The tapers went through the house today and applied sheet rock seam tape wherever two pieces of sheet rock butt up against one another.
Thursday, May 17, 2007
Seam Tape
The tapers went through the house today and applied sheet rock seam tape wherever two pieces of sheet rock butt up against one another.
Sheet Rock, Pt. 5

The kitchen is on the right, the hallway to the back entry and stairwell is dead ahead, and the living room is to the left. The window in the wall helps funnel western light into the East side of the house (the side I'm standing in to take this photo).
The brown paper is on all the floors so that mud cleanup is quick and easy.
Monday, May 14, 2007
Sheet Rock, Pt. 3

A visual feast of sheet rock geometry and architectural lines, taken from the second floor landing. To the left is the second floor bedroom. The stairs drop between the cats.
Tomorrow the sheet rock crew (the "rockers" who hang the stuff) will finish up the first floor and complete most of, if not entirely finish, the basement. They'll be followed by the tapers and mudders who'll take a full week and a half to two weeks to get a smooth finish on the first and second floors. Since the second floor and basement bedrooms already have sheet rock with textured finishes, we'll complete patching in both of those rooms with matching texture.
Texture is sprayed on and conceals imperfections in sheet rocked walls and is less time consuming than a surface with a smooth finish. We don't mind a low profile texture, but sometimes it can get out of hand. One of the bedrooms at our last house had a textured finish so severe that a knuckle drag across the wall got you bloody fingers.
Black is the New Tub
The tub was an abstract mix of forest green, sky blue and primer white before Rach attacked it with a satin black can of paint. We don't have any good pictures, though it is in the background here.
This is the second of three steps in the restoration of our original clawfoot.
The first was refinishing the porcelain interior. The next step is getting the feet sandblasted and coated with clear gloss so as to avoid oxidation. The tub should be returned to its original grandeur late next week.
Alex, our project lead, suggested painting giant shark teeth on the front. Hmmm.
Sheet Rock, Pt. 2
Wednesday, May 9, 2007
Stacked Siding
The siding has been one of the greater debates of our remodel. We initially were trying to salvage all removed siding, patching only where necessary. Much of the removed siding was damaged beyond repair, and patching it would have been a expensive proposition. We ended up with, essentially, two sides of the downstairs portion of the house entirely without siding, and the other two sides needing some minor patching (these sides had not been removed.) The second floor had siding from when it was built 15 years ago and, while that siding is cheap particle board, it has been mostly untouched by the remodel. The stair tower was a new addition and thus had no existing siding.
Our options were:
a. Custom-match the new siding so that it matched the two walls we hadn't touched (East and North)
b. Remove all downstairs siding and purchase new, standard-sized siding
As I mentioned above, we had wanted to keep all exterior walls intact and simply patch up the siding. The design made this impossible on the west due to the stair tower and french doors, but we had thought that this was feasible for the other three. We changed our minds on the South side after realizing both the wear and the lack of insulation.
We removed the siding from the South and West walls, salvaging all good siding as we went. We began looking into buying siding to match the still-intact East and North walls. Unfortunately, this style of siding is no longer in production so, to match it, we were going to have to pay someone to create a custom-knife with which to shape the boards. On top of purchasing the custom knife we would then have to provide the pre-cut standard siding. Last but not least, we'd have to pay by the linear foot for the custom milling.
The costs of custom-milling siding for 1/2 of the house was comparable to the cost of purchasing certified lumber siding for the entire house. Thus, we decided to take option b and purchase stock siding. This resulted in us removing all remaining siding - that on the East and North sides of the house. This allowed us to further stabilize the exterior structure and, most importantly, insulate the the highest of standards. We figure we'll replace the shoddy particleboard-esque insulation in 15 years or so...next time we paint.
The original siding is not all lost. We hope to plane some of it down and use it in our salvage construction crafts like hand made furniture, shelving and wood accents where we need them.
Inspection Snafu
Inspectors came through and flagged our basement utility room for non-insulation. It sits below the kitchen, so they told us to either insulate the basement walls or ceiling to separate the livable from non-livable space. By framing and insulating the concrete foundation walls, our livable square footage increases. Nicer still is that the utility room now has a more defined 'indoor' feel to it. We opted against insulating the ceiling because there's a little too much mechanical stuff between the joists to cover over.
The crew re-plumbed, framed and insulated this wall in just a few hours this morning. Quite impressive.
Disregard the vile blue-green post and its easter-purple concrete base. Those aren't anything we can't banish with a bit of paint.
In the far corner we'll have the utility sink. Moving left along the wall we'll have the washer and dryer. The side access door to the driveway is off to the left of the photo. Off the right of the photo is the mechanical room and past that the basement bedroom/office/movie space.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007
Foam Home

Just about every wall and ceiling cavity in the house is filled with yellow medium density foam insulation. It feels and squeezes like those water soluble packing peanuts you sometimes get in Amazon.com shipments.
Walking around inside today was an altogether new spatial experience. It was like being muffled under a comforter or having cotton stuffed in your ear canals. Sound died instantly. From the living room we could barely hear the skill saws humming in the driveway, and the back door was wide open. As we stood and stared at (what must be) the NASA technology surrounding us we could vividly imagine the coziness this place will have in winter. We were nearly hallucinating our tiny heating bills.
This photo stitch was shot from the landing between the first and second floors.
- 5/9 :: Daniel adds : That stuff is awesome. The brand new Mayflower Inn Spa filled every single wall in the new building with the stuff, mostly for its sound proofing ability. You are going to have one quiet (and cozy) house. I just wish we'd had the foresight to fill our ceilings with the stuff when we did our original construction, our biggest complaint is our upstairs neighbors clomping around.
Monday, May 7, 2007
Roofing Off

The old 3-tab composite asphalt shingle on the lower roof is off. We found five layers of this stuff, and the recommended maximum is two before you're supposed to strip it all and start over. One layer or a dozen, it doesn't matter for this project because we're installing metal roofing and we need a bare roof on which to mount it. Metal has a much longer life, is lighter, and has better heat reflectivity than asphalt.
Ganging Up
Justin spent well over 24 hours this past weekend working with the rockin' electricians. They ate, drank and slept wiring, and didn't leave until nearly midnight on Sunday. Their time was well spent as they passed inspections with flying colors on the first round.
Here's a great example of what J and the guys from Statewide Electrical put together. You'll notice the switchbox above has room for 5 switches. We're trying to minimize the "wall acne" (a term coined by Susan Susanka in our remodel bible, The Not So Big House) by ganging as many of the switches together as logical. Furthermore, we're trying to order the switches in a sensible manner. This is to decrease the flicking on and off of lights trying to find the correct one. Few things bugged me more with our last house than trying to turn on the outdoor light and instead starting our 90-decibel garbage disposal. Our friend Shawn M. once did it late at night while visiting. I think it nearly killed him.
On a green note. The metal recycling guy stopped by this morning, as he does every Monday. We're usually pretty good about leaving all scraps out for him, but, in the haze that was this weekend, managed to dump some of the wiring. I walked up to the house as he was fishing it out of the dumpster. Though we've never met, I can tell that he's good people. He only takes what's on the street or in the dumpster, and never comes on site. I think he has his regular rounds, and seems to know the construction crew. What a great mutualism.
Foam Prep

The spray foam insulation crew was in today to prep the windows, doors and inside walls with protective plastic and plastic backing. Click on the image for better detail of the first floor, which presently looks like something out of the movie E.T. Here's another photo from a different angle.
We're insulating the interior walls and first floor ceiling as much for energy efficiency as we are for sound proofing. Icynene spray foam has good sound dampening qualities and it can be applied quickly. And since it doesn't have to be cut into polygons like batt insulation, we can fill in all the little nooks and crannies around electrical fixtures, wiring, plumbing, ventilation ducts, windows and doors that would otherwise be escape holes for heat and sound.
- 5/7 :: Mark adds : When I see the shots from the other angle I think Flight of the Navigator, but ET works too . . .
Deck Update!
Okay, maybe not too much to get excited about here, but the remaining stringers are in and the corner stringer is nearly finished. The decking material hasn't arrived yet, but when it does this part of the project will quickly roll forward. In the meantime, we've been finishing up some porch design details, such as identifying which brackets to use. We've also been planning the deck rail post positions and how we want to run the cable guardrail system through them.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)