While Coretta was painting the interior, I was tiling the bathroom. I went back a week later and put down some sealer and the toilet. All we need now is a sink and we have a full bathroom. Seems like good progress.
Friday, August 27, 2010
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Painting
We had someone install the sheetrock while we were away. It's great to leave and come back to a finished task without having done a single thing. Well we did pay him. We tried several shades of white, most seemed too dark, but ended up with a middle shade. Probably a good slate for the amount of wood in the place. Here are some pictures, the place is already crowded again, but it shows off the windows and the angles the guy had to deal with.
Saturday, July 10, 2010
Interior Sheathing
These pictures don't do justice to the room but it does show the progress we're making. Was able to get the insulation and paneling up before I left on vacation. Have someone putting the sheet rock up now. Should have more pictures when I get back from New Orleans.
And this is a picture of the windows from the bed, which I guess is the living room.
These are pictures of the kitchen area, the tape on the second picture is where the cabinets will be layed out.
And this is a picture of the windows from the bed, which I guess is the living room.
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Passed Rough Inspections
Well Kind of. Got passed rough electrical and plumbing inspections. Had to redo a title 24 energy audit because I wasn't using a furnace or air conditioning. Codes are so strict nowadays that even if you switch to something more efficient you need an engineer to re-quantify your entire energy audit. But after some changes to the vent pipe, I've gotten sign off. Turns out I also need an inspection for the insulation. Not just that it's there, but that's installed correctly. Another strict California code check. No gaps around outlets and what not. Hope to have that done over the fourth and get the walls started.
Friday, June 4, 2010
Finished Electrical and Plumbing
Finishing up the drain lines and adding a bathroom vent. A neighbor came up (thanks Steve) to help out and we finally got started taking down the remainder of the old cabin. Not sure when I'll finish up. We got the roof off, but there was another tarred roof underneath it. The inspector on my initial plumbing inspection had me redo several vent pipes because they were using the drain line. Not sure this isn't code, or just the inspector. The changes didn't take too long, but I did have to replace about 50 bucks worth of piping. And the scrap is pretty much unusable. Hoping that's enough to finish the inspection.
Monday, May 31, 2010
Taking Showers
Was able to take a hot shower at the cabin for the first time. Our water heater died on the cabin in the first week. The pilot light got clogged and is so rusted no way to fix it other than replacing the entire box. No chance for that with all the other work. So cold showers or no showers. Now I have the water heater and shower installed. The water heater is an electric tankless. Not the most efficient, but it works damn well. Nearly scalded myself on the initial shower. I was able to turn down the thermostat on the water heater to 120. Much more comfortable.
The shower itself was a four piece swanstone. Was a simple install which is now my highest priority in working on the cabin.
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Pex
Pex is a plastic piping for potable water delivery. It is also used in radiant heating systems and has been around for about 40 years. It just last year became legal in California after a long battle with the plumbers union. It took all of an hour to run both a hot and cold water line through five walls, which was about 20feet. With the nature of the round walls, this would have been an enormous undertaking using copper. I ended up plumbing the entire house in about a day.
The picture below shows the whole house water filter and the pex manifold. The manifolds are the key to the pex delivery system.
This is a picture from the kitchen sink. It's also where the on demand hot water tank is located.
The tank is pretty amazing, though I haven't put it through a real test yest. It is rated to provide enough water to the entire house, and since it's electric, there's no need for venting.
A seperate manifold system for the bathroom.
Normally you would run a single hot and cold manifold to the entire house, but I found locating one set in the bath and one in the kitchen was a bit easier, especially with the extra materials I had on hand.
The picture below shows the whole house water filter and the pex manifold. The manifolds are the key to the pex delivery system.
This is a picture from the kitchen sink. It's also where the on demand hot water tank is located.
The tank is pretty amazing, though I haven't put it through a real test yest. It is rated to provide enough water to the entire house, and since it's electric, there's no need for venting.
A seperate manifold system for the bathroom.
Normally you would run a single hot and cold manifold to the entire house, but I found locating one set in the bath and one in the kitchen was a bit easier, especially with the extra materials I had on hand.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Fire
Sunday, March 14, 2010
Lights up
Got some exterior lights on as well now. First I put up some motion detector spot lights to get to the trailer at night. With the short winter days, I end up trudging back to the trailer in the dark, now I've got my path lit.
Also put some deck lights up, we decided on fixtures that kind of resemble the roundness of the yurt. I like the style, even if they are a bit nautical. I guess nothing wrong with that.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Winter slowdown and Electric starts
It's been two months of winter here. I've slowed down showing up, as the rain, snow and cold have prevented me from wanting to work. I'm mostly indoors working on the electrical, planning and set up have taken longer than expected, but now that I'm laying lines, it shouldn't be too difficult.
The water heater is a bit ridiculous, takes 2 220 lines with 50amp breakers, that's a lot of juice running so close to the water line.
The water heater is a bit ridiculous, takes 2 220 lines with 50amp breakers, that's a lot of juice running so close to the water line.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)