Sunday, August 05, 2007
Roof
The roof was a simple design of 2 gables, but I had never done a valley before. I took the easy way out and made the intersection on top of the other roof in order to avoid complex rafter framing
Finally, the last of the 22 sheets of plywood.
Saturday, June 23, 2007
Sunday, April 29, 2007
Garage Foundation
5/4 he backfilled and got ready to pour the slab on Tuesday next week.


5/1 he finished up forms and had the inspector over.He pumped and poured the footings and walls Tuesday and stripped them today.


A view from the back corner of the yard that will soon be behind the garage
4.27 he progressed well and did all the layout and started forms.
After much delays from our contractor, he finally got started.
4/25 he started digging with his min-track-hoe.
5/1 he finished up forms and had the inspector over.He pumped and poured the footings and walls Tuesday and stripped them today.
A view from the back corner of the yard that will soon be behind the garage
After much delays from our contractor, he finally got started.
4/25 he started digging with his min-track-hoe.
Saturday, April 07, 2007
Skylight
We decided to add a skylight in the second bedroom.
Cut the hole on a Friday night at 6pm hoping to get it in before dark.

I got it in just in time before some drizzle came in.

Now there is a surplus of light in the center of the house.

The room is much more bright and plesant.

Finished and painted
I got it in just in time before some drizzle came in.
Now there is a surplus of light in the center of the house.
The room is much more bright and plesant.
Finished and painted
Monday, February 19, 2007
Kitchen done?
I finally finished the counter top out of bamboo. The dimension was a few inches more than the 8' panel length so I had to add 3" extensions. It ended up looking good with the edge core showing from all sides.
A detail showing the ends, the slate backsplash, and the stainless countertop.
A birds eye view of the finished (ha, I still have to grout the backsplash cracks) kitchen.
Detail of glass shelves and inside of cabinets
Sunday, February 11, 2007
I finally finished the microwave door. I had to change my design 2 times due to hardware issues.

The new kitchen has 17 drawers.

The back of the island has a stool perch with slate interior.

Glass shelves inside the cabinets.



The new kitchen has 17 drawers.

The back of the island has a stool perch with slate interior.

Glass shelves inside the cabinets.
Monday, January 08, 2007
Kitchen Island
After quite a bit of planning, I started on the kitchen island. It would be made of bamboo and slate. There were many design iterations on every aspect of material finish and volume massing. We decided to offset the back to make it into a set of discrete boxes with slate planes dividing them.
The cardboard mock-up.
Back cabinets mounted. These boxes are made from bamboo ply and have no sub-boxes. The structure is entirely exposed. No room for covering up mistakes with base molding, side panels, or other things. Glass shelves are inside.
Base cabinets being installed. This base will have a flip door for the microwave. This mandated no sub-box and no trim side panels. The side panel is the structure of the box and was fun to build since it had to be scribed to the floor and have no exposed fasteners.
Drawers and fronts. I used FSC laminated pine panels for the drawer bottoms and backs. This is an inexpensive material that is made from knotty scraps of pine plantations in South America. No particle board is used in any of my cabinets. I don't use it for durability and formaldehyde reasons.
All the boxes mounted.
About 55 hours into it so far not counting design, which I would guess around 40 hours. This is why kitchens are so expensive. I have about $1400 into the materials. I would guess this would be a $10,000-$12,000 job if we had Henrybuilt do it.





About 55 hours into it so far not counting design, which I would guess around 40 hours. This is why kitchens are so expensive. I have about $1400 into the materials. I would guess this would be a $10,000-$12,000 job if we had Henrybuilt do it.
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