Sunday, November 30, 2008
Family Work Day II
Thanksgiving weekend. This year it was in Nebraska, so I thought it would be "fun" on Saturday for the whole family, especially my talented nephews to join in the activities for some construction bonding. Everyone worked really hard as usual. Cheryl, Velma, Shannon and Rhonda had some unexpected late season gardening in damp cold weather to plant a million tulip bulbs while Tom, Liem, and Gary installed the support post in the basement and mixed and poured close to 1000 pounds of concrete for the footing. Owen and Miles helped their dad take down more lath in the kitchen and they also helped Grandma remove nails in the basement work area. Priming, cleaning, and other tasks kept everyone busy as well, and Shannon kept everyone fed with great organic food. Michelle had her hands full keeping Eli out of danger since he is now walking. All in all it was a successful work day and we celebrated that evening with dinner at a Chinese restaurant.


Saturday, November 22, 2008
On Closer Inspection
This weekend's goal was to get two of the windows set permanently into their openings. This got thrown off course when I started checking the individual glass lites of the custom grill pattern and measured almost one-half inch difference in the four horizontal divisions - on the manufacturer's drawing that we approved they were specified to have identical widths. We thought a major window manufacturer should be able to achieve a better tolerance than +/- one quarter inch, so now we're waiting on a call back from Pella. Hmmm.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Windows
Another reason today was big, five shiny new Pella windows arrived! The windows took quite a bit of deliberation and design work as both Shannon and Gary learned more than they ever wanted to about sashes, muntins, Prairie School patterns, aluminum cladding, tempered glass, sill heights and a million other details. Shannon even had Ed Zimmer - Lincoln city historian - come over to consult. He pointed us to some great examples of venerable Lincoln homes in the established neighborhoods near B and C streets. We adapted one to our liking and drove the Pella salesman crazy trying to specify and order a custom-made grill pattern. But they arrived and it was all worth it to see one sitting in its opening on a trial basis (still need to do the exterior trim work), and to see how much more light is in the kitchen already!

First Inspection
Basement Hole
Since we will be moving a load-bearing wall in the kitchen, the support beam taking its place needs to sit on some posts. This required a deeper footing in the basement to take the load. We cut through the basement floor using a diamond blade in the circular saw. The post will land right next to the existing stairs so we had to remove part of the stairs in order to be able to cut under it, then brace it back together again. While doing this we discovered that someone had penciled labels on some of the treads - “Fisk” (the original architect in 1925).
The diamond blade in the circular saw worked pretty well but made the basement look like Mount St. Helens after the dust settled even though we used the shop vac to try to catch the clouds.
We also had to brace an existing post which happened to sit on the very square of concrete that needed removal. Surprisingly, the concrete was only a couple of inches thick, but that was fortunate in this case since the circular saw only has about 2.5-3 inches of usable cutting depth.
The diamond blade in the circular saw worked pretty well but made the basement look like Mount St. Helens after the dust settled even though we used the shop vac to try to catch the clouds.
We also had to brace an existing post which happened to sit on the very square of concrete that needed removal. Surprisingly, the concrete was only a couple of inches thick, but that was fortunate in this case since the circular saw only has about 2.5-3 inches of usable cutting depth.
Family Work Day
Starting the Kitchen
After the re-wiring reached the kitchen, we had to suspend that and turn to doing all the rest of the stuff needed before the kitchen could be re-wired, which basically meant gutting it, re-framing, installing windows, moving the wall, etc. Here's a couple of "before" shots.


Then we began tearing off plaster, removing cabinets, and the like. Here's the kitchen sans cabinets.


Then we began tearing off plaster, removing cabinets, and the like. Here's the kitchen sans cabinets.
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