Posts Tagged ‘Work Weekend’
Posted by Thor
Friday Jan 2, 2009
Its Christmas time and the family is in town, what else is there to do but work.
Our cabinets arrived December 23 filling the garage with boxes big and small. Liz and I came back from Indiana the day after Christmas because I was on call and Liz had to work. If work was slow and I didn’t have get called in I would be able to help Matt and Dad install the cabinets.
I spent Friday doing a massive cleanup project, reclaiming our home from the dust for the living. I did laundry for the first time in our new house with our new washer and dryer that arrived a couple of weeks earlier. I mopped three times and still could not see the rich red of our living room floors, but the dust was slowly disappearing. I’m sure your socks and feet will still get dirty walking around the house, but at least now its not being tracked from one room to the next. After cleaning, Liz came home and grouted some holes in the bath tub tile and I painted the ceiling and kitchen walls white so that we could install cabinets without having to later paint the area. I survived the day without being called in to work.
Early Saturday (7AM), Dad and Matt arrived from Indiana and we started installing the cabinets. Its always slow going at first as you need to establish the high point of the kitchen floor so that all the other cabinets can be set level by shimming them up to that highest point. But the Martin boys were firing on all cylinders and managed to get all the base cabinets in and some of the wall cabinets including the difficult built in refrigerator cabinet before break time.
Our Aunt Lynne and Owen were still in town and Liz’s birthday was the next day so we decided to have our traditional family dinner with Liz’s family at a popular gourmet Mexican restaurant in Oak Park- the New Rebozo. We had a lot of fun with the two families, Uncle Bruce visiting from Texas and a fair amount of Margharita’s. You could tell Liz had a lot of fun with everybody she loves together.
The third day started a little bit later and I knew that I just would not be lucky enough to not get called in for a third day straight to work, but Dad and I got to putting together the wall cabinets having learned a lesson that we could attach a manageble bank of wall cabinets together on the floor and then hang them together on the wall. This proved helpful and allowed us to move on to the bathroom cabinets pretty quickly.
When Matt arrived we threw up the last of the wall cabinets and then brought in the monstrous 8ft high bathroom built in cabinet through a complex manuever via the front door. I finally got called in to work just as we were sitting down to a late lunch. When I got back I helped Dad and Matt muscle in the built-in in a tight fit in the bathroom and admired there completed work in the kitchen.
Posted by Thor
Tuesday Dec 9, 2008
Three days off of work in November for Matt and I and a visit from Dad in the middle of the week and Walah! our old slanted roof of the backroom is gone and replaced by a vaulted ceiling gable roof. Probably the most dramatic change since getting our floors redone happened last week when we tore off the roof of the back room and put up the new roof. It was like an old barn raising without the beards and the lemonade.
If it were only as simple as that.
The first day was spent demolishing the old roof which was complicated first by Dad’s car trouble and most dangerously by the existing power lines that run into the house along the roof line. This involved a lot of sawing sledge hammers, and sheer brute force. The only delicate part was peeling away the roof right next to the existing power line to the house. But a long’s day of work and no electrocutions left a large open air sitting room that Liz could not appreciate during the frosty fall nights. Of course none of the demo pics are available because Liz always seems to have the camera when I’m tearing things up. At the end of the night it looked like one big skylight and we contemplated leaving it that way. But Liz quickly put a nix to that idea because she thought it would be a bit drafty.

Day two started off with the required Home Depot visit. For those looking for a new car, twelve foot long lumber fits nicely into the Mazda 5.

By the end of the day, we had framed in the new back door and the roof rafters. We ended by throwing up the plywood sheeting and it was all coming together. You could finally see the outline of the new gabled roof that matched the house and made the back room look so much more substantial. Inside you could really get a feel for the vaulted ceilings and the size of the room. What had started off as a low dingy carpeted after thought of a room had now become a dynamic space for of light that was its own asset beyond just extending the kitchen. In fact the room was bigger than most of the other rooms in the house. Our trash was becoming overwhelming so we got one of the guys who picks up scrap metal that we leave in the back to come back for a load of trash. $250 bucks got rid of all the trash that an 5×8 truck bed piled 5 feet high could fit. It was worth the weight off my conscience and the fear that neighbors would quickly grow tired of our mess.
Now, we were getting a lot done, but it was taking a toll. Each day was at least ten hours. I got sun burned one day thinking that you couldn’t get sunburned in 35 degrees weather. Each day ended with us heading to Liz’s mom’s house showering, having a couple of beers during dinner and passing out.

Then Day Three came, we were racing to get the roof on so that Dad could leave. Usually, he tries to leave early to beat traffic, but we blew past 3PM. We also decided to throw in some skylights, finally at 6pm while hitting our thumbs as much as nail heads in the dark on the roof we decided we should get to a stopping point and call it quits. This was a lot of work and after pulling 10 hours the day before we didn’t know if we would have enough in the tank. The night ended when we couldn’t see where we were hammering at 7pm in the dark and Matt had hammered his thumbs one too many times. But the roof was all sealed up and would only require a half day for Matt and I to finish on the weekend.
Matt told me that he had trouble sleeping because he would be lying awake in bed and as he dosed off he would be startled awake with the sensation that he was falling off the roof. Matt and I spent sunday afternoon finishing up the last shingles on the roof.

In truth it wasn’t very sealed up, because you could see through some of the sheating, there was no insulation and the shingles weren’t completely on, so it made for some really cold nights in the back of the house, this along with the lack of a shower (which we had taken out and given to the junk man so that the plumber could lay the new tub) forced Liz and out of our home and back for another stay at Pat’s.
As exciting as it was having a new roof line that looked clean and consistent, moving out was a major set back on our progression to home sweet home. And the soreness from climbing up and down the roof and ladders would out last the pain of running a marathon
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Posted by Thor
Monday Nov 3, 2008
The Goal: Tear off the roof on the backroom, finish enough framing to get the plumber and electrician working, and maybe just maybe install new windows.
Well, that kind of got scrapped before the weekend even started. We planned on finally having our permit after 10 nauseating weeks. Alas, we achieved plan approval on Friday at 4pm after a lot of red ink and copying by Matt in the Village Hall Building department making final revisions. However, we did not have all the necessary updated licenses and insurance for our contractors to get the big yellow card for our front window. Thus, we scrapped the brazen idea of ripping off the back roof in broad day light without a permit. Also our current electrical service run through where we want the gable to end, so we realized we have to wait for the electrician, who is going to put in a new service. We’re still on fuses, and are changing the one to the garage every other week with Liz’s projects out there. But it sure would have been fun. Stay tuned for my Wizard of Oz themed parable on the permit review process in the Emerald Oak Park.
Then our windows plan was in ruin. Our Jeld-wen windows from Home Depot arrived on Friday morning with a possibility of next day delivery on Saturday. The only problem was all the back room windows were missing our cottage style grills. So two hours at Home Depot and much wrangling over the phone, half the windows were going back and the replacement windows for the bedrooms and dining room were be delivered early Saturday morning (I got a call at 6:30 AM when I’ve been working nights for the past month, argghh!). But this window saga was happening at the same time as the rush to get our permit, so Matt had to leave me to fend through the westside CTA. I love and hate (late buses) the CTA, but never have I smelled anything so foul as somebody who was s*itting behind me on the Cicero bus. (more…)
Tags: bus, contractors, CTA, Demo, dry-wall, electrical, framing, home depot, jeld-wen, kitchen, Martin, permit, plaster wood lathe, plumbing, roof, sunroom, Village of Oak Park, windows, Work Weekend
Posted by Liz
Thursday Sep 25, 2008
Thursday
On my lunch break I took a trip to Costco to stock up for the soon arriving horde (the Martin’s, Matt, my Dad and Granddad), the main essentials being snacks (dips, crackers), bottled water (even though the tap water in Chicago is very good), and most importantly Gatorade. Gotta keep the workers happy, otherwise they are running out every five minutes to pick this stuff up. After work it was off to the paint store. Thor and I were determined not to repeat our earlier mistake of just buying paint and putting it up, so we bought about 7 samples of paint for the living room. It’s actually pretty nice that our Benjamin Moore store sells tiny samples that you can put up and try out for only about 3 dollars. I wanted blues, he wanted greens, and we wanted to paint one wall a neutral color. I figured we’d put them up and duke it out. (more…)
Tags: base board, crown molding, janis, Martin, paint, paint color, randy, snacks, stripping, trim, Work Weekend
Posted by Thor
Monday Sep 22, 2008
OK I might leave the dramatic reveal to Liz’s post about work weekend 1.1, but the front half of the house is looking about 80% done.
Once I took off my cranky pants on Sunday after a frustrating start, a surprise call into work, and having to re-stain some trim that didn’t turn out, the Martin crew was able to wrap up the trim, crown molding, baseboards, and shoe for all of the doors and rooms in the front half of the house.
I was so happy with the way everything turned out and how much we got done. I am so grateful to my family for all the work they did and the fun that they had doing it. Sometimes rehabbing can become overwhelming because there is so much to be done just to start doing additional work. Couple that with an unforeseeable completion and trying to live through the repeated cleanings and messings, cleaning and messings and your life quickly becomes on the verge of breakdown everyday. (more…)