Monday, August 3, 2015

Curiosities of Cabinets

They're back, Carol Ann. After a long (and slightly stinky) stay in a storage container, cabinets from the original house kitchen and apartment kitchen have been refurbished to make up the kitchen island and bar.
The old wooden cabinets from the original house's main kitchen were cleaned, painted, and fitted with new, invisible hinges and new handles. The first limestone counter pieces were mis-cut, so Phil the carpenter made a beautiful temporary wood counter while we waited for replacements.
The wood cabinets when we last saw them


Original dividers lined with contact paper

Original potato and onion baskets
Remember these?
Cleaned and powdercoated, they are now the bar cabinets, topped with butcher block salvaged from Laura's parents' neighbor's house during a renovation in the 1980s.





Awaiting an under-counter light.









Sunday, July 12, 2015

House of Shards

Building a house is messy. Building a new house on top of an old basement is messier. Here is a sampling.

One of the previous owners was fond of affixing things to the basement walls: cabinets, hooks, shelves. To secure the screws, he use plastic sleeves, and slivers of wood, some that would function as serviceable vampire stakes. We removed them by screwing a drywall screw halfway in, then pulling the sleeve out with a claw hammer. We filled the holes with cement. Problem solved!







Someone's toy horse emerged from the earth around the house.
The old standby cigarette pack shim
The television schedule from December 28, 1963

Lots of water
And mud
Mud dripping down the walls
And on the window frames
Oozing insulation
Excess insulation cut off to accommodate the drywall
Dust, lots of dust

Messages from the past
Extra venting
Various construction trash
Metal filings
The end of a corrugated steel siding sheet
Still don't know who these belong to























Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Galvanizing

The two-story part of the house is sided in corrugated steel plates, screwed into furring strips and framed by a system similar to the one used with the fiber cement siding. This feature of the house also required us to request a variance from the Board of Zoning Appeals.


To shed water, the plates overlap like roof shingles, and are installed bottom to top on the wall.

To keep the plates flush agains the house, there is a rivet at the bottom of each plate, centered between the lower screws. 
How the adjacent walls clad in steel join
How the steel joins the fiber cement
These plates are still awaiting rivets. You can see the plates bowing out a little at the bottoms.




Robert installed quite a bit of the siding before heading back to Minnesota.


Kegan cutting a steel plate

Keith pulling the protective plastic off the windows while descending from the finished south wall.

Dave, triumphant after installing the final plate.
Siding complete, lawn seeded, and temporary plywood stepping stones placed where gravel paths to main and west entrances will go.