Tag Archives: Home

Deck and Siding Removal

Step 1 of the new construction is to remove the siding from the east side of the house – revealing very ugly yellow clapboard riddled with holes from the blown in insulation.

Step 2 begins tomorrow as the east side of the foundation is excavated.  New drainage goes in along the wall, the concrete blocks will be parged and a basement will be dug for the mud/laundry/bathroom.

New Floors

As part of our home remodeling we ended up with new hardwood flooring where they did the wall removal work. This is where the old bathroom was at one point and where we ripped up the carpet in the living room.  It was a lot of work to move all our furniture out of the house and stored it in the upstairs or barn.

While we were vacationing at Keuka Lake our floors were refinished.  They are bright and clean.  Below looking both ways up and down the hall.

The living room and bedroom showing Kathryn’s new closet.

Planting Trees

Each spring we get trees through Oneida County Soil and Water Conservation District.  We have mainly planted spruce trees as windbreaks, but also some white birch and lilacs.  This year I ordered 50 spruce trees, 10 lilacs and 10 red oaks.  The trees came in on Saturday morning.  I traveled to Schoharie on Saturday for our High School reunion meeting and left for Bellevue, Nebraska on Sunday morning.  Kathryn ended up planting all the trees with a little bit of help.

Home Re-Modeling Phase 1

We have been planning our home re-modeling for the past couple years. This remodeling breaks down into two major projects.  One major project is to built an attached garage with a mud room, pantry, laundry and 1/2 bath connecting it to our house.  This past summer we began contracted to have our basement drainage re-done, brought in a lot of fill to begin that project.  We are letting the fill settle for a year (or two or three) before building the garage.

The other major project is to remodel the interior of our house.  This project includes:

  • Using 1 of the 3 first floor bedrooms for a new, larger, more modern bathroom
  • Expanding the size of our master bedroom
  • Opening up the entrance way to the living room and installing pocket doors.  Our living room faces south with a large (9’x6′) picture window. Going through nu-eco.com.au/ helps in getting a lot of window design options. The view is nice and the solar gain is great during the winter.  We want to allow this warmer air to circulate throughout the house.
  • Opening up closets in foyer and Eric’s bedroom
  • Along the way we will be moving electrical switches, power plugs, and telephone jacks
  • Finally we are removing our cast iron steam radiators and installing a new hot water boiler and radiant heat for the 1st floor. You must have a look at the new boiler cost and know which one to get.

In the past few weeks we have been trying to move furniture, weed out books, clothes and nick-knacks.  It will probably take a couple of months to complete the structural items to be followed by weeks of painting and wallpapering.

Foundation and Fill Work

For the past year or two Kathryn and I have been going through the anguish of long term planning.  Given Eric and semi-stable jobs we decided to plan on being in the area for the next 12 years.  Specifically we decided we like where we live; the specific location and land despite winters and snow.  The issue is that our current domicile is not very handicapped accessible; one has to climb a set of stairs to get into the house and then there are still issues.  Primarily, one small bathroom and laundry facilities in the basement.  We considered looking at other homes for sale or building a home but kept coming back to how much we enjoyed our current location: a great view, ponds and wildlife, no neighbors in proximity, available land, existing landscaping, etc.

If we wanted to stay in the same place long term we needed to make some re-modeling decisions.  We engaged an architect, which has been both rewarding and frustrating, and came up with an initial set of plans.    Given the economy and the hit our retirement and investments took we broke the remodeling into phases.

Phase 1 involved improving the drainage around the north wall of the foundation and bringing in fill to permit a garage and mud room/half bath/laundry room to be constructed on the same level as the house.  I wanted to get the fill in to allow it to settle for a year prior commencing any further phases.

Well as they say, the best laid plans of mice and men…..

We began phase 1 on Monday and it is evident why new drainage was needed was needed along the north wall.  Even without any recent rain there was water laying next to the foundation.

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When the foundation was dug out it was evident why new drainage was needed.  The existing drainage pipe was clogged, had no stone around it and the basement wall had not been tarred or sealed.  With water laying next to the foundation blocks for 59 years the bottom row of blocks started to deteriorate and need replacing.

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So already our ‘drainage’ project has expanded into a ‘replace the wall’ project.  This weekend I remove the internal shelving and walls adjacent to the north wall such that next week the wall can be demolished and rebuilt.

Meanwhile, fill was being brought in to level the east side of the lawn with the existing house.

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We need a lot of fill.  This is looking from the existing driveway, near the barn up the new drive way towards the house. We are going to end up sloping this fill down towards the honey locust tree so we have a ‘mowable’ slope.  But we can use other fill for that.

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A panoramic view of the situation.  We are removing the remaining lilac trees and relocating a temporary driveway over about 8-10′ so we can still get to the house with the car as needed.  Hopefully, this slope will tie in with the slope near the barn when everything is completed.

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