Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Bathrooms

So as it stands we have not posted in a long while.

The big reason is we were joined by a wee Bateman on the 1st of March.  His arrival has been lovely, wonderful, exciting.  However, it has in fact, distracted us from the other things we treasure, including our house build.

Over the next few weeks we'll endeavor to lead you thru the next steps, the finishing touches and the final moment of our build.

From this point we will go room to room, because the house at 1 March was going thru a quick transformation.

Today is ... drum roll..... the bathrooms.

Before unveiling pictures it is worth saying that there are some things we had to consider when doing the bathrooms

Showers - tile or cabinet ?
Vanities - wall hung or up from the floor?  How much bench space?  drawers or cupboards?
Grout - white, lite grey, mid grey, dark grey or beige?

Our decisions

Showers - tile for the master bath, cabinet for the spare
Vanities - wall hung with drawers and as much bench space as possible, thanks!


Grout - mid grey


STAGE 1
Master Bath - shower - tile floor to ceiling




The brown tile and the silver tile - the brown is the floor tile and the grey is a detail tile.

Spare bath - Tile around bath and shower cabinet


STAGE 2


Vanity drawer for the wash closet (aka toilet) - this is one of the features of our home that we really like - the separate vanity and toilet.



Spare Bath Cupboard





STAGE 3




We really love this combination of tile. 

It is a small bathroom so this was hard to get a good picture - but here it is with the shower to the right. We also used the light fixture pictured above the vanity and basin in both the spare bath and the toilet.















Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Week 15 - Filing in the blanks

Filing in the blanks is the rule today.  We've got just a moments before our baby arrives, imminently, so, after slacking for a good 5 weeks we thought we had better get in gear and give ya'll and update.

Before we go into the brief update we have to say that we have learned another valuable lesson.

Lesson #5: Be specific, be nosey (aka ask a LOT of questions!), and when things don't meet expectations negotiate getting them fixed!

We found in this last round of accomplishments that a few products didn't turn out the way we expected.  Chalk it up to inexperience.

In one case we didn't know that the cladding was short by .5 of a metre and that there would be a join at the seams.  In another case, when we asked for screws on our doors but we didn't know that the joiner would use surface screws instead of counter sunk.

The great news is we were able to negotiate (lock this into your head, repeat it with us "negotiate") to get this stuff fixed.

The bad news is we wouldn't have to be in the fixing stage for some of this stuff:
a. if we had been super specific, like draw pictures, (a skill learned way back in primary school, and often neglected by adults), and;
b. if we had been way more nosey and investigated the plus and minus tolerances of things like the cladding lengths, or asked the joiner about his standard method.

Put this lesson deep into your pockets right now, but of course, NOT deep enough to get lost or slip through that hole you've been meaning to get mended.

Now, onto the great stuff Stonewood is doing for us!

Here is the list of goings on:
-drainage dug - check!
-cladding up - check!
-gib and plastering fixed - check!
-coving and trim mounted - check!
-doors fitted - check!

And here are some pictures to illustrate

DRAINAGE
Drainage at the front of the property


Up close of our sewer connection.

CLADDING
The cladding(siding) is on its way, as well as the plastered chimney!

Cladding on the backside of the house... so tidy!


GIB AND PLASTERING
No - he is not a clown - he's our plaster guy!

The lounge.

And up close of our plastering inspector...ha! (Gross - this fella was huge- probably about 2-3 inches long in the bod with even creepier legs!)

COVING AND TRIM
Tim & coving in the corner alcove of our lounge.


DOORS

Doors onsite waiting to be installed

Gavin opened the pocket slider and what did he find?

A Mother in law!

This door will be where Henry hangs out for snacks. (aka the pantry!)


Monday, January 23, 2012

Week 10 - the "Ups" and "Downs"

Ok, I admit this is a play on words.  The Ups and Downs of building have hit us in many ways since before Christmas.  At our last post you saw walls go up, exterior Ecoply put in, and we were still waiting on the roof.

We are please to say, that the Roof is now UP, however, it was a bit of an unexpected journey to the top.

We committed to putting DOWN the flooring for the main living area and the hallway.  A lovely hardwood floor which has been waiting in storage for 9 years.  A solid matai wood with more recently bought jarrah edging.  So, the roofers were to finish before Christmas break.  We would be away for a week and then we would return, lay the floor while no tradies were on the property.

Wouldn't life be grand if it worked as planned?!

Well it didn't in this case. The roofers ran out of roofing by 100 tiles and the tile distributor went on vacation, and wham bam... hole in the roof.  Now, in warm, desert climates in the middle of summer, this would be a breeze.  In New Zealand it was a downpour, literally through one section of the roof, which happened to be adjacent to the area where the hardwood was to be laid.  

Lesson #4: Wet floor and hardwood do not mix.

Overall this resulted in a change to the plan, the order of laying our precious floor was meant to be like this:
  • seal floor
  • measure and cut wood to fit
  • glue and lay floor
  • allow to dry
  • done
However it was more like this

  • patch roof with tarp
  • dry room with dehumidifier and heater
  • measure and cut wood to fit while floor dries
  • pull up measured and cut wood, label each individual piece and stack in neat piles
  • seal floor once dry
  • glue and lay floor
  • allow to dry
  • done
While this may not seem like a huge diversion from the first plan, the fact is the wood had to be touched twice. Instead of measuring, cutting, glueing and laying, the wood had to be measured, cut and fitted on one day.  Pulled up, labeled, put in ordered stacks on another day.  Then on an entirely different day it was finally glued and laid.  

Needless to say we got there in the end, and so did the roofers.  They showed up, apologized, and finished the work the week after we the floor was laid.

Here are some beautiful pictures to illustrate:

                      The Floor
Cutting, while we wait for the floor to dry.

Another action shot... so much to do!
Floor is finally dry so we seal it up - that's the dark green stuff. According to Gavin it's gooey and REALLY hard to spread.


Glue is added using a V-notch trowel.


The floor is laid onto the glue, weighted and clamped.

The floor now looks like this - just needs a bit of evening off at the edges.  Unfortunately we didn't get any pics of the post trimming for this blog.

Floor is then covered with Ram Board for protection from the "other guys", voila!



The Roof - Done!

So beautiful.
Other events in the previous weeks (My mother is peering over my shoulder... she is a hard out home renovator. Both she and Gavin are here for what I thought was moral support... it turns out they treat their roles as multi functional. They have added spell check and style guide to their job descriptions as well as moral support, how lucky I am.) 

As before...other events in the last few weeks have been marginally slow, I guess that's what happens when the building of our house is plopped right in the middle of a national 2+ weeks of holiday.

So here is the rest of progress to date:

If you look hard you will see it... PLASTER! yep, that's right, some of the cladding is up.

Ooh... what a sexy fireplace.

Last, but not least, batts (aka insulation for the americanas reading along), wiring, plumbing, and gas! Now we just have to wait for the pre-lining inspection and the drywall will go up!


Sunday, January 1, 2012

Weeks 4 & 5 - From Trusses to Glass

So MUCH has happened since the 13th of December, our last  post.  

Since the 13th:

  • ·      Trusses are up
  • ·      Eco-ply up
  • ·      Flashings up
  • ·      Windows in
·   
All of this has been done between the 13th and the 23rd - in just 9 days.

Here is a brief summary in photos:

Trusses up!



Ecoply, awaiting installation
Eco ply up!



The house is looking great, it is really beginning to look like a house :) 


Flashings (this silver bits) are added to protect the Ecoply seams



Windows arrive


We were really excited about the windows.  I didn't think they would be so big or look so nice.




and they function too!  Gavin giving a demonstration...


The roof was also mostly installed - pictures at the next blog.  There is one patch that is missing, so we will be in touch with the roofers to find out the why once the New years holiday in NZ ends.

Additionally an in wall vac has been installed and some wiring too!

All in all, despite the roofing hick up, things are looking grand.




Tuesday, December 13, 2011

From Slab to shape - Week 3 begins -

On the 12th we told you all about Weds the 7th, the ring foundation, underfloor heating etc... we left all of our readers excited about a simple piece of concrete:

a simple piece of concrete

A day later left us with our jaws dropped, our eyes blinking in shock and Jenn doing a funny victory dance through our "house"... Simply put we were WOW'd at the builders accomplishments.  

We left work at 4:45p.m. and arrived on site at 5 and this is what we found:
All of the wall framing up and in place!

The builder's had been very busy!  Of course this is the benefit of pre-nailed frames ... efficient and up in a day.  The  additional benefit is that for the first time we got to tour the place, feel the space, experience a little glimmer of what we will one day call home.  *sigh* *tear*... etc etc etc...

It was really fantastic to walk through the hallway, gaze out the lounge windows... big empty holes in the wall and to imagining entertaining and relaxing in home sweet home.


 Needless to say, we were very pleased!
looking "pleased"!
And tomorrow -- the trusses go up!




May the victory dances long continue!