SEARCH

Google




ARCHIVES BY CATEGORY

December 2009

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31    

Return to the Home Remodeling Help Blog | May 2007 »

September 28, 2006

Small Bathroom Remodel

I was 7 months pregnant when we decided to tackle the 2nd floor bathroom.  It all started with the thought that we could freshen it up with a little paint.  The bathroom had yellow and black tiles for a tub surround and going halfway up the walls, and had nasty yellow square floor tiles.  I looked it up online, and we double-checked at the paint store.  Sure, you can paint tile.  Just use this epoxy paint!

So, I started by scuffing up the tile with a sander, then painted on the primer, which really made a huge difference!  The only problem... next day when I pulled back a little of the masking tape I had used to protect the walls, the primer came off with it. 

So we called the "home improvement hotline" -- i.e., my parents.  "Dad, is it hard to remove tile?"  He said no, we should be able to knock it right off with a chisel and hammer. 

Sure enough, when we attacked the tile wall, a couple of tiles broke away easily -- only to reveal the OTHER layer of tiles (a lovely shade of 1940s pink).  Actually, I think I could have lived with pink tiles, if we would have been able to remove all the residue of cement that the yellow tiles were stuck to them with.  However, that was impossible.  The only answer was to remove BOTH layers of tiles.  The pink layer was a much more difficult matter to remove.  That is the understatement of the year.  It had been applied by imbedding it in mortar and metal lathe.  It took a sledge hammer to break any of it loose, and after that we found we had better luck getting through to the lathe and cutting out sections with a wire cutter.  We had to pull the lathe free of the studs.  Yes, we were down to the studs.  And all this had started as a simple paint job!

Similarly, there were two layers of tile on the floor. The pink layer were tiny little squares.  It took a lot of pounding with the sledge hammer, which at one point sent a hunk plaster crashing down through a plumbing access panel in the kitchen ceiling, and actually poking holes in the plaster of the kitchen ceiling.  Nothing a little joint compound couldn't fix though.

Finally, the bathroom was completely gutted.  There were about 80 garbage bags full of debris on the curb.  HEAVY debris. 

We had kept the ceiling but stripped the little bit of plaster that there was off the walls.  We installed cement backer-board around the tub, because my dad (a plumber) said it was more absorbant so if the surround leaked, the walls would hold the water so it would not leak into the rest of the house. 

Here is a key point that will save you a lot of trouble if you've never cut cement backerboard before:  DO NOT USE A CIRCULAR SAW.  You don't need it for one thing.  You can score the cement backerboard with Stanley knife just like you do with drywall, and break it on the score.  We had set up our cutting station in our living room, and cut with the circular saw.  The dust that filled the house sent me into a sobbing fit like my husband had not seen yet in our marriage.  I'm sure it was partly the great offense to my nesting instinct, but oh the MESS, dust on everything we owned.  The Stanley knife method is much less dusty.

We put greenboard drywall up around the rest of the bathroom, and a plywood subfloor down.  The day that subfloor went in was a very happy day. 

It was our first experience taping drywall, and we didn't do the best job sanding the seams... my dad actually sanded them again after we had the walls primed, and they were a little better.  We used a textured wallpaper for the lower part of the walls, which hid a lot of mistakes especially around the plumbing under the sink, where we had to make some tricky cuts.

The most memorable adventure of all by far was the Battle of the Toilet Flange.  In the process of removing tile with a sledgehammer, the old flange had been inadvertantly damaged.  It had to be replaced.  This is not something that has to be done very often, if ever.  They aren't really meant to come back off.  And our flange was not budging!  This time we consulted with my grandfather, who was more familiar with 1940s plumbing.  He said the flange was probably held in with lead and rope sodder.  He suggested engine oil to loosen it.  With a vice clamp (the kind you squeeze to open) on each of two sides of the flange, and lots of engine oil down the crack, it finally started to budge, and with some jiggling back and forth and a lot of unintelligible noises from my DH, it finally pulled loose.

Another thing we did was move the light switch to the wall next to the door frame (instead of right by the sink) so we could switch the door so it opened to the wall, instead of banging into the toilet. That was when we found out that the room was crooked.  The door was no where even close to fitting back into the opening once we switched it around. We ended up buying a new door, which my DH and my dad fiddled with until they had it cut to the right shape and size.  As for the floor of the room, to this day it is probably still slanted.  It's not noticeable unless you're looking for it, and the lovely vinyl floor we put in makes up for all grievances. 

So here are the before and after bathroom remodel photos.

BELOW - This picture was taken when we were looking at the house before we bought it, when the previous owners still lived there.  Can you believe we bought this place? :

Small bathroom remodel - before photo

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BELOW - Here is the tub surround after the remodel (no more tile around the heating vent!).  The installation of the surround was interesting, since the standard ones didn't QUITE fit.  We actually wound up buying two surrounds, and the panel behind the shower head was shorter than the others, but we made it work:

Small bathroom remodel - after picture

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BELOW - Here's a bathroom BEFORE photo taken from the hallway (a nice view of the yellow tile floor):

 

Small bathroom remodel - before photo 2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BELOW - And here's the AFTER bathroom remodel photo taken from the hallway:

 

Small bathroom remodel - after photo 2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BELOW - One more view of the remodeled bathroom:

Small bathroom remodel - after photo 3

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By the way, the night I went into labor, I showered in our basement bathroom.  But it wasn't too long after the baby was born that the bathroom was completely finished.

Our Remodeled Cape Cod House

Here's a view of our dearly beloved and fondly remembered Cape Cod house, which we remodeled from top to toe.  Though a small house, it felt very comfortable to live in (the living room felt downright spacious) and it was a very solid old brick house.  Oh I miss it!

After-remodel picture of our Cape Cod house.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Click here to view a bigger version of this after-house-remodel picture.

 

Here's the view of the screened porch we put on, and what was once the really unkempt and overgrown back yard of a corner lot now contains a beautiful new house (we sold it to a builder who had taken care of all the details of subdividing).  Our house now had a smaller lot, but a cleaner one, and the neighborhood improved in value with the building of the new luxurious home next door. (We also worked out a timely deal with the builder to put a concrete driveway which went right up to our back door, there was just enough room to park one car there.  Now the house had off-street parking!)  There's a nice view of the porta-potty here too.  Great...

Another view of the remodeled Cape Cod house.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Click here to view a bigger version of this other after-house remodel picture.

 

So much of the work happened on the inside, but from the exterior you can see all the brand-new replacement windows we had installed.  That was a learning experience.  The first few windows we contracted through Home Depot.  Then we learend about a company that did wholesale window installations out of Baltimore, and they did the rest of the house for like, half the price of Home Depot.  Plus, the Home Depot installation guy did a poor job on caulking one of our windows - we had rain water pouring in one day.  The other guys were maybe not quite as neat with the caulk, but the windows were sealed quite well.  These combination windows were awesome.  You could tilt in the top to clean them, they had safety latches so the kids couldn't fall out a second story window but you could still have them open a little for breeze, and they were such a nice clean white color against the red brick of the house. 

Another thing you can view from the exterior is the chimney cap.  It was one of only a couple things a home inspector had flagged on the inspection when we bought the house (boy did we find the things he missed subsequently...).  We didn't want it to hold up the sale, so we had one installed.  A pest-removal guy (who came to get the squirrels out of our attic) was extremely impressed by our super-duper deluxe chimney cap.

We had new siding put on the back of the house.  It only had siding on a small part of the back, on the second floor above a first floor bedroom that for some reason didn't have a second floor counterpart above it (ie, the master bedroom on the 2nd floor overlooked the roof of this room.  There was a crack running the length of the room on the ceiling from where the 2nd story met that room, because of water getting in, hence we had to replace that part of the roof as well. 

The best curb-appeal improvement to the house happened courtesy of Hurricane Isabella and our insurance company.  Isabella ripped one side of the screen porch off, so we got some money to repair it.  We installed vinyl railings and vinyl pillars, and put up new screens.  It was a great place to hang out and catch a breeze in the evening (when the breeze wasn't blowing our way from the direction of the porta-potty anyway).

We did some landscaping, of course.  We planted a maple tree in the front yard to make up for the huge old tree we unfortanately caused to be cut down when we sold the back part of the lot to the builder.  We pulled out some overgrown evergreen shrubs around the foundation, and put in some new shrubs, including some pretty rhodedendrons, azaleas and hydrangeas - favorites in gardens throughout Maryland, I had noticed.  We put a bed in on the front corner of the lot and planted a few evergreen shrubs, then stuck in a few mums when we put the house on the market - a nice punch of color.

In summary, by the time we sold it, we had the house exactly the way we want it.  Figures.

September 08, 2006

The experience of buying our first home (Cape Cod style)

For over three years our lives were wrapped up with fixing up our 1949 Cape Cod-style home.  I will never forget the day we bought it.  It was a week or so before our wedding day.  The house was in MD, we were getting married in my hometown in WI, and we were off to Rome for 10 days on our honeymoon right after the wedding; we had to get this home-buying business over with before the wedding.  We needed to close on the closing day we had set or we wouldn't have anywhere to live when we got back from our honeymoon.

The final walk-through was scheduled just before the closing appointment.  We should not have closed with the house in the condition it was left. The previous owners had left the basement exterior door open.  The walls of the basement were alive... with huge black crickets. I had never seen so many crickets before. The door was closed to the basement bathroom; when we opened the door, we were amost knocked over by the smell of mildew, as old wet rugs were rotting away in there.

Upstairs, the only trouble was standing water in the 2nd floor bathtub, which was clogged up, and the fact that the previous owners had exchanged a really pretty light-switch plate with one that had a clown and balloons on it.   But the basement was really what made my heart sink.

At the closing, the husband and wife (he was a lot older than her, he was caucasian, she was Indian or something) were at war with each other.  At one point we had to go into another room with our realtor while they worked something out with the lawyer.  Finally we somehow got all the paperwork done, and --for better or worse-- we owned the house.

The first thing we did was buy a bunch of insect foggers and set them off in the house.  My then-fiance dropped me off at my hotel and went back to his apartment, leaving me to meditate on the monstrosity we had bought.

The next day we came back and found that crickets don't seem to mind bug foggers very much.  They were moving a little slower and I could kill some of them by stepping on them, swatting them, etc.  I got brave and decided to look inside the washing machine.  I found several crickets, and a huge black spider, poised for lunch!  Ugh. 

The floor refinishers arrived that day and pulled all the carpets out, then started sanding the floors upstairs.  My fiance had to work that day.  I was stuck in the basement, trying to clean up.  I disinfected the bathroom to the best of my ability so at least I would feel safer using it. I scrubbed at the mildew on the shower tiles, emptying out bottles of Tilex.  I started painting things, my first time painting really.  It was my initiation into home improvement.  I tried sponge-painting in the basement kitchen (it had been used as an apartment) which was to be my craft area.  A huge spider crawled out from under the baseboard as I worked.  I was painting things lavendar and purple.  What was I thinking?  None of that survived our ultimate remodeling of the house.  But at least it helped me start to feel a little more at home in that house.

The next day I became intoxicated by fumes as they polyurethaned the floors upstairs.  I just kept working in the basement, but that night my tongue was tingling from the poisons in my blood stream.  Duh...

I also spent a day helping my fiance get packed up and cleaned his apartment. His lease was just about up, and he was supposed to stay in the house the night before he came out to Wisconsin.  Well, he was there that night, though he didn't sleep at all... there was so much to do.  I'll have to have him post his version of his experience with this, I know it was a fiasco dealing with cable men and security system installation, etc.  I think I have blocked some of the memories.

Soon we all but forgot about our house concerns as we worried about getting married and going off to Rome, where we had the great honor of receiving a blessing from Pope John Paul II. 

Pope John Paul II blessing our marriage 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

While we were there, terrorists crashed planes into the Twin Towers and the Pentagon and the field in Pennsylvania, and we were not able to fly home as planned.  We were supposed to fly back from Rome through Newark, NJ back to Wisconsin, where we were driving my mini-van to MD.  Instead we got a free flight from the airline to London, spent two days in the airport there til we found a flight to St. Louis, where we rented a car and drove to Wisconsin.  At that point we just wanted to be back home, and were starting to look forward to getting back into our house.

It was still there when we finally got to it.  We started having an exterminator visit regularly and in time there were no more crickets, and eventually he even got rid of the big black spiders that infested the whole place.  The floors, which took a lot more sanding than our floor refinishers had bargained for, turned out beautiful in the end.  Workers who came to the house complimented the solid construction of the place. Gradually we were able to settle in, and my parents came out to visit us frequently, helping us remodel, one huge marathon project at a time.

In my next few entries I'll post some before and after photos and share a little about the home remodeling projects we did.

September 05, 2006

Home Improvement Projects - What am I getting myself into?

Have you ever stood there on the brink of diving into a home improvement project, and stopped for a moment to ponder what you are about to undertake?  "Wait a minute," you say.  "Just exactly what am I getting myself into?"

My dh and I haven't exactly done every home improvement project imaginable, but we've done more than our fair share of them in our handful of years together so far.  For three years we rebuilt, restored, and remodeled a little 1949 Cape Cod brick house, which seemed like the Money Pit at the time, but in the end netted us around $30K.  Now we're on to a 1986 cookie-cutter Colonial.  We might have thought buying a newer home meant less work, but all that has happened is we have a lesser-quality house to start with (they don't build them like they used to), and it needs everything, just as much as the Cape Cod did.  So we are starting some new ones now.

This blog will be our way of sharing with you the nitty gritty of the projects we have undertaken, or presently have underway.  That way, if you are thinking of doing something that we've already done (or tried to do), you'll have the benefit of our experience to give you a heads-up before you dive in.

Our lack of professional expertise in anything remotely related to home improvement is exactly why we are the perfect "experts" to describe projects to other novices.  We speak in lay terms, and define the new words we've learned along the way... you get the picture.  (Did I mention we will share pictures?  Lots of them!)

So keep an eye on home-remodeling-help.com and see what you're getting into!




Hosting by Yahoo!