Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Circley Square


Carlos and Tim spent some of yesterday finishing soffit for the front porch. It's now starting to look like finished construction; the porch is just about done save for metal roofing, railings and decking.

That's Dave in the photo. He spent all day with us yesterday laying bamboo flooring in the living room. Dave and Cynthia both have been a huge support for us and we can't thank them enough for their generosity.

The title of the post is somewhat literally inspired by the circle-shaped cutout for the can light and the square support framing in the soffit. In thinking of the circle and square, we took a line out of an absurd music video called Hands Are Bananas.

Subway Tile


These wall field tiles are 3" x 6" and are sometimes called subway tiles, presumably because you find tiles this size and shape in subways all over the world. These particular tiles are handmade and are about 3/8" thick. We picked them up at Dal-Tile here in Portland.

This wall will have tile running all the way to the ceiling since this is the corner into which we'll place the clawfoot tub.

Rear Deck Framed


Yesterday Michael and Jeff were back on site and they finished pulling the deck framing and stair stringers for the rear entry deck and front porch. The lower deck in this photo is the "recycling bench" on which we'll store our recycling and trash bins. The lowered deck makes it easy to toss things in from the back door and to move them on and off the deck to get them down to the end of the driveway for collection day.

Monday, June 4, 2007

Wood Underlayment


This 10 mm thick black rubber pad is our under-bamboo soundproofing. It's also from Sound Isolation Company. Wood floor soundproofing requires different materials and since our subfloors are ply wood and not concrete, we need a thicker pad than someone might use in a new high-rise condo. The pad is made from 93% post-consumer waste like as tires and old dodge balls. It's extremely heavy. One 4' x 25' roll weighs over 200 pounds, and we'll use close to 5 rolls. That's half a ton of soundproofing on our kitchen and living room floors.

Thanks to Matty Cat for lending us his heft this evening. Matt and Justin lugged these things up unfinished deck stairs and it was precarious, if not somewhat dangerous moving the behemoth rolls of rubber. We'd also like to thank Matt for his help a few weeks ago hanging insulation in the basement bedroom ceiling. (That too, was a soundproofing project.) Matt and Karen have been a huge support to us through this project and we'd be filling our milk with tears without them.

Fresh Tile No Traffic Until Tues Thanks


Today, Rude (pronounced "Rudy" for those calling him "rude," which he rarely is) planned and set the bathroom floor tile in place. We're using 3/8" thick Brazilian Black Slate which appears to be considerably strong given that it's stone, not ceramic. Rude tells us that stone tile normally ships in thicker grades.

The fuchsia wall coating is a waterproofing membrane that goes on a bit like liquid plastic. Once it's dry, it'll form a watertight barrier behind the tile. Water that does get behind the tile will run down to the floor tile and, with luck, either evaporate away or evacuate the room through the floor drain.

Tile Underlayment


Yesterday and today we've spent some time installing a layer of sound isolation barrier, which goes on top of the subfloor and beneath the finished floor. Since we have living space in the basement, we're hoping to keep noise isolated in each space. In the ceilings on the first floor we used spray foam insulation to keep noise from going through the ceiling into the upstairs bedroom. Given the foot traffic we'll have on the first floor, we are adding the additional layers of underfloor material.

For tile we're using a 3 mm thick styrofoam-like composite material with an adhesive backing, made by Sound Isolation Company. Our good friend Rude (of Portland Cement Co. and who's laying our tile and pouring our countertops) tells us that this stuff is great to work on and that it takes thin set (the mortar mix used to hold tile in place) as well as Wonderboard does.

Saturday, June 2, 2007

Frosty Glow


This is a fluorescent wall sconce in the stairwell on the landing between the first floor and basement.

Kitchen Paint


The kitchen alcove and bump out are brown and we extended the white of the ceiling onto selected sections of wall here and in the living room. The white in between the sections of color adds a lot more interest to the room and brings out the varied geometry of the walls.

Living Room Paint


The living room has gone from all walls orange to one wall orange. Last night Chano and Leo finished the first coat of orange on the whole living room and when Rachael and I saw it, we simply didn't like the way it abutted the brown walls in the kitchen. So we scaled it back a little and went with a white living room and a single orange accent wall, which we like a lot more.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Power Up


The first new light fixture.

Remodel Exhaustion


A tired owner takes a thirty second breather. We're nine days from move-in and getting tantalizingly close to the end of the project. The siding is nearly all on. Only the living room remains for painting. Trim out electrical and tiling both start tomorrow.

Urban Panda


Very rare. Spotted on our garage roof this evening, angling to get at the bowl of cat food sitting in the back yard.

Porch Progress


The rafters and sheathing are on the front porch.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Porchsign


At last, the ghost of a front porch appears. The structural timbers are 4x4 Ipe, which is the same material we're using for the handrail posts on the rest of the deck.

Rear Deck Prep


The concrete footings for the back deck, poured yesterday, are hard to see in this photo. The pressure treated ledger went on today. The inside corners created by the stair tower have slowed things down from time to time, mostly because of runoff water management. We don't want water getting in the cracks and causing damage inside the structure or behind the siding, so getting the flashing cut right and in place correctly is somewhat tedious work.

Construction on the rear deck should begin on Friday or early next week.