Friday, March 30, 2007

SEVENTH SATURDAY -- Cabinets!


The cabinets were delivered this morning. Due to some miscommunication and the cabinet guy being stranded in bad Wyoming weather, the installation is slipping a bit. We have some issues, too, with a couple of things that don't match what was ordered, but Tom, the cabinet guy, said not to worry about it a bit, assuring us all will be right before he is finished. He has a great reputation, so we'll trust him on this.

Have we got enough oak in the room? Maybe. But I really like lots of wood, personally, even though the chief designer and home-meisterette requires the mantle and entertainment built-ins to be painted white.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

One Coat of Finish



The first coat of finish has been put on the red oak flooring. The color is a pretty decent match with the existing oak railing.

The stuff dries fast. We could walk on it after five hours and the fumes don't seem too bad.

Our friend Doug Garner dropped by this evening to measure for the carpets, now that the floorspace is clearly defined. The carpet will be installed in about one week.

Now for the cabinets...

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Unfinished Oak Floor


The oak floor has been laid and partially sanded. It will get three coats of finish. One before the cabinets go in, and two coats afterward.


In the second shot, you can see the oak floor layout, and, on the right, what remains to be filled in with carpet.

Saturday, March 24, 2007

SIXTH SATURDAY - Mostly painted


This is the dining room. After a full day of prep-work on the walls and moldings, and a day of painting, we have a coat of primer on everything (ceiling included), a coat of white on the ceiling and yellow on the walls. It still needs another coat of yellow before we attack the doors and windows with final coats of white paint.

Thankfully, the kitchen area (not shown) needed only ceiling paint, since the walls will be completely covered with cabinets and tiled backsplash.

Lesson learned: My HPLV sprayer does not like primer. Neither do I. It doesn't wash off with water, despite the advice on the label. (A green kitchen scrubbing pad works.) We quickly switched from sprayer to roller for the duration.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Window Detail

Just a close up of the finish work done around the window.

Outside View



Here's the view from outside. The window no longer has the arched top, but that's okay. Note the vent in the middle of the wall for the new fireplace -- no connection to the chimney at all.

Almost ready to paint

Most of the trim around doors and windows has been completed. With a little prep work, we're ready to paint. The stacked wood in this picture is the red oak flooring to be installed on the 27th. It has to acclimatize in the room for a week first.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

FIFTH SATURDAY - We have walls again



The wallboard is all up; the mud goes on next. Note that the window is smaller now. It's very echoey in here!

Meanwhile, we're trying to pick out carpet which we'll probably get from Doug Garner, but that will be one of the last things to go in.

Connie and I plan to be painting walls (ourselves -- we're cheap) in about a week.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Doors

The new doors went in today, replacing the sliding glass doors leading out onto the deck. If you look closely, you'll see these have blinds sandwiched between the glass, a feature which we find quite exciting -- no cords, no dusting, no kid-damage. Slick! And it still affords a great westward view of the Great Salt Lake and the sunsets.

THE CONTRACTOR

Here's Roland Trump, our dear friend and contractor. He's the master behind all this quality work. On a sad note, his identical twin brother, Ronald, died this morning of Lou Gehrigs disease, so spirits were a little heavy on the job.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

FOURTH SATURDAY - Let the reconstruction begin

Now it is time to start rebuilding. We're ready for doors and windows next, and some sheetrock.

Thursday, March 8, 2007

READY TO REBUILD

Here is the kitchen stripped to the 2x4 bones, with the ceiling raised and the hydronic heater removed (where the loose plywood is in the picture.) Now the reconstruction begins.

NEW FIREPLACE

This exciting view shows where the new fireplace is situated. It will vent directly through the wall to the outside, not up a flue into the chimney. It will be a high-efficiency gas fireplace that ignites with the flip of a switch and has lovely dancing flames that look authentic on glowing ceramic logs. The cubby hole to the left of the fireplace and the other flue will house a built-in entertainment unit with the TV, stereo and storage for tapes and DVDs.

WIRES

A boring picture of wires behind the new fireplace. Some members of the family will find this quite exciting, though, because it represents a proper antenna for the basement TV, speaker wire for whole-house music, a telephone connection on the practical side of the room, and broad-band internet connectivity where there was none before. Special thanks go to my friend, Blaine, who loaned me his cool 9-foot segmented drill bit that enabled me to run wires through walls from attic to basement.

FAMILY ROOM WITHOUT FIREPLACE

The old fireplace used to be in the center of this view. It is gone and the framing for the new fireplace just to the right has been done.

Incidently, the ugly ceiling fan light sorta stays. The light part will be removed and tossed, but the fan itself is great and will remain.

POCKET DOOR

If you have ever wondered what a naked pocket door looks like, here you are. The door was jammed for years, but here it has just been replaced with a new one. In case you can't tell, it is shown in the retracted position inside the exposed wall.

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Here's an uninteresting view of what was supporting the old kitchen ceiling.
The dropped ceiling finally dropped. I was very glad not to be present when the Roland's guys took that down. It was full of rock-wool insulation, and they were still coughing and hacking hours after the stuff had all been carted out to the dumpster.

At this point, we finally start to get the impression of how open the new kitchen will feel. The lowered ceiling was claustrophobic.

Sunday, March 4, 2007

SUNDAY DINNER IN THE TEMPORARY DINING ROOM

Life goes on. Having no kitchen is not an excuse for not having the kids and grandkids over for Sunday dinner. A basement bedroom now serves as our dining room for the duration of the remodeling job. A microwave, toaster, electric skillet, and crockpot -- what else do you need?

Saturday, March 3, 2007

End of another long Saturday

Lots of flooring to throw away. The view from the corner of the kitchen.
The big red spot. I don't know if this happened before carpet was added, or afterward with some sunlight-induced reaction between linoleum and pad, but the south-facing window definitely had something to do with it. Maybe an above-ground nuclear test?
Reminiscent of what the dining room looked like a long time ago. (Thankfully, it was before our time. We know there also used to be velvet-patterned wallpaper and an ornate iron chandelier here, both with a Spanish flavor. And don't forget the mirror-tiled wall!)
Exposed 35-year-old linoleum. Lovely.
Happy John is cheerfully hauling out the last of the cabinets at the end of a long day that he enjoyed SO MUCH!
Making headway with the carpets.
Next, the carpets go.
Connie vows never to allow carpet in the dining area again. Even with most of the kids grown up, they tend to bring messy little agents of entropy with them when they come to dinner. (With my luck, the hardwood we're putting in will be seen as an invitation to the little people to throw hammers and chisels on the floor instead of mere applesauce and jello.)

Notice the hydronic baseboard radiator separating kitchen and dining room. We're very pleased to be removing some of them. The room was usually too warm.
The entire kitchen floor, made of Pergo, came up in one piece. Apparently, it is not unusual for Scandinavian appartment dwellers to take their Pergo floor with them when they move. I've decided it is perfect for resurfacing my battered workbenches in the garage -- tougher than oak and looks snazzy.
The plumbing has all been disconnected.

Some of my kids laid claim to the old cabinets, but Roland warned me the sink cabinet wouldn't be salvagable. He was right. It didn't survive the little tumble off the hand-truck in the drive-way. (That cast iron sink makes it very top-heavy and its mass assures the complete distruction of the cabinet if it falls over.)

THIRD SATURDAY -- KITCHEN BARED

Almost everything is gone but the kitchen sink. I think we'll bequeath the perfectly good garbage disposal unit to Jeff for his duplex. (He's on a tight budget.)