Sunday, January 4, 2015

Done and done, but not without controversy

Welcome to the New Year dear readers.  We are excited about having a new home in early 2015.  Progress this last week or so seems to support us moving in sooner versus later.

The insulators finished their job and moved on.  I mentioned in an earlier post that they had installed fiberglass insulation in the ceiling above the garage.  The plan called for dense packed cellulose instead, so they returned to carefully remove this so it could be reused.  They will return later to fill this cavity once the sheet rocking has been completed.

Kitchen view.  Taping has begun.
Which it has been.  We toured around the house today and all of the walls, with the exception of one more sheet for the basement stairs, are now clearly defined.  The space looks really great, only slightly different than what I expected.  One of the things that is clearly evident now is the height of the ceiling on the first floor.  These are set at nine feet and it makes the entire space, including the closets, look much airier.  We'll need to devise a clever way to use this extra space in the many closets and pantries on the first floor.  I'd hate to waste such a valuable asset.

The front door has also arrived again and has been installed.  Nate and Jamie brought one small ceramic heater that has been keeping the entire house very bearable.  It was well into the single digits last night.  The house seems extremely tight, even though there are two holes in each door where the doorknobs and deadbolts will be installed and we have yet to have insulation in the guest bedroom floor.

Sheetrock debris waiting to be recycled.
When the last of the sheetrock was hung and the place was cleared and swept, there was an enormous pile of sheetrock debris covering most of the front porch.  I wish I had a picture of it, as it looked like half of the sheetrock that was originally delivered.  At first I thought this was left on the porch because the dumpster was full.  I was really pleased to find a guy there today carefully creating neat pallet size stacks of used sheetrock.  He told me this will be returned to the factory and ground up to make new drywall.  I read somewhere that the majority of construction debris in our landfills today is sheetrock. It's cheaper to use a new sheet than it is to pay a taper to cover the seams of small pieces patched together, so this creates an enormous amount of waste.  Having a recovery loop in place for this makes me feel good about the way this house is being built.

The garage looks cavernous with sheetrock installed.
And speaking of, I mentioned last time that cellulose insulation is the preferred method of filling thick walls, instead of the foam insulation.  Nate mentioned that it is also 50,000 times better for the environment.  If you look carefully at the cellulose insulation, you can see the individual letters that once made up newsprint.  This too is a recovery loop for the newspaper industry.  In addition, the chemicals in the foam insulation create environmentally harmful byproducts.  So clearly we are champions of the environment and I've barely gotten off my ample butt!!

We did have some excitement at the job site this past week.  Sometime Christmas day or night, the site was broken into and the siding and sheet rocking crews had most of their tools stolen.  They even took the half empty box of sheet rock screws.  The siding installers had their stuff locked in boxes on their trailer, but the trailer was taken apart and ransacked.  They also stole the pump jacks that are used to raise their work staging up vertical poles that are temporarily attached to the house.

The delay was only a few days, but in the case of the dry wallers, most of these were their personal tools, only a third of which was covered by insurance.  At the time of writing, Nate and the subs had a pretty good idea who was responsible, but as yet, there is no closure on this unfortunate event.

Master bath.  Lots of green in this project.
The siders are scheduled to return on Monday, and a bunch of five gallon buckets of sheet rock mud are on site, awaiting the tapers.  Steph and I have made our final paint decisions and have relayed these to the painters and we're starting to think about appliances.  All very exciting!!

Till next time...

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