Not just finishing touches, but major work including the basement and the garage and the yard. That said, we’re so happy to be out of the basement and so grateful to be in our (mostly) finished home. After ten-plus years of blood, sweat, and tears, all the help of family and friends, we’re living in our house and it’s beautiful. This past Christmas was our first chance to decorate upstairs and it was kind of magical.

I’m going to start blogging again. There’s been a lot of work this past year to catch you up on, but we also wanted to take a breather and a lot of life happened as well. There’s a lot to do yet, and I’m happy to share it as we go. We’re not going to be working as hard on the house as we did before, since the pressure is off and we’ve already spent so much time on this that we’re looking to take it easier, but there’s a lot to do and it’s not going to get done on its own.

Mixed Results

It took a month before the electrician’s lackeys finally showed up and ran the additional HVAC power line, and then they did it wrong, so now he’s got to come back out to fix it. Supposedly that’ll be tomorrow morning, but he also said that about Tuesday morning, so we’ll see. On a more positive note, we passed our rough HVAC inspection. That also took more weeks than hoped, but other than some displeasure at our boiler vent on the side of the house, there weren’t any issues.

Air handler in attic (they did fix that drain)

Drywall was supposedly to start this week, but so far nothing. That’s probably for the best, because we still need to clean out a bunch of stuff that’s in the way and we don’t want covered in drywall dust. I’m not entirely clear where all that stuff is going go, but we’ll figure something out. We also have a few sections of sound proofing insulation to put in and while I’ve made a lot of progress, I still haven’t finished installing the tile backer in the tub and shower surrounds yet. We’ve had some busy weekends, I haven’t had the energy in the evenings, and poor Sarah just had hernia surgery. This weekend we hope to get this all knocked out. I did manage to cut and thinset the curb in place for the master shower. The curb abuts the sloped shower base that I mentioned in a previous post and we’ll put a glass wall on top of it.

We’ve finally gotten a second quote on the back porch, but it was just as high as the last one, so now we’re trying to figure out how to swing this. I’m also trying to get the kitchen cabinets ordered, but still have to work out how to get the bank to pay them out of the escrow, since they aren’t an actual installer, just a supplier. Meanwhile, they’ve started work on finishing the front porch, which includes the composite decking, cladding the exposed wood, new stairs, and railings. More to come as that progresses.

Can’t Someone Else Do It?

It’s been a couple of months since my last post. Sometimes work is diligently continuing even as I don’t update the blog, but in this case, not much has changed. We still don’t have a new roof. We still don’t have siding. We do, however, have a new plan. Whether or not we can bring that plan about and how long it will take, is a separate question.

When we started looking at siding, we got a few quotes. With the two inches of exterior rigid foam, we wound up choosing Hardie board, a cement fiber clapboard siding. I spent a lot of time reviewing other options, but there are a lot of products that will not warranty an installation over more than an inch of foam. In the case of Hardie Board, we’ll need to put up furring strips over the foam that are screwed through the foam and cladding into structure.

When we did the research on siding, we found that there was a big range when it came to cost, so we weren’t sure what to expect in terms of quotes. Without exception, the quotes came back at the top of the range. That means that siding is turning out to be a very big ticket item. So big, in fact, that paying for it out of pocket isn’t really feasible, and getting a loan or floating it on credit cards would put us in the position of paying it back over perhaps three years.

The problem with that is we are tired of living in the basement. It’s been two-and-a-half years already (time flies) and we’d really like to live in our house. If we take out a loan that we have to pay off for even a couple years, it means we aren’t taking out the loan to finish the house until that’s paid off, and that is a very unappealing idea at this point.

What we’re left with is putting the siding into the same loan that we need to get to finish the house. One option is to forestall siding until we’ve finished all of the remaining projects left before we take out the loan, which mostly includes re-framing the second floor and attic: subfloor, walls, and stairs. It’s hard to accurately estimate how long all that would take, but given the rate things have been going, I’d guess it would take another year.

The other option, and the one we’ve decided to go with, is taking out the loan now, and letting professionals finish the job. We’ve been working on this house for seven and a half years now. We’ve put in an awful lot of sweat equity, and we’re ready to have a house that we can live in. The kids are ready to have their own bedrooms.

With that decision reached, we’ve been working with contractors to put together proposals, working with banks on loans, and working with an architect to revise our plans to match what we actually built and what we’re actually building, given some of the necessary and elected drift that’s taken place in the last several years since we got our original prints.

This wasn’t an easy decision for us to reach, and we’re faced with all the same concerns (and experience) we’ve had with contractors up to this point, but we simply don’t have the free time needed to get the house done ourselves the way we want it done in a reasonable amount of time. We’ll still have to finish the basement ourselves, since we’re living in it,
and probably some of the back yard work like the patio and pergola, but the rest of it we’ll get done in one fell swoop.

More to come. Even with this change in direction, we will continue to chronicle the progress in the blog and perhaps (perhaps!) the end is actually in sight.

New Temporary Back Steps

After I took down the back porch steps so our concrete mason could put in the new retaining wall, we were left with no way to go out the back of the house. Since we park the car in the back that wasn’t ideal. 

Stringers attached

 

With the new retaining wall in I decided it was time to remedy the situation. We aren’t going to have our new deck for probably a couple of years, so I wanted something semi-permanent but still fairly cheap and easy to put together.

Completed stairs

 
I settled on pre-cut pressure treated stringers and 2x10s but only 24″ wide between the railing. Since our back sliding door is already pretty narrow, this works fine.