House


2
Apr 09

Remodel: 2009/04/02

There has been tons of progress on my house!  It’s amazing to see how far it has come with all the demolition completed and additions built.  Check it out:

The contractors have finished all the major work – the additions are fully framed, interior walls are complete, roof is all on, and the windows and doors are all installed.  Progress photos.

Now the contractors are installing the siding, I’m using Hardie Panel siding with the Cedarmill pattern in Harris Cream color (yellow!).  It’s more expensive up-front, but being pre-painted means I won’t need to paint my house for a very long time :)

What’s next?  I need to complete the electrical wiring which I’ve already started, and then on to plumbing, insulation, drywall, etc.  Lots of finish work still to go but that’s the fun part!

There’s still no firm ETA for finishing the house, but just yesterday my dad was talking with the city inspectors and they reversed the decisions to require residential fire sprinklers and buried power mains – this literally saves us months of scheduling and coordination and tens of thousands of dollars in costs.  Very awesome :)


22
Jan 09

Remodel: 2009/01/21

My fatther and I spent a few hours in the evening (630-8pm) doing more demolition, we stripped sheetrock from the two bedrooms, including the ceiling, and removed the hall wall from the second bedroom.

The carpenters have finished the garage walls and the interior walls for the bonus room.  It was awesome to be able to go walk through my new rooms!  The powder room is a decent size, the laundry is also a good size, and the bonus room (aka TV room :) is nice and big.  From the drawings I was worried that it would be too small, but in person it’s perfect for relaxing in front of the TV.

Originally the bonus room was going to have a pass-through to the kitchen, but the plans also included a door between the bonus room and kitchen/dining area.  It didn’t make sense to have both, they pretty much negated each other.  After some thought I realized that the pass-through would permit noise from the TV into all the rooms of the house except the bedrooms, due to my open floorplan.  It would also permit noise from the kitchen into the bonus room.  Basically, if the TV was on then you’re going to get lots of unwanted, unavoidable background noise.

So the pass-through has been removed from the plans.  We’re keeping the door, which also allows me to seperate the more formal areas (living, dining, kitchen) from the play areas (bonus/tv room).


20
Jan 09

House Remodel, January Update

Work on my house has been moving very quickly!  Latest pics are on Flickr.

The landscapers have graded the yard and added french drains to the backyard and side yard (by the front door), it’s ready for a fence and topsoil/compost.  They’ve also graded the driveway and brought in crushed rock for the driveway base, side of the garage, and work pad behind the garage.  My yard is huge!  I’ve gained lots of space from clearing the old bushes and trees and leveling the yard.

Now the carpenters are working, they have all the exterior walls up for the new master bedroom, bonus room, and garage, and interior walls for the garage & bonus room.  They’ve ordered the roof trusses (arriving in 10 days), and are working on the interior walls for the master bedroom, both bathrooms, and elsewhere while they wait for the roof trusses to arrive.

My father and I have started demolition work inside the house, working the weekends and evenings to remove the old interior before the carpenters need to work there.  It’s amazing to see the progress as my house transforms.

During all this I’ve been rapidly making decisions about the othere features of the house.  We’ve ordered all new vinyl windows, making sure the bathroom windows are frosted ;)  Doors will be ordered soon, as will siding and flooring.  We’ll be using Hardie Plank Siding which comes pre-painted, and I need to match the siding color with the garage door (white), roof (black), and fence (green or brown?). The fence will be Trex Seclusions Fencing which is low-maintainence and long-lasting.

And don’t forget the interior!  Right now it looks like it’ll be Pergo flooring (or similar), which is an engineered laminte flooring that is very durable.  My aunt’s house has Pergo flooring, and after 5+ years of a dog and motorized wheelchair it still looks brand new!  I’ll be doing a dark chocolate color in 6″ distressed planking, I saw a similar style at the Street of Dreams that looked awesome, and it matches well with my other design plans.  The kitchen will be an Ikea Kitchen, they’re good value and I like the features & options.  There are even appliances available at Ikea, this oven/range/hood combo looks perfect.

Finally, you have to play a little – sooner than later I’ll be splurging and adding a barrel suana to the backyard :)


21
Dec 08

Update: My House, Rebooted

After some record-breaking procrastination I’ve finally turned over my remodeling project to my father to manage.  In the last 3 weeks he’s done more than I was able to do in the last 2 years!

We now have contractors (with quoted prices) all scheduled to complete the exterior of my house:

  • Backfill the foundation & install runoff drains
  • Install a french drain in the back yard & general landscaping
  • Frame the new additions & install roof joists and roofing
  • Fencing
  • New water main, electrical, cable, and phone connections

And they’re all biting at the bit to get started – if Bellevue wasn’t buried under snow they’d already be working….

Backfill the foundation & install runoff drains

After the foundation was poured, the trenches outside the forms were not filled in.  I thought we needed to install footing drains, but after talking with an inspector we learned that was not needed.  Yay!  Less work to do.  There were drains for the downspouts though to catch all the rainwater, we’re going to have those installed again for all the new additions and have the foundation backfilled so there’s no longer a gaping trench outside the forms.

Install a french drain in the back yard & general landscaping

My backyard is generally soggy through the winter and spring, this is due to my property being downhill of 4 neighbors.  In fact, one neighbor landscaped their yard to improve their drainage – right into my own yard!  After talking with the city, they’ve approved us installing french drains & connecting them to the stormwater runoff system (AKA the ditch by the street).  This will require cutting the sidewalk behind my house & installing a 6″ drainpipe to go from a silt collection chamber on my property to the ditch on the other side of the sidewalk.  Which of course requires another permit :)

While the contractor is doing this, they’ll also be re-shaping my yard and removing the old trees and shrubbery, cement patio, and deck.  Then we’ll need to put in a couple inches of bark/topsoil to cover the bare dirt to avoid erosion and muddy runoff.  Finally once the yard is done we can call the gas company to relocate my gas line which currently goes through the new master bedroom foundation.  They won’t relocate the gas line until the yard is at its final grade because the gas lines need to be 2 feet below the finshed surface.

Frame the new additions & install roof joists and roofing

We found some carpenters to build the new additions – garage, bonus room, and master bedroom.  This includes pretty much everything: exterior walls, interior walls, roof joists, new windows, house wrap, cut back the eaves, and remove an old skylight.  Framing is pretty quick, but I’ve never done structural framing on a scale like this.  It’s much quicker to get a team of people who already know what they’re doing.

The contractors looked at our plans and told us we were silly to not have them do as much as possible.  Only having them do exterior walls and us do interior walls doesn’t actually save that much money but would take (us) much longer to do.  And they’re right :)

All the windows in the house are being replaced (vinyl-clad double-pane), none of the current windows are worth saving an and many have broken seals.  Additionally, all the new windows are difference shapes & sizes than the existing windows so again it’s quicker to let the contractors do the work.

Finally, we’re having them cut back the eaves to allow more light into the house.  I have a really steep roof with a short ceiling, this means the eaves actually come down below the tops of the windows and block a lot of light.  Cutting them back would really brighten the interior, and it’s another good job for a contractor – not because they’d do it better, but also because it would just suck to do yourself!

Fencing

This is what my neighbors have been waiting for since day two of the remodel.  Now, 3 years later, I’m finally putting back in the fence along my backyard.  Currently my whole yard is visible from the street behind me, in all it’s abandoned glory.  In talking with fencing contractors I wanted a low-maintainence fence that looked good.  At first I was thinking of concrete fences, but apparently they cost 10-12x more than wood fences – wow!  We were recommended Trex fencing instead, it’s only .5x more than wood and meets all our desires for a fence, including looking good from both sides!  I’m very excited to have a fence again, as will be my neighbors.

New water main, electrical, cable, and phone connections

When I first started the remodel, I looked into what it would take to bury the electrical connection to my house which currently drapes across the street from behind my house.  There is a power pole on my side that I could dig a trench to, but the power company said that pole wasn’t rated to run a power line to (despite their own meters using it?!?!).   That meant I’d have to cut a trench through the street, which was lots of $$$, so I put off the idea.

Now I’m doing it!  When my permit was approved it was required that I install residential fire sprinklers, but my water main is too small (only 3/4″), I need to install larger water main (1″).  The city hasn’t upgrade the water mains in my neighborhood yet, so I need to pay for this all myself – which includes cutting a trench across the street to the main water line.  That sucks, but it does mean I’ll now be able to bury the electrical connection as well!  And while I’m at it I’ll bury the cable and phone lines too, which means my house will no longer have ugly wires hanging from it.  That’s what I call lemonade :)


2
Nov 07

Backhoes are fun

Did you know that you don’t need any special license or certification to operate a backhoe on private property? When I needed to break up my concrete driveway and garage floor I called up an equipment rental shop to ask about renting a backhoe with a breaker attachment – no problem!

And to top off the experience, the equipment rental shop is less than 1 mile from my house, so I just drove the backhoe to the shop when I returned it. Nothing like driving through the middle of Bellevue in a backhoe :)

Of course I have pics of the concrete demolition too.


31
Oct 07

I’m a winner!

Toolmonger just picked me as their Demo Glove Winner for this week for the garage demolition photos I submitted. Woohoo!


31
Oct 07

Butane Zippo

Annoyed at having your Zippo always be empty because the fuel has evaporated? Toolmonger found out that Zippo now makes butane lighters!


29
Oct 07

Remodeling Pics

I’m migrating all my pics to Flickr; last night I uploaded a couple collections from my house remodel/demolition from last year:


25
Oct 07

Fix your plugs

Using 360 electrical outlets you can better fit all those weird plugs that your electronics use!


24
Oct 07

Costs: Concrete Foundation

The new additions & garage require concrete foundations, and that’s too much for me to do myself. I’ve hired a concrete company to come out & excavate the new crawlspace, pour the foundations, and get everything ready for the new walls to be built.

Of course, it’s not that simple.

Because of how close the new additions are to the property setbacks for the side yards, the city requires that have as-built surveys performed to insure that I’m not exceeding the setbacks. When the city inspector came out the first time he also didn’t like the look of the soil, so he requested a soil engineer come out & check that the soil was strong enough for the new new additions.

Also, due to the construction and it being winter (lots of rain), I had to install erosion control (silt fences, straw bales, etc) to keep mud from flowing off my property and into the street & drains.

  • Foundation: \$31,000
  • As-built surveys: \$1600 (2 x \$800)
  • Soil engineer: \$300
  • Erosion control materials: \$400