Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Progress report --- Week 15


Progress accomplished this week:

--New high-efficiency gas furnace installed in addition
--Drywall work completed in addition
--Trims and casings for garage and addition selected; trim work begun in garage
--Kitchen repainted
--Protective paper and plastic shielding removed from kitchen; kitchen is now officially COMPLETED, just in time for Christmas dinner, hallelujah!
--Exterior masonry work continued
--Concrete board installed in addition, as prep for laying tile
--Access panels for various electrical and mechanical units installed in addition
--Tile for bathroom ordered. Wagner is a master negotiator and got them to come down on their prices quite a bit.
--Sliding doors for (soon to be former) laundry closet area purchased. We were looking at interior doors for the bedroom when Wagner spotted a section full of clearance items. There stood a set of sliding doors that would fit our laundry area perfectly, and which we needed as we wanted to get rid of the bifold doors that had caused us so much grief by constantly bumping into the door to the addition. The doors were priced at $110, marked down from the original price of $277, which I thought was a spectacular deal. But by the time Wagner was through negotiating with the department manager, he got the whole set, including track work, for $50. I told you he was a master negotiator. ;-)
--Door for bedroom selected and ordered. We're getting a fancy door with a beveled/frosted glass inset. Very attractive, and will help let in natural light from the bedroom to the foyer area.

Obstacles encountered this week:

--Bitter cold temperatures, snowstorm halted all work one day; masonry work has been much delayed
--A light test of some sort revealed that the whirlpool tub did not arrive with an adequate seal or lining or something in two spots. I didn't quite understand what the problem was, but Wagner assured me that it would be taken care of adequately, or we would need to get a replacement tub under warranty.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Progress report --- Week 14

All I can say is: Wow!! Just wow! Wagner warned me that "things will start happening fast now," but I can't get over the transformation. The addition now looks like part of the house (albeit an unpainted, unfurnished part of the house). I'll post a bunch of photos, but I really need a wide-angle lens to show everything off in its glory.

Here's a shot looking into the new shower. You can see the two arched doorways, the first leading into the drying off area, and the second to the shower area. No more squeegee, WOOT!




This is a shot taken from the bedroom looking into the new master bath. The first opening to the left will be the vanity area; the second is where the toilet will be. Shower and whirlpool will be on the right. At the far end is my closet. Note there is a window there... that was the pre-existing window from when this space was our garage, and we decided just to leave it there, in spite of my aversion to windows in closets. ;-) (FYI, the space-age looking yellow thing is a nifty work light Wagner uses... puts off something like 1000 watts of light.)


This is the interior of the bedroom, with the door to Jon's closet at the left and the main door to the bedroom on the right.


Here's a higher shot, attempting to show the vaulted ceilings, but not very effectively. I need that wide-angle lens:

A shot standing from the door to the bedroom looking toward the opposite corner:




Progress accomplished this week:

--Drywall installed in addition
--Brickwork just about finished
--Glass brick windows in master bath installed
--Gutters installed on addition area. Several months before starting the renovation we had put up, at considerable expense, new EverClean gutters that allegedly never, ever need cleaning out. (It probably goes with out saying that Jonathan's and my gutter-cleaning habits are every bit as unreliable as our granite-sealing efforts.) Wagner was able to carefully remove them from the garage and re-use them for the addition.
--First skylight in kitchen removed; new skylight installed. It does a MUCH better job of letting in the light, so I'm glad we went to the effort and expense of swapping it out. We ended up locating it slightly off center so as to necessitate cutting only one room beam instead of four. It looks fine, though:


--Approaching closure/final decisions on tile. Wagner found a new tile store that had a huge number of sample displays up and great selection of trim. I found a new trim piece there that is considerably cheaper than the border I had picked out at Louisville Tile ($8.99 per linear foot compared to $30-something) and looks nearly as nice, so I think I will go with that, and then get the rest of the tile as originally selected.

Obstacles encountered this week:

--Massive indecision on my part regarding humidifier selection. At this point, we're going with the True STEAM, but we're waiting for a callback from the HVAC guys to make sure it will fit okay in the furnace room.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Moisture on the brain

So I have spent WAY too much time the past two days researching humidifiers. The HVAC guys Wagner got estimates from recommended two possible units: a Honeywell True STEAM humidifier, or a Trane evaporative unit. Thanks to my time on the Piano Forum, I knew a little about basic types of humidifiers (pianos need very precise humidity control for a number of reasons), and I had a dim memory of some brands receiving greater praise than others. So I told Wagner I wanted to study the choices before making a decision.

Talk about a headache. While there are plenty of reviews of small portable humdifiers, there are very few objective reviews comparing different whole-house humidifiers. There are plenty of websites discussing individual brands, but they're all biased (published by the company selling the brand), and they all make their own particular brand sound like the be-all and end-all of humidifiers. Rather more troubling was the fact that I could find next to nothing about Trane humidifiers.

On the other hand, the True STEAM was getting rave reviews from a number of corners, including various HVAC and do-it-yourself forums. Apparently it is very effective because it heats water directly into steam, and thus converts essentially 100% of the water that flows through into humidity, as opposed to the evaporative type of humidifiers, which run water through a pad and thus as much as 2/3 of the water just goes straight down the drain. (This type in turn is infinitely better than the old-fashioned drum type of humidifier, which rotates a spinning pad on a drum through a standing pool of water and is thus prone to all sorts of bacteria and mold problems. Whatever you do, don't buy one of those types.)

The snag is that the True STEAM is a fairly new unit, introduced only in the past year or so, and thus with not much of a track record for longevity or reliability, and it also cost twice as much as the Trane. I also could find only one post talking about the cost of running the unit, and it mentioned that it raised their electricity bill by about $40 a month. That adds up to a lot over time.

But with the internet remaining scarily mute on the Trane, I didn't know if I wanted to spring for it. On the other hand, the Piano Forum (and other places which presumably knew more about humidifiers) also raved about the Aprilaire or Desert Spring units (both evaporative types). Of course neither of those were offered by the HVAC people we were having doing the furnace.

Then I noticed buried in some forum a post which asserted that Trane was the same as Aprilaire. Huh. I called the Aprilaire people and spoke to a VERY nice and helpful young man who was reluctant to confirm that they were identical but did confirm that Aprilaire's parent company also manufactures the Trane unit. I pressed him a bit on the issue, and he said that the main units were probably the same and that the main difference would be in how they were packaged (e.g., the humidistat supplied with it, etc.)

At that point I was leaning toward the Trane/Aprilaire, when I mentioned we were getting a high efficiency gas furnace for the addition. In that case, he said, we strongly recommend that you connect the humidifier to a hot water line. Because the furnace is so efficient, it doesn't run as much, and therefore the humidifier isn't operating enough. Using the hot water line would help it humidify better during the shorter time it was running. This, I knew, could be a big snag, because Wagner had only (thus far) run a cold water line over to the furnace room.

Uh-oh.

So then I called the HVAC people and asked them about it. I spoke with the technician who is installing our furnace, and I spoke with the owner of the company himself. They both said that while both humidifiers were nice, they preferred the True STEAM. I mentioned the operating cost issue, and the owner said that he had installed three of the units in his own house and did not notice a big change in his electric bill. I didn't know what to make of that. He wouldn't lie to me (would he?), but he definitely had a vested interest in selling me the more expensive unit.

Grapple grapple. So then I decided to go to the horse's mouth and call Honeywell directly and ask them how much their units cost to run. And here is where I get all irritated. Any Honeywell execs reading this, you should know this: Your customer service sucks. First, your website is hard to navigate, with some pages slow to load or resulting in the dreaded Error 404 (page not found) message. Worse, there is no customer service phone number posted under your contact information. There's just an email form where you can submit a question, but when I tried to do that and clicked "send," nothing happened.

Finally, I found a pdf brochure for the True STEAM linked through the site, and way at the bottom of the brochure in tiny 4 pt. font was a customer phone number. Heh heh. I dialed it, rubbing my hands and cackling evilly. But first I had to navigate three separate menus before I even got to the recorded voice that told me that my wait time "might exceed ten minutes." Then I was treated to a scratchy, poor quality audio recording of an instrumental version of "You Light Up My Life." I'm sorry, but the Honeywell person who designed that hold tape should be the first casualty of the economic downturn.

Finally, finally, I talk to a real person... who, judging by his accent, was sitting in a large call center in India. Before I can even start my question, he asks me for my telephone number, name, zip code, and shoe size. Just joking about that last one, but I finally got all snitty and asked "Why do you need to know all that?" "We want to ensure our call quality," was his reply.

Finally I got to ask my question: What is the typical operating cost of the True STEAM system? "Oh, I'm sorry, ma'am," he replied, "I can't discuss that. I can only talk about the various features of our products." This stumped me momentarily until I came up with a clever rejoinder: "Hmmm.... well, it occurs to me that the typical operating cost of your unit IS in fact a feature of your product."

"I'm sorry, ma'am, but it is impossible to predict how much it will cost to run. Say that I am in Texas. ['fat chance of that,' I think to myself] The cost of electricity and the weather conditions will make the operating cost of the True STEAM unit very different than what you might pay."

I begged him to just give me a ballpark range... was it a dollar or two a month? Forty dollars like the sole mention of it that I found? Or 100 dollars a month? He stubbornly refused to budge, and I ended the call much disgruntled.

So, at this point I'm leaning toward the True STEAM unit, simply because I do find the literature compelling and believe the people who say that it is more effective. I was finally swayed by something the HVAC company guy said, which is that moist air will migrate toward dry air, so the new humidifier unit should also help out with the rest of the house... and our current humidifiers do not do a great job of keeping the humidity high enough in the winter. The final straw was when he casually asked, "Say, didn't Mr. Wagner say you have a piano you were concerned about? This True STEAM would be better protection for it."

I am fiercely protective about my piano, so even if it costs more to install and run, I guess I'll go for the better unit. Perhaps growing weary of my changing my mind every couple of hours, Wagner told me to "think it over tonight" and let him know for sure tomorrow morning.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Progress report -- Week 13

Progress accomplished this week:

--Most of the interior framing/carpentry work for addition finished
--Insulation installed in garage
--Installation of insulation in addition started
--Electrical panel relocated
--HVAC inspection passed
--Brick work continues (slowly)
--Tile layout for bathroom finalized
--Drywall in furnace room put up
--Whirlpool tub installed

Obstacles encountered this week:

--Bitter cold weather has made it impossible most days to lay brick
--Frame for whirlpool tub initially made too wide. We had decided not to have steps leading up to the tub, because it was only 21" off the ground and we thought we could just step into it easily. But the first frame built for it was too wide, and Wagner feared the building inspector wouldn't approve it without a step. So we got the carpenter back in today and he will cut it back.

This should be an exciting week, as most if not all of the drywall in the addition will be put up and then it will start looking like part of a house rather than a construction site. We're supposed to get an inch of rain today, though, so Wagner wants to wait until the rain is done, just to make sure there are no leaks in the addition before putting up drywall.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Back to earth

I had talked in an earlier post about selecting the tile for the master bath and how I had selected a beautiful layout, complete with 40" x 40" mosaic medallion to install on the floor and elaborate decorative trim to go in the interior of the shower, around both arched shower doorways, and around the whirlpool tub area.

We are now getting to the point in the renovation where the drywall is ready to go up, and seeing as we had a more definite idea about interior layouts and measurements, Wagner thought it would be a good idea to go revisit Louisville Tile and get the order processed.

Well, that was an exercise in reality-testing. During my first visit, when I had made all the selections, there was one teeny-tiny little detail I had forgotten to ask about, namely, how much all of this stuff cost.

Uh-oh.

Turns out that it costs a lot. A whole lot. Take the decorative border. I had planned on a top border with a little leaf motif, about 2.5" wide, then a 3" decorative trim that matches the mosaic medallion for the tile, and then a half-inch bullnose trim below that. Taken together, those three little trims cost something like $70 a linear foot. Yes, per foot. And the big floor medallion was hideously expensive. Yikes.

It was time to rethink. I thought, briefly, about skipping the floor mosaic. But I had really, really fallen in love with it, and I rationalized it to myself by saying that in the broad scheme of what we were paying for the renovation, the floor mosaic was a mere fraction.

So we're keeping it.

The decorative trim was another matter. I knew I wanted the trim, but maybe I didn't need to have it go all the way around the whirlpool area and I could just keep it in the shower. And maybe I didn't need to use the expensive 3" trim that matched the floor mosaic. So I looked around and found a plainer trim with a leaf design that could work, and I found a cheaper bullnose. (It disturbed me greatly that the half-inch bullnose trim was within a couple of dollars as expensive as the much fancier, wider top decorative border I had picked out.) But the more I thought about this alternative version, the less I liked it. Kathy had noted that the new trim was all the same bland color and thus wouldn't represent as nice a decoration as would the original trim, which was multi-colored (and designed specifically for the tile we had chosen).

So then I went to Plan C. I decided we only needed trim on the exterior of the first shower arched doorway, and we would leave the interior arch (the one that separates the drying off area from the shower proper) plain. And then I realized that I didn't really need that bottom half-inch bullnose border, either; I think it will look good just to have the top border and the matching 3" decorative trim, and then go straight to tile. That will save us about 1/3 on the trim costs.

And then I resorted to Plan D, which was to ask Jonathan across the dinner table, "Don't you agree that we should make the bathroom look really nice and the way we want it to, even if it means we go over budget and have to pay a little more?" My wonderful hubby just laughed resignedly and said "yes."

Gosh, I love that man. :)

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Throwing the switch

So today is a big day for the renovation. It is the day where we relocate the main box thingy where all our electricity comes into the house. It had previously been located right outside the (former) garage, which is now inside the (new) bedroom closet for Jonathan. Kentucky Utilities, however, is rather picky about where the electrical box goes, so we have to install a new box that will be located outside the addition.

If all goes well, the transition will not be a big deal and we will be without power for only about an hour. I wasn't nervous about it until I became aware that Wagner was feeling a little nervous about it, because he kept assuring me that he would "be there the whole time the transition takes place," and that he wouldn't "leave until you got power restored, no matter how long that takes." And then he casually mentioned that it might be a "good idea" to turn the thermostat way up a few hours before the work starts so that the house will stay warm "as long as possible."

Gulp.

The good news is that the worst case scenario is not all that bad. Even if there is a problem, we can simply camp out at Jonathan's office for a night. Or more. Athena is more worried about her pet rats than anything else, so I promised her I'd hang around the house all day as well and be prepared to swoop them (and the cat) off to heat and safety should there be any delays in getting our power back on. The guppies will have to fend for themselves.

...But now it's time to power down the computer so it doesn't get fried during the switchover.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Floored by options

As much as I wanted to, I couldn't rest on my laurels of choosing the master bath and laundry room tile. We have several other important surfaces that needed decisions, and Wagner kept dropping little hints like "You need to start thinking about what you want on the garage study floor," and "You need to begin thinking about the bedroom floor," with the hints gradually increasing in urgency to "I really need you to decide what you're going to use for flooring." Gulp.

The problem is that there really are so many different choices, and they range in price from expensive to scarily expensive. I initially thought the garage study would be easy. Again I'm not anticipating the room will get heavy use, so I thought it best to go with something economical (= dirt cheap) and easy to maintain. If ever a space was designed for vinyl or linoleum flooring, this was it, I thought. Well, guess again. First, Wagner got that disconcerted look on his face again and said "Of course, you should get whatever you want, but if you're going to all this expense you may want to consider something that will hold up better." Then when I looked at vinyl samples at places like Home Depot and Lowe's, the staff there all kind of sniffed and said "Vinyl really isn't being used much at all these days." Not to mention that it wasn't as cheap as I had thought it would be. I was interested most in the vinyl that looked like fake hardwood or fake stone tile. These still cost anywhere between $2.00 and $4.00 per square foot. That made the 99 cent per sq. ft. tile we ordered for the laundry room look very, very attractive indeed, and I gnashed my teeth thinking we should've ordered a whole bunch more of it for the garage study. But it was a close-out with limited quantities so that wasn't an option.

Then Jonathan suggested carpet for the garage. I was less than enthusiastic about this, for several reasons. First, as expensive as tile and vinyl was, carpet was even more expensive. More important, though, was the cleaning factor. Here I must confess that we do not own a vacuum cleaner. We used to have one, but we loaned it to step-daughter Larissa when she moved to town a few years ago. We have a cleaning service come in every week to the house, and that's proven to be sufficient in terms of keeping our upstairs carpet nice and tidy. But I wasn't planning on having them clean the garage study, given the extra expense and minimal amount of use I anticipate it will receive. Even if we bought a new vacuum, I wasn't wild about the idea of lugging it back and forth to the garage. So I nixed the carpet idea.

That left us back with the fake wood vinyl flooring I saw at Home Depot, which cost $1.97 a square foot and would entail suffering the snide looks of the Home Depot employees if we ordered it. ("Hey, look, here comes that lady with absolutely no taste in interior decorating again!") So I was brooding over the options when I ran across an ad in the local newspaper placed by a firm called "Lumber Liquidators" and advertising genuine oak laminate flooring for 78 cents a square foot. This seemed too good to be true (I had seen that laminate flooring at Home Depot costing five or six times as much), but I had to check them out. Sure enough, they had two kinds of 6 mm thick oak laminate flooring for a mere 78 cents a square foot. This is the stuff that come in long planks that you just click together sort of like a jigsaw puzzle. It looks like a hardwood floor but is a lot cheaper, because it's so thin. But it looks a hell of a lot better than the fake wood vinyl. And it was cheaper. Talk about a win-win situation.



It didn't end up as cheap as I had originally dreamed, however, because it turns out that you can't just plop the planks down on the floor; you have to purchase a pad with a water barrier to go under it. When I asked the employees "Do I really need that pad or can I just plop the planks down?" they gave me that awkward look I've been getting a lot during this renovation from various stores ("Man, I can't believe this lady's lack of basic home construction knowledge") and assured me that a pad was essential to avoid moisture problems and keep the planks from popping up. They also said that failure to use a pad would void the 10-year warranty. Okay, so that convinced me. The pad they recommended cost another 50 cents a square foot, which brings the total to $1.28 a square foot for the laminate, which *still* represents a hefty savings over the fake wood vinyl while looking infinitely better. So that's what we're going to go with.

Oh, and there's also the expense of the trim. We can order a primed white quarter round for something like 45 cents a linear foot, which can be painted to match the walls. Or we could order oak quarter rounds matching the stain of the floor for a whole lot more, $22 per 7.5 foot length. The white cheapie seems okay to me, so we'll probably go with that.

Now that just leaves choosing the flooring for the garage bathroom, the entry foyer to the addition, and the master bedroom itself. Yikes.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Progress report --- Week 12


Progress accomplished this week:

--Electrical inspection of new garage/study passed
--Half of electrical wiring for addition part accomplished (photo above shows one of the recessed can lights that will be in the bedroom)
--Framing work continued in addition for interior walls
--Bricklaying continued; nearly finished with exterior
--Tile workers came in and measured so that tile can be ordered


--Door from Jonathan's computer room to new closet in addition put in. I haven't talked about this part of the renovation before. The garage was originally on the other side of our small study that Jon uses as his computer room, where he hangs out and plays video games. We could use more storage room for that area (his video game collection is quite impressive), so in planning the addition we decided to put in a door that would lead to a walk-in closet area where we could put bookcases, a table with room for a printer/fax/scanner machine, etc. We had quite the animated discussion as to whether to have a door installed or just leave the opening to the closet area open. Wagner and I were advocating heavily for the door option; Jon was arguing just as strenuously to leave it open. Wagner ended up putting a door on "just for the time being" to insulate the house from the rest of the addition area (which is still very cold all the time due to not having all the windows installed yet or furnace in place). We are both hoping that Jon will get used to the door and not object to it staying there. ;-)


Obstacles encountered this week:

--Well, it's hard to call Thanksgiving an "obstacle," but it did slow down work.