Renovations
...now browsing by tag
Mega Wasp Nest
Wednesday, November 11th, 2009Kitchen Day 4
Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009Clearing out the old kitchen walls and ceiling is taking much more time and effort than hoped, but perhaps that’s to be expected. Today was a big day for Susan as she got to remove the old upper cabinets that she refused to use.
And they’re gone …
With her reviled cupboards gone, Susan attacked the wall with enthusiasm.
One of the big pluses of getting everything down to the bare walls is that we can be sure that there aren’t any nasty surprises, like this:
Luckily I’m pretty sure that these wires had caused problems and had been disconnected.
We got the rest of the wall finish off and another big chunk of the old ceiling down by days end.
We’ve decided to cover the brick on both these walls. The window wall is an exterior wall so needs to be properly insulated. The other wall is now an interior wall, but we’re going to frame a wall so I have somewhere to run wiring, plumbing for the washer, and a dryer vent pipe.
Kitchen Day 3
Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009We’ve had a few “off” days (back to cafe to work weekend, provisioning, tidying) but yesterday was back to rip and tear (after finally getting the upright freezer emptied, defrosted, & moved).
This wall was the worst so far to pull out. There was actually fiberglas batt insulation behind the press-board, which unfortunately had 50 years of (ex) mouse “condos” and the like.
This wall in now an interior wall (after I built the insulated addition to replace the old porch that got burned in the 2006 Halloween fire). There won’t be much showing though, plan for this wall is (L - R) full height cabinet for stacked washer dryer & broom closet, fridge, 2′ counter as the “comms center”. I think I’ll have to build a half wall to take electrical and plumbing. Need to finalize that today.
Susan has aggressive plans for today, so we’d better get to it. Great to have Geoff’s help again today.
Kitchen Day Two
Wednesday, October 28th, 2009With a day interrupted by newspaper articles and a time out while a friend trimmed our donkey Lucy’s feet, progress was slower than hoped for. The good news is that, spurred on from yesterday’s demo, we got started at removing the ceiling to see what the beams look like.
They didn’t skimp on the nails at all. The headlight may look a trifle geeky, but it works like a charm. (BTW, it’s stardard farm wear for me working outside in the winter, and lasts several weeks on a set of recharable AAA’a). Susan was very excited to see the beams start to appear.
We figured this would be more exciting than finishing clearing out the space to make it easier to work. Maybe true, but with things looking so interesting I kept going and got about a quarter of the ceiling down. Enough to get a sense of what it could look like.
After this was some less exciting tidying up, and converting some of the demo wood into sizes that will go into the wood stove. Not quite “Burning Down the House”, but at least converting waste into heat. We’re creating fuel faster than we can burn it. We’ll be back at it tomorrow.
Kitchen Renovation Start
Wednesday, October 28th, 2009We’re finally getting started at building the new kitchen at the farm. Although there’s still stuff we need to clear out Susan was bound and determined to start tearing yesterday (the ol’ “Patience my ass, I want to kill something” sentiment). She was so fast with the crowbar I couldn’t get her into focus (that’s my story and I’m sticking to it).
We counted at least nine different layers of wallpaper.
I really like the black one at the left. If we could find something similar I think it could make a great accent wall.
With the softboard off we’re back to the brick.
The house burned in 1952 and was re-built inside the original triple brick shell (but changed from a two story to a 1 1/2 story). The black lines in the brick are the charred remains of the wood lath that they set into the inner layer of brick to give something to nail the internal wall finish to. This wall will become an interior wall once the back addition is insulated, so we’re thinking of leaving it natural brick.
Need to clean up this mess and make some more. Good that a lot of the mess can go straight into the wood stove.
Today we want to get some of the ceiling down to see if our idea of leaving the beams exposed is going to be feasible.















