Monday, July 20, 2015
Moving day
Well, maybe moving day is a bit optimistic. The Living/dinning rooms do have furniture now. Too much furniture actually. We hauled up all the furniture we had been accumulating so we now have room for many people to sit comfortably. And for the first time ever, we had dinner on a real dining table with real chairs. We also sat on our new sofa and watched a movie Saturday night. When you’ve been working on a place for over 2 years, this is a real accomplishment.
Ok, enough lounging around, back to work! With our focus turned to the upstairs, we made some progress on the upstairs 1/2 bath. We knew we wanted to do something with this small room, but hadn’t really finalized any plans. A lot of time was spent with blue tape, laying out wall/door locations and thinking about what option would work best. The options were:
1. Do nothing. Just refinish the walls and tile the floor.
- pros: Not a lot of work.
- cons: Will have to live with the awkward small doors and cramped bathroom.
2. Remove the door from the non-master bedroom making it a master en-suite.
- pros: Again, not much work and makes electrical a bit easier.
- cons: Anyone sleeping in that room would then need to use the downstairs bath at night.
3. Expand the bathroom in to the front bedroom and move the door to the hallway.
- pros: Larger bath. Usable by both bedrooms. Later a dormer could be added to make room for shower.
- cons: The new door would be in an awkward location. Really should move plumbing to make it work.
4. Expand the bathroom into the master bedroom and move the door to the hallway.
- pros: Larger bath. Usable by both bedrooms. Later a dormer could be added to make room for shower. Door is in a less awkward location.
- cons: Losing some space in the master bedroom. This can be somewhat mitigated by using some of the space for built-in bookshelves.
We’re going with #4. The less awkward door and not having to move any plumbing to make it work were really the deciding factors. We did tear out the one bathroom wall and started building the new wall. The new wall is only about 8 inches away from the old, so we’re not taking a lot of space from the bedroom.
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
Upstairs Punchlist
Here’s the list of what needs to be done upstairs. Ordered roughly by priority.
Demo upstairs bedroomsFinish demo of closetDemo bathroomFrame new wall and new door opening- Remove/cap unused vent line
Re-wire outlets & outside light in bedroomRe-wire outlet/light in bathroomRe-wire closet light/outletFrame niche in bathroomInstall insulationDrywall work in bathroomTexture bathroomPaint bathroomInstall lightsSubfloor in bathroomTile bathroom floor- Door casings and baseboard in bathroom
Install toiletInstall vanityFrame for whole house fanInstall whole house fanInsulate outside walls- Install new ceiling fans
Drywall work in bedroomsTexture bedrooms, hall and stairwayPaint bedrooms, hall and stairwaySubfloor for bedrooms & hall- Kneewalls (drawers, cubbies, shelves, etc.)
- Install window casings
Install floor in bedrooms & hall- Install door casings
- Install baseboards
- Install window blinds
Install doors
Monday, July 13, 2015
Upstairs demo
With the downstairs in pretty good shape, it is time to start demolishing the upstairs. With a full crew, we parked the trailer below the upstairs balcony and started ripping out paneling, sheetrock, knee walls, carpet. Basically everything. Most of the interior walls are staying with the exception of the knee walls so we left those alone, but the exterior walls are now down to the studs. The nasty carpet was pulled out and what was left of the pad scrapped up. It took a little over a day to get almost everything out. By then we had a full trailer so it was off to the dump. All that’s left to do upstairs is the closet and half bath. Throwing the debris straight off the balcony into the trailer worked out pretty good. I think we’ll do this again for the rest of the upstairs. The upstairs looks brighter and larger with all that dark paneling removed. Demo always seems to go pretty fast.
As a reward for getting the upstairs torn out so quickly , we bought a new couch. The fact that it was on sale for 20% off didn’t hurt either. So we now have some real furniture in the living area. Next week we’ll haul up some of the other furniture we’ve been stockpiling. It’s going to be strange not eating meals on the cheap small patio table and camp chairs.
Monday, June 8, 2015
Moving
The big news in this episode of the scary cabin is that we’ve moved our sleeping arrangements to the downstairs bedroom. This is big news because it means that we’ve mostly finished the downstairs and have started work on the upstairs. There are still a few small things to finish up downstairs like baseboards and a few moldings and, of course, the utility room (it’s a small room….).
The major accomplishments that led up to the move were installing the TV. Yes, that’s right, we now have a TV in the living room. Of course we had nothing buts setup screens to watch, but we do have a TV. Also the face frame for the built-in bookcase was built, installed, and painted. Genny did a bit more paint touch-up too.
Before we could move into the downstairs bedroom it had to be cleaned out. We’ve been using that room for storage and construction (that’s where the table saw and miter saw lived). Once cleaned out, the beds were moved downstairs and the sheets washed (another milestone, we used the washer and dryer for the first time). We then realized how much stuff we had stashed away in the upstairs bedroom.
Big T’s Trees was out and trimmed all the dead wood out of the various pine trees. They also cut down a couple of stumps and ground down a couple of stumps. Besides making it a bit more open, we did get a small pile of chips out of the deal.
Monday, June 1, 2015
Let there be … dark?
Ok, maybe not pitch black, but now that we have binds in the main living areas, it is possible to make the rooms darker. More importantly, it allows for some security by obscurity by not allowing anyone to just peek in and see what treasures lurk in our scary cabin.
Getting to the point where the blinds could be installed took a bit of work as all the window trim needed to have the gaps caulked. While the caulk gun was out, we also caulked the walls around the beams and the ragged wall to ceiling joints. So lots of caulking and then lots of paint touch-up to cover all that caulk.
A few other minor tasks were completed as well, like adding inside casing to the front door.
Surprisingly difficult was adding the “T” molding to cover the gap between the hallway tile and the bedroom laminate. The gap had a lot of thinset in it that first needed to be ground out to create a consistent width/depth channel. Then a piece of wood needed to cut and fit in that gap so that the “T” molding channel had something to sit on. Turns out that the channel has very little tolerance with respect to it’s height. Too low and the “T” molding doesn’t seat well and stay put, too high and the “T” molding doesn’t sit flush to the floor. We’re talking 1/16” or less tolerance here. It took a couple of tries to get it right.