Monday, July 18, 2011

Fourth of July

Thankfully the weather has been extremely cooperative this summer so we're managing to get quite a bit done on the outside while we can! I took a few vacation days the week of July 4th and had a few big projects planned out. My main goal was to get the two large beds at the front of the house laid out, cleaned out and at least mulched. I figured it would take about 4 days, and that ended up being more or less right on...

BEFORE: East Side
I'd laid out the mowing strip on the East side of the walk a while ago using reclaimed concrete pavers that we found in various miscellaneous places around the property. Not the most glamorous material, but free! The bed was still overgrown with volunteer weeds and a ton of ferns. The ferns were probably fine when there used to be a big tree here: 
FEBRUARY 2011
(Hard to believe that's what it looked like a mere 6 months ago!)

Anyway without the trees the bed gets sun most of the day, and that meant that the ferns were turning brown and generally not looking all that great. Not to mention that the bed was still overrun with ivy and other miscellaneous weeds. It just needed to be completely ripped out and cleaned up!



Took the better part of a day to rip out the weeds and re-mulch. Luckily we had all of the trees turned into wood chips so we've got a pretty BIG pile of free mulch to use! The following weekend I headed out to Ashcombe's and Stauffers and picked up a few initial perennials to at least get a bit of color in the beds. Not even close to being enough o fill in the space, but at least a start for this year!

AFTER: East Side with new plantings and fresh mulch.
 Next up was the West side of the house. That bed was a bit larger and a bit more of a mess!

BEFORE: West Side
All sorts of issues here! There really wasn't any defined shape to the bed. The entire area had been covered with English Ivy (my nemesis!) which had been mowed just prior to this photo. The trellis that wraps around the house is in need of repair, and the corner column was overgrown with more ivy (English and poison!). The other complicating factor is that the yard slopes down and away from the inside corner where the porch and the house meet and then back up as you go around the side of the house. (The lowest point would be in the bottom right corner of the picture.) The challenge was to come up with a plan to define the bed without making it look like it was sinking. 

DURING
The answer seemed to be to create a short retaining wall to visually raise the corner of the bed to that from the street it would appear level. Thankfully I was able to secure some recycled wall blocks from Dan and Jo that were just perfect for the project. Because of the slope the wall is actually only 1" high at the sidewalk and then steps to 3 blocks high (about 18") in the corner. This is a shot of the wall installation in progress AFTER the bed was cleared of weeds and ivy. (And after I'd already gotten my second bad case of poison ivy for the summer.) And the final product as seen from the front pond looking back to the East:
AFTER: East Side
This was my fist attempt at retaining wall construction, and though obviously not the most COMPLICATED project ever, I was pretty pleased with how it turned out, especially with the challenges of needing to keep the wall level and deal with the change in grade. I think it turned out pretty nice and it definitely gives the bed much needed structure. This photo also shows the now newly painted corner post all cleared of debris and the repair to the front trellis span. Just a couple of rose bushes and one false indigo bush planted for now. More next year!

The other part of the project was the reworking of the basement window well:

BEFORE
 This is the only accessible window in the basement, and is where the secondary (and tertiary) sump pumps need to discharge during times of extreme basement flooding. Hence the black pipe. The problem was that at some point they decided to barricade the window by making a huge dirt mound directly in front of it and covering that with random bricks and concrete pavers. Eventually that got taken over by ivy and weeds resulting in a big mess, and a cave in every time the window needed to be open. That may have been ok, but to make the mound they basically just dug out in front of the mound which meant that the planting bed had a huge hole which just collected water which subsequently made it into the basement.

I decided to use the same recycled wall block in combination with a regular window well to create a new enclosure.
AFTER
Took a bit of tweaking, but the blocks pretty much hide the plastic window well and since they are the same blocks that were used for the retaining wall, it all blends together nicely.
By the end of the weekend I was pretty sore and itchy (thanks to poison ivy), but pleased with the new look:

Happy Birthday America!


Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Facelift

This past weekend's Sunday project was a quick face lift on the main facade of the porch. Even though we are making a lot of progress, the front of the house still looked pretty shabby as the photos show.
East Porch before.


Front Entrance before.

The paint was peeling of in a number of places, and the old traces of the former ivy infestation were all to visible from the street. A couple of hours and a gallon of paint later, and the results speak for themselves:
Front Entrance After.
Now it looks nice and CRISP. I replaced the old tiny brass house numbers that were BARELY visible from the street with more distinctive 5" numbers that are easy to see and make a statement. 

Front view after.
I also put out the window box planters and hung the hanging baskets that were brought over from the old house. They're a little small scale wise at this point, but as the baskets fill out over the next few months they'll look more like they belong. 

I still have a few more days of scraping and painting to get the rest of the trim polished up, but all in all a very satisfying day.

Plum Perfect - Follow up

A bit later than I anticipated, but here's a snap of the "new look" for the dining room.
Dining Room
Still need to rehab the floor and do one more coat of the purple and retouch the ceiling medallion, but making progress! Definitely an improvement don't you think!

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Plum Perfect

First... a note about the lack of posts.... First we moved... Then the computer died... then we had no internet... So now you know! Needless to say in that month or so a lot has happened, so I'll try and run it down for you over the next few days. NOT in any particular order...

Today, progress in the dining room which along with the living room are really the only two MAJOR inside projects that we have plans to deal with in the next few months.

A couple of BEFORE pictures. The room was a BLINDING shade of red. Now I like red... (I even painted the kitchen a lovely shade of red) but this red was RED-ICULOUS! In addition the ceiling was sagging and damaged from the water leak in the second floor bathroom. The entire ceiling had to come down and be replaced. In addition, we had to come up with a new light fixture since, like all of the other fixtures, it had been ripped out by the previous owners.


I decided that I wanted to do a purple room, and decided that the dining room was probably the best candidate. I debated for a while on the exact shade, but finally settled on a deep purple that I'd say is a plum color. Not finished yet, but I'm liking the results so far! I'll post some photos of the new space later this week.

Ceiling ripped out...
I'll admit that it was a bit frightening, but I went ahead and let them rip out the ceiling completely rather than just put new sheetrock over the old plaster... nothing left at this point but a single bulb and some floor joist and the underside of the master bedroom.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Kitchen Takes Shape

Before: Loose Bricks
It's been just over a month since the work started on the house. The very first day involved ripping out the old appliances and general demo in the kitchen. Since then most of the efforts have been on getting the upstairs ready and some of the other larger projects. We've finally made a bit of progress getting the kitchen ready to roll.

One of the trial and error projects was fixing the loose bricks in the kitchen. The brick is a thin paver probably about an inch thick. They were laid down directly over the plywood subfloor with mortar. Needless to say the plywood flexes and the bricks don't so several were popped loose. The guys had to pop them out, clean out the hole, and then reattach them using mastic which will hopefully be a bit more flexible than the mortar.
Before: Broken Window
Before: Upper Cabinet Gone
   Next up was patching some serious holes in the wall and prepping to paint over the khaki brown color. While the color was ok, there were many bad spots where the wall was cracked, dinged or otherwise damaged. we decided that if were were going to have to patch and paint anyway we might as well make a color change. The guys pulled down the upper cabinet unit so we could check out the situation with the backsplash. Sadly it was in rough shape as I had predicted. Whenever they did the last renovation they just busted up the wall to run the electric. To make the upper cabinet sit back flush to the wall they busted out the to bullnose tile. It would be a huge deal to have to repair, so we'll end up covering it over somehow.

AFTER: Coming together!
The new counter tops were installed this past week, so we finally have a sense of what it will look like all put back together. The new paint color is up, new window is in, and new pendant lights are hung. All that's left is to install the new backsplashes, reattach the upper cabinet, and install the appliances. We may actually have a kitchen by the time we move it!


Sunday, March 20, 2011

Stormy Weather

The water has finally gone down after near record rainfall a week ago. Things are mostly back to normal, but I thought I'd post a few snapshots of the basement during the "great flood" of March 2011. Here's hoping this isn't a regular event!



















Water pours in at the bottom of the wall like a garden hose going full speed. It runs across the floor and into a little depression in the floor where there's a pipe through to the back room... Now we know what that pipe is for!

It comes through the wall here and joins the other stream in the channel along the wall. When we first looked at the basement I couldn't really figure out why there was a concrete trench randomly cut in along the one wall. It all make sense now!
Final destination is the pit of the sump pump. At the peak of the flooding the pump ran nearly continuously.
In the rest of the big room water just seems to bubble up and pour in from just about everywhere. Don't think we'll be storing anything of value down here any time soon!

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Tore Up From The Floor Up

One of the first projects tackled by the contractors (aka Jason's dad's crew) was the bathroom flooring. Both bathrooms upstairs were in desperate need of new floors after water damage over many years had wreaked havoc with the sub floors.

The Original Flooring
The original floors in the main bathroom were a nasty speckled linoleum tile. When the guys pulled it out we discovered that it had been put down over what would have been nice hardwood floors at one point. unfortunately at some point they'd ripped out sections to run new wires or piping or something.

New Floors Prior to Grouting
When the white stick on vinyl molding visible in the photo to the left was pulled up it revealed a big hole where the floor had actually just rotted away over time as water splashed out of the bathtub. Strips of self-sticking molding were the perfect fix????? Right!

Since a complete gut job of the bathroom was out of the question, we decided that we would work with what we had and go with a floor tile option that would both complement the existing color scheme as well as tie in a bit of a historic feel.

The flooring in the baster bath was just nasty plywood sub-flooring since the master at one time had actually been carpeted. Yes... carpeted. Sadly I don't have "before" pictures of the floor in there. (Not missing much!) in that space we decided that since it is so tiny we wanted to so something unexpected and a bit fun. We found some really cheap porcelain tiles with a neat copper and blue glaze which in a large area might be a bit too much, but in such a tiny space really sets things off.

Master Bath tile job in progress. (Yes it really is that small!)