Archive for the 'Renovations' Category

Deck Madness!

lisa July 3rd, 2010

We’re on week 5 of our deck-building adventure. Mark has laid out the first few weeks in this post on his site. We’ve made great progress since then and it’s really looking great. We’re using mahogany (sustainably harvested), cedar, and pressure-treated wood for the structural elements. I can’t wait for it to be finished! Hopefully only a couple more weeks, and definitely in time for labor day! Next up: painting the exterior. That’s a long-needed job that we’re going to have to tackle in stages, but it’s going to look awesome when we’re done.

Updating Elsewhere

lisa February 6th, 2010

Although this blog has been dormant for a while, Mark has actually posted a couple of entries on his site, sustainablemaynard.org - chock full of great photos!

Here’s the post on the Master Suite.

Here’s the post on the Mud Room.

It’s been 18 months already?

lisa March 1st, 2007

Amazing that 18 months have passed since my last update. I’ve got quite a lot of news!

  • Winter heating and the woodstove. I mentioned in the last entry that we were regretting having switched to natural gas. Well, we switched back to oil last year, with the help of our pal from the oil company (our neighbor to the rear). Then a couple of months ago the boiler broke, and we replaced that, too. Mark would like to replace the entire heating system with a geothermal radiant floor system, but that’s a project for after we win the lottery, I think. We upgraded our woodstove last year, too, and it seems to be doing its job well. This winter was very mild until January, but I think the stove has saved us some money on heating bills. Mark worked out a deal to get free uncut lumber from a landscaping guy he knows, and he and a friend spent much of the fall chopping up and splitting logs. We probably had 4 cords of wood starting out this winter, and we’ve gone through at least a cord. I get tired of constantly tending the stove, but it’s really nice to have it when the weather gets nasty.
  • The upstairs hallway. We finally got all the trim back up in December! Woo-hoo!
  • The outdoor projects… last summer I was away for the entire month of July and part of August, so I didn’t plant anything or enjoy the garden much. This year, I’m going nuts with new vegetables: spinach, sugar snap peas, edamame soybeans, cilantro, and peppers — and, of course, tomatoes. I got a bunch (60+) of old canning jars for free from a neighbor last weekend, and have plans to make and can lots of tomatoes and salsa this year. We also picked up a used chest freezer earlier this year, so I have lots of room to store my garden goodies.
  • The workshop. The driveway to the workshop is finished, and the workshop itself is mostly finished. You can see pictures of the building process here.
  • The front porch. We still have to finish the steps! But the rest of the porch is pretty much done.

We sat down a few weekends ago and actually made a list of just about every single remaining project. We have 16 remaining high-level priority projects. Here they are in order from highest to lowest priority:

  1. Kitchen cabinets - all the drawers and doors and shelves, plus an additional wall cabinet, floor cabinet, and spice rack/corner cabinet.
  2. Mudroom - the room needs to be painted and the sliding glass door needs to be installed.
  3. Fence yard - we have the chain-link fence materials — we just need to install it. We have to do this before we can get a dog/dogs, and Mark wants to get it done this spring.
  4. Back deck - build it!
  5. Second floor cosmetics - two bedrooms left to fix up (strip the wallpaper, repair the plaster, then paint).
  6. Workshop exterior - siding
  7. Workshop interior - insulation, electrical work, etc.
  8. Porch carpentry - those darned stairs.
  9. Refinishing rest of floors - need some spare cash for this!
  10. Exterior paint - would love to do this now, but we need to save our pennies.
  11. Tree work - both planting new (fruit trees) and taking down old (catalpa and weed maples).
  12. Heating system - completely redo (see above).
  13. Basement refinish - demolish floors, excavate and install new concrete floor, repoint foundation, maybe put up some drywall, replace windows, etc.
  14. Roof - we need a new one… and maybe we’ll install solar panels!
  15. Replacement windows - would be great to replace all our double-hung, inefficient, warped old windows. Probably not going to happen for a while, if ever.
  16. Master suite - my dream is to demolish the wall between our two remaining bedrooms, build a connecting walk-through closet, and install a full master bath. Probably not going to happen unless we win the lottery.

So I guess that’s enough for now.

Sort of annual update entry

lisa September 8th, 2005

More than a year since the last entry. I have been putting off writing anything, because it seems too overwhelming to write about all that has happened in one entry. I know there are a few people reading this who have their own blogs. Take it from me - I have been blogging since 1998, and if you don’t keep up with entries, it is very easy to let things slide and then suddenly, you look up and it’s three, six, eighteen months later.

Anyway, things are still progressing as far as renovations go. We spent a long time last fall getting the house more weather-proofed: we put in a woodstove and all new storm windows. The woodstove hearth was a fun project. We built the platform with steel and concrete, and tiled the thing in blue slate. It turned out really nicely. Our experience with the woodstove was not that great last winter - we were hoping it would really take some of the burden off of the furnace, but that did not happen. We converted to natural gas a few years ago, and now with the price of natural gas even higher than heating oil, we’re kind of regretting it. I’m not looking forward to this winter - we may end up keeping the thermostat at 60 all season, if the prices remain high.

We’ve spent over a year trying to finish the upstairs hallway. We took down almost all the trim and sent it out to a place that had a dip tank to strip off the paint. That was last summer, and the trim still isn’t back up. We did get the floors refinished and Mark did a fantastic job with the stair banister, and the hallway walls are painted now. We also bought a really nice chandelier for the ceiling above the stairs. Eventually we’ll sand and finish all the woodwork and put it back up. Mark did a beautiful job on the front door, too - it is now natural wood, and he put a couple of coats of spar varnish on it.

My outdoor projects this year were building raised beds, putting in asparagus and blueberries, and tackling my irrigation problems. I bought and installed two rain barrels and laid a lot of soaker hose this year. The asparagus (var. Jersey Knight) have been fun to watch - they seem to be doing well. The blueberries (var. Bluecrop, Blueray, and Jersey) seem happy, too. I also grew lettuce (var. Buttercrunch) this year, for the first time, and it was a big success. My tomatoes this year were very early - I bought plants that were already in bloom from a local grower, and my first ripe tomato was in July! I grew Sweet Million (too prone to splitting), Early Girl (very prolific, on the small side but nicely-shaped), Better Boy (so heavy the plant fell over, even with multiple stakes and cages), and Jet Star (seemed weak at first, but has done okay).

We attacked the brush pile that had been building up for four years with a rented hydraulic 5′ chipper. I got some great mulch out of it, but it was a lot of work. Mark’s been clearing more trees, trying to figure out siting for the barn/garage/workshop he wants to build. He’s been busy looking at plans and even bought a small tractor to do some of the site prep. We started putting down a gravel driveway along the east side of our property to the barn site, but the tractor broke, so work on that has been stopped for a couple of weeks.

The last project to document is our front porch. We’ve had temporary stairs for almost two years, so this summer I insisted that we finish the porch and install the other two sets of stairs on either side. We are almost done with that project - probably in the next two weekends, we’ll be able to finish that up and then I can finally add another photo to the front page of this site!

Update

lisa May 20th, 2004

The house is coming along. We are trying to refinance. Got some great news from the appraiser today — house has increased in value to almost twice what we bought it for. The mortgage guy is coming on Saturday and hopefully we’ll be closing soon.

The first floor is pretty close to done — parlor, great room and dining room are about 95%, but kitchen and mudroom are next. Upstairs we’ve done two of the bedrooms and the sitting room, but the bathroom, our bedroom, and maid’s bedroom/study are still incomplete. Outdoors, I’ve not planted any veggies yet but the flower beds are looking quite pretty. Bought some Jacob’s Ladder and a new delphinium last weekend. Earlier this spring I went absolutely bonkers for pansies and bought a ton (almost 100 plants). My newest thinking is to put an asparagus patch in rather than bothering with annual veggies. I also want to put in blueberries and maybe a kiwi. Or a paw-paw!

Anyway, the strawberries a friend gave me last year are overtaking that patch. Quite fun! We put up a fence to try to keep at bay whatever ate them all last year. We shall see…

Lazy Sunday

lisa November 9th, 2003

We haven’t been doing much work on the house. We kind of ran out of money, and steam, after our party in August. It’s hard to motivate, especially when it’s just the last few minor things that need to be done. There’s still a lot of work we need to do in the kitchen, but the living room and dining room are 90% done. Upstairs, we’ve sort of started work on the sitting room, and I asked Mark earlier if he wanted to get something done today, but here I am on the computer, and he’s downstairs watching TV. It’s only 1:15, so there’s still time to accomplish something. Maybe I’ll go repaint the dining room!

I don’t think I ever told that story: Mark and a friend painted the living room and dining room one night in Wednesday while I was at rehearsal. Problem was, they painted them the wrong colors. I had picked out a green for the dining room, and a blue for the living room, but when I came home I had a green living room and a blue dining room. So that weekend I painted the living room blue, but I never got around to repainting the dining room. I kind of want to do that before Thanksgiving…

We’re doing Thanksgiving this year, for Mark’s family. Mark found some caterer’s serving pieces at a yard sale not long ago, so I think we’ll do it buffet style this year. It will help when we get a bunch of new furniture, including a hutch. Mark’s mother down in Florida is moving from a house to a furnished double-wide trailer, so she’s sending us all the stuff that won’t fit. We’re getting two full bedroom sets (with king-sized beds! Woo!) and a bunch of other stuff. Thank god we have a big house.

Working on the Porch

lisa July 18th, 2003

Work has begun on the porch. Seth and John have been out nearly every day and the basic stuff is complete (see the gallery for pictures). Tonight Mark, Seth, John, Alex, Dave, and Greg put up the beam that goes across the front. It was a really heavy beam! We initially projected a two week timeline for the porch, but it’s going to end up taking more than a month. We have another two weeks to go.

We’re using ipe wood for the floor planks because it’s strong, hard, and fire-, rot-, and insect-resistant. Cool wood, especially when you buy it from an environmentally responsible company like we did.

Things in other parts of the house are also progressing. I’m working in the parlor this weekend (patching the walls) and hope to have it ready to prime and paint next weekend. Tuesday night I spent an hour sanding the walls. Last weekend I scraped the paint off of the heating pipes in two corners of the room, then primed them with a Rustoleum metal primer. They look pretty now - pretty for pipes, that is! There are five more pipes to do on the first floor. It’s not a hard job but it takes a while to scrape all the paint.

Mark is planning on doing some more cabinet making in the kitchen this weekend. And on the second floor, we finished gutting the “bird room” (the northeast bedroom) and putting up wallboard. The plasterer can’t make it out here for another couple of weeks, so unfortunately it won’t be ready for use as a guest bedroom when my family arrives at the end of July. So I’ve booked them a hotel room =(. At least the parlor will be done and we will have a nice comfy place to relax while they’re here.

Work continues

lisa July 7th, 2003

This past weekend, we went to two cookouts and a bluegrass show, and did some hard labor. Cleaned up all the brick from the old fireplace that was in the driveway - sorted out the whole bricks for later use in a pathway and tossed the broken stuff into the dumpster. That was a three hour job. Then Sunday we demolished the northeast bedroom and took out all the old horsehair plaster. We had to rig up a chute out of the window into the wheelbarrow, which was complicated. And it was so hot all weekend that doing physical labor wasn’t easy - had to keep hydrated and carefully monitor ourselves.

We’ve hired Mark’s friend Seth and Seth’s partner John to work on the porch. With a little loan from Mark’s stepmother to cover our shortfall, we should be finished with that in a couple of weeks. Then we will try to refinance.

There are a few new pictures in the gallery.

Progress

lisa June 18th, 2003

Well, we’re both back at work this week, feeling like we got a lot done. We got some of the cabinets built, but we have one small section left to do on the floor cabinets, as well as the laundry cabinet and all the wall cabinets. But look! The majority of it is done!

The countertops are mostly done - just need to finish a couple of sections and do the backsplash. I love how the cooktop area turned out. And even though I wish we could have afforded granite slab, I like the tiles and they turned out fine.

The plumbers came yesterday and hooked up all three sinks (kitchen, pantry, half bath), the fridge/icemaker, and the toilet in the half bath. I think they did the plumbing for the dishwasher, too, but it needs electrical before we can use it. And today, they’re working on the gas - the cooktop and the dryer. Woo hoo! I celebrated last night by doing dishes in our pretty new sink.

Boy, it feels great to see some progress.

More cabinet building

lisa June 11th, 2003

Mark and I took this whole week off from work to work on our kitchen cabinets. We’ve made a lot of progress, and should be pretty much done by Friday. This weekend we’re going to start on the front porch.

The process of cabinet-making is not rocket science, but you do have to measure very, very carefully. We’re only building the cabinets themselves right now - the doors and drawers will have to wait until we have the money to buy the maple. Luckily, Mark has already acquired all the tools he needs to make the doors, which will be an exacting and time-consuming process. But we’re saving a ton of money by building the cabinets ourselves, plus this way we get to make them exactly how we want. Custom cabinets, site-built to our specifications.

We’re in a period of great change. As we finish the cabinets, the woodworking equipment will move to the basement. Then the plumbers will come and finish plumbing the kitchen appliances and the two bathrooms. Then the upstairs sitting room will move to the first floor, and we’ll work on cosmetics in two of the upstairs rooms (sitting room and bedroom - strip wallpaper and paint, repair plaster, and re-paint). My priority right now is to get the downstairs more livable (paint, trim, clean) and to finish redoing one of the other bedrooms so that we have a guest room. We’re expecting family for a visit at the end of July. There’s a lot to do, but by then we should have a working kitchen, two working bathrooms, and places for them to sleep - I can’t guarantee the place will be totally clean, but at least it won’t be the chaotic mess it is now.

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