Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Color me mud

While I was visiting friends recently we watched their neighbor speed paint the trim on his house. It was pretty inspiring. About a month earlier my neighbor had given the outside of my house a concrete skim coat and it was drying a little blotchy so when I got home I decided I should have a speed paint session of my own.

Before and afters below.

Just after Thanksgiving, 2006. Way before I bought the house. That tree, by the way, is gone gone gone. So is the green door, the awning, the flag, the plastic chair and the chain link fence.



From the real estate listing in June, 2010



Getting a little grungier last year. But those flowers were pretty.

Skim coat applied.

And the final layer.




Friday, July 19, 2013

Rock it

Drain tiles are for winners. The guys came in and in 5 days they broke up the concrete around the perimeter of the basement and hauled the debris out in buckets.




They dug a trench about 10 inches deep all the way around the interior walls


and then filled the trenches with rocks.






so now if there's any water sitting in the dirt under the floor it can migrate over into the rock beds. And since the rock trench is 10 inches deep, gravity will pull the water down and away from the floor. Sort of like sitting on top of a dribble glass.


Then they covered the rocks with concrete 



but left an open space about an inch wide to catch any water that could seep in through the walls.




They also put a bunch of pink sponges inside the coving. I wonder if they'll expand into dinosaur shapes? !!!



But that's not all...they also poured a new floor in the front (under the front porch),


patched the dirt floor area on the other side of the room


and, finally, they skim coated the crumbly old walls which used to look like this


and now look like this.


They got a lot done in 5 days, these guys work hard. Some times there were 3 or 4 people working but mostly it was just 2 of them, sweating away and making it all happen. Great great job.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Subterranean

Things are going well at Huron. There's still lots to do to snazz this place up; curtains, blinds, shades, pictures hung, some more clean up, the list goes on and on. But lately the focus has been on the basement. A couple years ago the basement flooded. 3 times. Something had to be done about that so a sump pump was installed along with this mad professor rerouting of the pipes. That was all super awesome and worth it, now when it rains I can kick back and relax instead of FREAKING OUT.

Sump pump in mid-installation in 2011.


But even with the pump and reroute there was still water getting into the basement. Standing water under the floor would seep up through the concrete and sometimes water would come in through the walls and pool on the floor. It wasn't terribly bad but it also wasn't the bone dry room every girl dreams about. (note: the floor in the picture was watered down by the guys who were breaking up the concrete. That's intentional water.)


You can see the porous basement walls in the picture above. Keep in mind the house was built over 130 years ago. Those foundation walls were poured (were they poured back then?) the same year James Garfield entered (and inelegantly exited) the office of the presidency.

The floor on the opposite side of the basement was a complete puzzle. And a gross looking mess. It turns out that dirt was poking through a thin, cracking layer of concrete.It looks like mold but it's really just plain old ground.


Here's a picture that's meant to make you say, hey, that's not so bad. But below are a couple close ups that look like someone dropped, then ran from, a contagious culture from the CDC.



But guess what, good news abounds. The guys who put in the sump pump came back last week to install drain tiles. The water issues should now be a thing of the past. !!!!! Pics of that project tomorrow.