Diary of a Mad House Builder

Winter views

Skylight reflection

View from the new Master suite
Not going crazy. Not yet. But definitely crazed with a more than full life, which is my excuse for the paltry number of entries I post on my blog. I know the other bloggers are giving it their all – 2, 3x a day. Obviously, they have no other life. I limit my access to the Internet as well, since we all know that it can suck hours out of your day.

Steve's favorite perch on the ridge - reinstalling the solar panels
And now, not to waste anymore of yours –my news on the house building.
We’re in that phase of stagnation, which I point out in my home remodeling planning courses (upcoming in Falmouth, Sandwich, Lexington, & Lincoln/Sudbury – write me for more info) is one of the psychological down periods where its hard to discern what progress is actually being made. Following the highs of seeing the exterior completed, though Pete’s Shingles still has a precious few pieces left to install, and the framing completed, we’ve been in the electrical and plumbing roughing stage for what seems like weeks.
The wall frames are there, and nothing much changes physically from day to day, and people seem to be there working, most days, but great leaps of change are not evident. It’s a subtle period.
There are miles of electrical wire however, now tying the entire house together – another precaution against the wind?
- Wiring Men At Work
And you can follow white PVC tubing from the depths of the basement, to the heights of the solar panels – creating a strong link from room to room. Plenty of “tweaking” is going on: a movable platform covering the old bulkhead, now located in Jonathan’s studio, the bar wall framing so the cabinet maker, Bill, could visualize how to connect the glass-sided boxes to the wall and ceiling, the redesign of the remaining bathroom that was going to happen at a later phase, but why not just do it now, and other related activities.

A Big Hole is dug for a new retaining wall - This will hold up the catwalk and patio

Another view of the Big Hole

Concrete forms go on

Voila - we have a wall

Fill it in and you have the makings of a patio too.
I have been working closely with Steve to finish up all the details. There have been lighting schedules, door schedules, flooring schedules – all depicting the individual elements of each finish item room by room. Every doorknob gets considered, every window sash, every bookcase and closet shelf. The beauty will be in the details, and our success, how well we stay on top of these.

Shingling is almost done

I could describe how the new shower surround came in with a laser cut that was so wobbly as to disgrace the medium and how I spent half a day last week finding a suitable – meaning quick and relatively cost effective – solution. But I won’t. Just suffice to say that one should remember the time commitment required for this endeavor, and the possibility of insanity setting in as you get overwhelmed with the number of decisions that need to be made each day, at a moment’s notice.
Oh, you can take your time with decisions. That is certainly an option. But the price you will pay is time – the time it takes to finish the project. We’re definitely working on a deadline. We need to be in sometime in May for all kinds of reasons – family-related and otherwise. So delaying decisions will just prolong our finishing date, the agony, and our insanity, and forestall our ecstasy.
Jonathan was on hand today as I was up in Boston. He organized the team of technology experts from Nantucket Sound as they wired up the sound system throughout the main floor. Meanwhile, up in Boston, I was touring the finished product of a “This Old House” project in Cambridge that I’ll be doing an article on, that also included what they called an “audio room”. I call our wiring Mecca the technology closet, but clearly I am downplaying the importance of this brain trust. All signals will lead back to this intersecting spot – music, Internet, television. What I don’t get is why we had to be so over wired when everything is going wireless? Keep my mouth shut – huh?
After my tour in Cambridge, I went over to visit our kitchen cabinets, under construction in Brighton. Lots of progress since I last visited in early December (good thing). The deadline is still set for March 1, and given the number of “boxes” (what the wood guys call these cabinets), it looks like they will make it. The boxes are gorgeous! The wood is phenomenal – grainy, exciting, rich with color and luster. The Makore, or African Cherry, has been applied in its veneer form to the exterior of these birch plywood boxes, and brought to a deep shine with tung oil. This is not going to be a subtle room. There are fair quantities of cabinets and the wood will be making a strong statement, but the size of the space, the lightness of the walls and transparency of the numerous windows will help ease the impact.

The Boxes

Dining Room Table

Table Base
On the other hand, the dining room table, built in a dramatic Purpleheart, will be another powerful visual statement that will demand attention. The sheer size (4’x 8’) and weight (over 700 lbs – does that sound right Bill?) forces you to take this table seriously. The elegant legs have a beautiful line, but don’t look gangly. And the construction looks permanent and strong as an ox. I am really looking forward to putting people around it. Getting a look at these elements just makes you want it all the more.
Well patience, patience. Let’s not get ahead of ourselves. If we keep on schedule, as it seems we may, we’ll have our plumbing, electrical and framing inspections within the next week. The insulation will follow quickly thereafter, and then the wallboards start going up. When this happens, that psychological barometer will swing into overload because progress will again become tangible. Perhaps then the kids won’t say, “It looks the same as the last time I was here.” Oh, from the mouth of babes.

1 Comments:
looks good except for some reason, when you sent the email ( bulk) the link didn't work...try putting in the hole URL...the title is great...
j
Post a Comment
<< Home