Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Thanksgiving day

We have arrived at one of our many "deadline dates" and instead of "arriving" we have taken several detours that are leaving us pretty close to where we were a month ago.

Detour # 1- I decided to remove the white book cases in the office. They are too damaged and shallow to be much use.

Detour # 2- Once the book cases were no longer holding up the walls, the plaster  decided to fall down.




Detour # 3- New drywall, plaster and priming takes an extra day.

Detour # 4- After removing the bookcases and old plaster on three of the four walls, a fourth area (below) decided to crack and buckle and we went back to demolition mode again.

Good news, our painter is also a drywaller and is willing to work through the Thanksgiving holiday to get us back on track.

Bad news, we don't have any drywall available and all of the stores are closed today, dah!  I imagine we may be the only people looking for drywall on Thanksgiving.

Word to the wise. Remove all exterior plaster walls during demolition. They will need to be removed eventually and doing it after you have put away your demo equipment is a real pain, especially on Thanksgiving morning.

Lath and plaster wall begins to buckle after the crew tried to save it with a layer of new plaster.  It had to be totally removed.


We think we can see the end of this very long tunnel, but G and J arrive tomorrow night and finding a clean place to put them is going to be a challenge. The plummer, cabinet guy and drywaller will all be furiously trying to put the house in order tomorrow and the next day, but I am not planning on having much of a guest room by tomorrow night.

Final look at the office with carpet sample and freshly painted walls.

Monday, March 28, 2016

Searching for doors...


The "Eastlake" door, designed by a British architect, has a distinctive design with specific detail around the recessed panels. The code words "Eastlake 5-P 33x80" allowed us to rummage through over 3,500 doors in 5 hours and find 6 doors that fit the description.

Here is what we currently have in our house and below are the "treasures" we found in Berkeley.



Urban Ore and Omega Salvage boasted thousands of reclaimed doors from the beautiful San Francisco Victorians. They were not exaggerating!!  We spent an entire day going through salvaged doors. Stacked in long aisles like this. Word to the wise...This is not a trip for the faint of heart or the non-robust shopper. It took us about 5 hours to locate 6 doors among the more than 3,500 possible doors.

One in 100 doors that come into the salvage world is an Eastlake, and we needed specific sizes to fit our design. A bit of a "needle in a haystack experience". Most old doors run narrow, around 27-29 inches. We needed  32 inch interior doors and one exterior door that was at least 34 inches.  We also needed 2 identical pocket doors to fit a 9 feet tall opening.




The varying heights give you an idea of the many shortening events these doors have sustained over the years. Carpet installations were probably the main reason for chopping the doors. Urban Ore had broad categories of doors like short, tall, extra tall, and solid core.  Not a lot to go on, especially when you don't know the Dewey Decimal system for doors.

Between these two locations, and a generous friend who had an Eastlake exterior door in her garage, we managed to fill every doorway with authentic, solid core, Eastlake doors. I can't wait to see them hung.


The identical 9 foot pocket doors. These weight about 150 pounds a piece. They will need to be joined together to make one massive sliding pocket door.  I am sure my contractor will groan when he sees them. They are monsters. When doing a restoration, you just have to love the authenticity even when the price is a aching back.
 This beautiful old door will be our back entrance. Original, wavy, leaded glass makes it look spectacular and the "Apple" sticker tells me it hasn't been living in a warehouse for long.
These two pristine doors were a wonderful find.

The final two doors we found had survived a fire and will need some TLC to get them back in shape.

I ended up with one extra exterior door (not pictured) that is only 29 inches wide, too small for my entrances. Using Houzz and Pintrist, I found wonderful options for using this door for the pantry or cabinet in the dining room. It will need some glue and glass, but once it is finished it will add another element of "new/old" for our house.






We begin again...

We have been "on a break" since Christmas Day 2015. During that time we have used an 18-inch opening to move from the kitchen to dining room, walked on plywood kitchen floors, enjoyed the challenge of minimal kitchen cabinets, no counter space and the occasional power outage due to overloading the circuits.

Today, that all ended.  The 18-inch opening was closed, the kitchen was demolished and now we have a temporary kitchen without the luxury of a sink or dishwasher and we consider ourselves lucky.
Here is how the day went.


Pre-demo "future dining room view" Ceilings 8 feet high. Adjacent bathroom still in tact.
Post demo "future dining room view". Original ceilings (10 feet) revealed, the lead paint is in remarkably good shape. A pre-existing boarded window is exposed on the right.  Original back yard window height can be seen where the ceiling and plaster is removed.  This  was a double-hung, 8 foot window. (so strange that they darkened the kitchen as part of a 1960's remodel)

Pre-demo "future laundry room" view shows the existing  cabinets, dropped ceiling and the little over-sink window.

Mid-demo (above on right)  cabinets and plaster removed, but dropped ceiling still in place. The sink window's  full footprint exposed and goes higher than the dropped ceiling.
Post-demo "future laundry room" with 10 foot ceilings and exposed double hung, high window on right. Plaster is gone, lath remains on one wall. We can see some Douglas Fir original, old forest  wood floor that was below the cabinets. This wood will be reclaimed.

Tomorrow all of the plaster will go.
Pre-demo view of "future open concept" into living room. This is the 18-inch walk through (on the right)  that has allowed us to continue to access our kitchen. The opening will be sealed off during construction to keep our living space (on the other side) dust free.
Post- demo view of "open concept". A temporary plywood wall has been installed to seal us off, washer/dryer removed and message wall removed. This area will eventually be completely opened up. Our 18 inch walk-through as become the "walk-around". Around the house, that is. The only way to get from front of house to the back is out the front door and in the side door.

Pre-demo last look from the "clean side" before the divider went up. (Below) We now have our refrigerator, microwave and all of the comforts of home packed into our "temporary kitchen". At least the wine cabinet is on our side.We expect to live with our temporary kitchen for about 4 months.

Post demo close-up of the over-sink window. They literally put a piece of plywood on the exterior, painted it and called it an exterior wall. The window frame was left in place and covered with a bit of drywall, strategically placed cabinets, and the dropped ceiling to cover the scar on the inside. (Look back 7 photos to see the "pre" of this area above the sink. No idea why anyone would board up such a nice, high, sunny window.


I could really appreciate it if it wasn't so darn toxic.



First dumpster load.