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Skip to my loo

I love our new bathroom.  Although it’s not really a bath-room, as we don’t have a tub, just a glorious, tiled shower with a rain head.

(Pictures?  Not yet.  Although the bathroom is nearly finished, we still have a couple of things that have to be fixed, and I won’t take pictures until it’s perfect.  Just take my word on this for now).

And we have surprising amounts of storage in the bathroom.  Our designer gave us, not only a Godmorgen sink and drawers

godmorgon-edeboviken-sink-cabinet-with--drawers__0172346_PE326412_S4which is super efficient, but she also carved a space for the Lilangen cabinet to sit inside a niche in the wall

lillangen-mirror-cabinet--doors--end-unit__0133086_PE288202_S4And she stacked two of them on one wall.  Giving us a full-length mirror and oodles of storage, with the mirrors flat against the rest of the wall.

You don’t need to have a small house to have a need of a small bathroom.  Who amongst you has ever wondered if you could get a shower into the same footprint as a powder room?  Have you never thought “it would be so handy to have a full bath right there?”

Well, there are ways of doing this. Houzz has 9 tips for fitting more into less space in the bath/shower room.

My favourite is the European style Wet Room.  The whole room is the shower.  All the surfaces will need to be wiped down after your shower, but if it’s a teeny room that’s not a big deal.

When inches count a wall-mounted toilet can really save space.

We couldn’t do it because our toilet is set against an outside wall (full of insulation, etc.) And we have a regular sink, not this eensy weensy one.

But that’s another way to save some space.  Apartment Therapy has some great little sinks — handsome, too!

ATBathroomSink1This one allows you to put a powder room under the stairs — great space saver.

ATBathroomSink2

No room for a toilet and a sink?  That’s what you think.

ATBathroomSink3Small space solutions.  Because small is the new black. (I just made that up but will be using it mercilessly in the future).

News from down the alley and around the town

DH and I took advantage of the unseasonably warm weather a couple of weekends ago to walk over to Commercial Drive and shop in some of the little stores that line that avenue.

We started off our stroll by walking down the alley for about five blocks — and we found a laneway home on every block.  All new, of course, all built under the former design rules with one-and-a-half stories and no outside parking pad, all looking very nice….and all looking very much the same.

I can’t blame people for wanting to avoid the extra cost of designing their own laneway homes.  And the Craftsman style that predominates is certainly handsome.  But I am glad that some of the local builders are including new and innovative designs in their catalogues.

Smallworks got lots of press this past week with their brand-new design for a glass-brick house.  The whole house is not built of glass brick, but the all four walls have a cheery glow:

GlassHouseThe design has got lots of attention.  I read about it in The Vancouver Sun, VanCity Buzz, Curbed, and Eater.  There was even a letter to the editor in the Sun that worried about the house contributing to light pollution. That’s more fuss about one laneway house than I’ve seen since the early days (oh, those pioneer days of laneway housing — two years ago).

I like the design, there are two versions of the plans, and I think it would be a welcome addition to any block.  And, as I said, I am happy to see a different and innovative look available without a custom design.

I don’t think I could live there (for one thing there is my proclivity to throw stones, and you know what they say….) it’s a little too bright — on a sunny day the light would pour in.  But it’s a handsome house, a good use of space, and a nice different design.

Congratulations, Smallworks.

On another note:

Laneway housing might be coming to the Queen City.  New Westminster Council is currently discussing

 the interest and feasibility of introducing laneway and coach houses similar to those allowed by the City of Vancouver.

Affordable housing is a problem throughout the entire Lower Mainland, not just in the city of Vancouver, so communities throughout the area are looking into a variety of solutions, and laneway housing is just one of them. New Westminster Council is discussing whether to go ahead with laneway housing or to wait and make it part of a much larger neighbourhood planning process currently planned for two years down the road.

The more the merrier, say I.  I believe fervently that laneway houses has a place in the mix of housing in any community.  It’s true that they don’t dramatically reduce the need for affordable housing but they do relieve the under-supply of homes in the area.

Fingers crossed the plan goes ahead.

More space for less stuff

The shelf guys were back this week to give us more space.  They put in shelves in places we had hardly thought of — great horizontal spaces for us to put our stuff.  And just moving boxes out of their way to install the shelves showed us once again — we have too much crap.  Er, things.

F’instance they installed a shelf under the kitchen sink so we can finally put our composting, recycling and garbage out of the way….and discovered we had stored bottles of carpet cleaner under the sink for the past 6 weeks.  We don’t have any carpets.  Ergo, we don’t need carpet cleaner.  Into the recycling they went.

Removing what we don’t need is part of our de-cluttering quest for this year.  And it’s a long, hard, constant job. Or, as LifeEdited puts it,

editing, i.e. getting to that essential, irreducible quality…is something that takes time and great effort.

They have a point, this life style demands a shift in thinking, a paradigm shift if you will.  One of the most important questions we have to ask ourselves is

What would my life look like in its most essential form?

So we’re changing our way of thinking in five essential ways, as suggested in this article:

1. Attention. Practice doing one thing at a time–whether it’s work, driving, reading or talking with a friend.

No more watching TV while writing, reading, doing the crossword.  Let’s concentrate on what we are doing.

2. Space. ask ourselves how we can make the most of the existing space and how we can remove any elements that don’t support how we live.

Like carpet cleaner.

3. Clothing.Create a wardrobe where every item is our favorite.

And that means no more shopping for shopping’s sake — even during the sales.

4. Food. eat less, but better–healthy, fresh food that supports longterm health, not immediate gratification.

Now the holidays are over and all the candy/snacks/desserts are gone, let’s keep it that way until next December.  The only food to grab and eat will be fruit.

5. Stuff. we might continually ask whether we need the stuff we have. Do we use it? Does our frequency and quality of use justify its residency in our lives?

As we move things from our rental storage space to our laneway home we have to keep getting rid of things we don’t use and don’t need.  Yes!  Everything we get rid of makes our lives simpler, more elegant, easier.  And cleaner.

Living a conscious, serene life.  Isn’t that what we all want?

Decorating for the ages?

Back a year ago or so when we saw the design that would eventually become our laneway home, we decided to get rid of our furniture (which would not have fit into it anyway) and go with a mid-century modern decorating scheme. Choosing one theme means that all your decorating goes together and you eliminate a lot of other choices when selecting furniture and accessories.  No to that French provincial pouffe!  Ixnay on the cottage-cute curtains! We consulted our designer, and came up with the interiors that we really wanted.

We like the calm, sleek look of the mid-century vibe, plus we know that it is a look for the ages.  The last thing we want is for people to step into our place and estimate to the month exactly when we chose each piece.  We want a timeless look, if you will, avoiding the pieces that were right “in style”, so our interiors would never go “out of style”.

Dated trends like overstuffed shabby-chic upholstery from the 80s, shag carpeting and the orange-and-brown colours from the 70s, the items that would immediately mark our place as “2013”.

If you know what I mean.

BHG0556

This room will be trapped in 1956 forEVER!

But of course, we failed.  Not entirely, because some of the items we picked were chosen to evoke the 1950s — turquoise headboard and fabric in the bedroom, sputnik lamp above the bed — that are specific to that time.  But we failed in the sense that some of the newest trends of 2014 (according to Style at Home) were incorporated into our decor almost by osmosis.

In the bathroom we stuck with classic glossy white subway tiles and hexagonal tiles for the shower surround.  But we chose matte tiles in a neutral grey for the floor.  And that is a trend for 2014, according to S@H:

Trend-bath1

 

As is the floating vanity, which was chosen because it’s easy to clean underneath (and it shows off our floor tiles).

In the kitchen, which is the room that you really want to get right because it’s so difficult and expensive to change it, we ended up with two features that are trends,

Built-in cabinetry that looks like furniture.

Very much like this, but with horizontal grain.

Very much like this, but with horizontal grain.

As it is described in the article

Far from the unfitted kitchens we’ve seen in the past, the new trend in kitchen design for 2014 is built-in accent cabinets that act as framework for the rest of the cabinetry. “We often design these cabinets tall and narrow to sit right on the counters, flanking the stove or on either ends of the run of cabinetry,” says Erin. “They’re usually quite contrasting in both colour and style, introducing more detail than the simple door profiles throughout.”

Because our kitchen and our sitting area are the same small space we want the cabinetry to look like built-in shelves you would find in a den or library.

Another “trend” we went with (honestly, we had no idea it was a trend) is carrying on the kitchen counters up the wall as a slab backsplash.  The article recommends veined materials like marble or limestone, but in our tiny space we wanted to keep the patterns to a minimum and went with the white quartz of the peninsula and counter to be used as a backsplash behind the stove and around our little counter-height window. It looks great, the lights above catch the glints of the stone embedded in the slab, and it is a dream to keep clean.

Another trend we didn’t realize we went with was the neutral-taupey-grey colour we used throughout the space.  We thought we were being as classic and timeless as we could, but according to S@H, it’s a trend.

 “Trends are moving from cool to warm greys and towards beautiful taupes, explains Bev Bell, creative director for Beauti-Tone Paint.

We had to keep the paint colour neutral, we wanted a grey undertone, but we knew if we went with a bluey cool grey the rooms would look cold when the weather was gloomy and rainy.  Instead, the warmth of the taupe keeps the feeling cozy.

IMHO, I think people go with decorating trends because new things become available — attractive new products that make a lot of sense at the time.  Shag carpet in comfy warm oranges had never been on the market before and people liked the intimate feel it gave the room.  Some people even upholstered their walls in it — remember?

And there’s a kind of zeitgeist that is reflected in our decor.  Back in the 1950s, new products incorporating the plastics that had been developed during the war were available in colours people had never seen or used.  And it was the “atomic age” when the A-bomb was going to guarantee our future security, as atomic power was going to fuel it.  The futuristic shapes of moldable plastic influenced art and decor.

"Dreams of Eames"

“Dreams of Eames”

So it’s not such a bad thing that we have some trends that are reflected in our decor.  We can’t really avoid it, we are part of our times, we live in this era and that will inform our choices when it comes to decorating as it does our choices in wardrobes, entertainment, technology.

And our home will always reflect this time — as long as we are living in it.

Keeping it cool – decluttering the fridge.

While showing off our ootsy-cutesy home over the holidays, someone mentioned that their small fridge was driving them a bit crazy, as it was just too small to adequately hold their needed victuals between trips to the market.

I didn’t see how it was an issue for us as we have three markets within easy walking distance, and we can replenish our little Blomberg quite easily and frequently — every day if we want.

Fridge

But guess what — now it’s an issue.

Mostly because none of the local markets supplies small amounts of foodstuffs for couples with small fridges — they are used to stocking huge freezers with family-sized boxes and bags of food.  Plus I just go a little nuts when I see some produce I like, so our eensy crisper gets filled up and spills over into the limited number of shelves.

It’s a habit I must break myself of — right now I am wondering how I am going to get rid of a large bunch of kale and 3/4 of a head of cabbage since I’ve discovered that my cabbage/kale soup has a deleterious effect on DH’s  digestive tract. I bought a lot because a) I like cabbage/kale soup, and b) it’s cheap (like borscht!  only cheaper!), and c) no one in the neighbourhood sells half a head of cabbage. Plus I find myself with a leek (they only came in bunches of 3) and half a sweet potato.

I have learned my lesson, and will only get what we need from now on, and I am sure I will be able to clear out the fridge if I plan a few meals of leek/kale/sweet potato soup (it is a real thing) with cole slaw on the side.

I’m usually quite good at planning meals — I customarily make a month’s plan of meals so we’re not repeating the old stand-bys and we’re trying new recipes.  I just went off the rails with the move.

But it turns out that wasting food is not just a fault of mine…

  • It’s estimated that 40% of America’s food supply ends up in the trash.

  • 10% of greenhouse emissions from developed countries is generated by the production of food that is never eaten.

Yikes!  This article from Life Edited came along just at the right time.  It offers six tips for editing down your supplies, and preventing waste. As it suggests in the article, I buy food from the perimeter of the grocery store, the produce, meat, dairy, and bakery, and try to stay away from the processed food in the middle.  And we save our scraps for the city’s compost scheme. Leftovers get taken to work for lunch.

But I am guilty of saving cans and jars of food “for special”

Avoid “precious” food. How many times have you bought special cheese, meat, heirloom tomatoes–whatever–and waited to use it for a special occasion, only for that food to end up rotting? Have a plan for your food–either eat it at an appointed time or immediately. Food spoils. Make every day a special occasion.

And henceforth, I swear I will live by this rule:

Buy only what you need. This is a pretty obvious one, but try to buy the food and the quantities you know you’ll consume from one shopping trip to another. It’s okay to have an empty fridge before you go shopping. If feasible in your area, make more frequent, smaller shopping trips.

I’ll take that challenge!

You may know that I am a decorating junkie (and if you didn’t know before…..that statement was a dead giveaway).  Every Christmas my husband “surprises” me with a year’s subscription to Style At Home.  I follow decorating blogs and get updates from Houzz and Apartment Therapy.  It was a bit silly when I was living in an 1100 square-foot-condo that I couldn’t afford to renovate, but it’s ludicrous when we’re living in a teensy laneway house with all-new furnishings and finishes.

Or is it?

Although we are going to concentrate on de-cluttering and minimalising our lives this year, we will also have to finish off the little things that will make our house our home.  And Apartment Therapy has a great way to do it, with lots of help and tips.  It’s called The January Cure — a month-long step-by-step way to give yourself a

 “new” cleaner and more organized home.

What’s the sense of moving into a perfect home if I keep up all the bad habits that got me into clutter-strewn life I lived when I had more space?  I’m sure it will take me many iterations of the cure to rid me of all my bad habits but I will start small.

Step One (I should have started this on Thursday, but won’t have to spend a lot of time on it):  Make a List of Projects.

ApartmentTherapyCure

Hmmmm. Starting in the front foyer area, we need to put a picture over our electrical panel.  It’s well-recessed into the wall, so a picture on a good solid hinge can also hide lots of “front door clutter” behind it.  We also want to hang some more art.

We have to wait until all the deficiencies are addressed to get some of these projects finished BUT making a list will give us a good start. I’ll go through the place room by room to make the list.

Step Two:  Weekend Chores, Flowers and Floors.  Hah!  That’s a snap.  Our built-in vacuum will de-fuzz the floors followed by a swipe with the damp mop. Quick work.  Plus a visit to the market for some flowers.

Step Two also includes finding Earth-friendly cleaners.  We have been relying on tried-and-true cleaners, but this is a good time to check out some of the more ecological choices we have. Luckily Apartment Therapy has some suggestions.

We’ll also see if we can’t complete one task from our project list: hanging the bedroom blind.

Well, I feel I’ve accomplished something already.

Fresh starts!

I don’t really make resolutions.  I find that they just add more pressure to my life, and I like making goals and working towards them rather than just saying “I will eat more healthily”.

So instead of just saying “I will live more minimally in 2014” I have set ourselves the task of getting rid of our rented storage space.  I am giving myself the wiggle room that we may move the rest of our stuff into a smaller storage space, and then continue our process and our progress into 2015.  But we will definitely be ridding ourself of stuff.

So far so good with keeping to the more minimal lifestyle on the retail front.  We ventured out on Boxing Day and managed to come back with just what we needed — a tray for the sitting area to make an ottoman into a coffee table, plus an HTMI cord so we could connect my laptop with the TV and watch videos (went through the whole Harry Potter canon during the holidays). I even bought some new bras, and came home and tossed my old ones.  There just isn’t space to save old AnyThing, if we get acquire  new, we have to shed something.

Today I got another little kick in the pants reminder to keep downsizing.  My twice-weekly email from Houzz included some handy tips for editing belongings.

The author mentioned one of my bugbears.  I am not looking forward to editing family pictures.  We used to have so many walls we could just toss pictures of grandparents and ancestors, so many surfaces to hold stiffly-posed portraits and spontaneous snap shots.

She wisely suggests editing:

 I took all of my family pictures out of albums and off the walls, and then organized them by year, starting in 1972 when Mike and I were married, and moving through our 40th wedding anniversary. Then I picked my absolute favorites and built a new single album, simply entitled “The First 40 Years.” I placed the rest of the pictures in clearly marked envelopes that went into a single large plastic bin. (Plastic bins are a downsizer’s best friend.)

This is a big project.  I am not looking forward to taking it on, but will make a start by sorting through our pictures for family shots and putting them aside.  Hopefully someone will find a quick and inexpensive way to digitize the photo library by the time I get around to it.

Unfortunately, the pictures don’t take up a great deal of room.  Fortunately the stuff that does take up a lot of room is easier to get rid of.  And we have a goal to work towards — no more expensive rental storage.  As this other excellent guide to de-cluttering says,

Begin with the end in mind. Think about how you want your home to be. Browse through the ideabooks you’ve already created and look for themes. Only after you’re clear what you’re shooting for should you begin to purge

Time to look backwards — and forward

As I like to remind people (yes, I can be annoying that way), January is named for the Roman god Janus, who could look forward and backwards at the same time.

I think that’s important, and this is about the right time of year to do it.  The hustle and excess of Christmas is over, and we have a few days respite before the hustle and excess of New Year’s Eve.

2013 was a real year of transitions for me and for mine.  As the year began we had to get ready to sell our condo, while we were getting ready to build our laneway, and I was getting over the blow of my mother’s sudden and unexpected death.  Tough times.  But we got through them.

Spring came. We sold our condo.  My father passed away (another emotional blow).

And we broke ground for our house.  Day1.1Everything seemed to take so long!  Waiting for the inspectors, waiting for the suppliers, waiting for utilities connections.  But bit by bit the house went up and we moved in right on schedule. When the footings went in we kept saying “How can we live in such a small space?”

Foot1And we said that again when the foundation walls went in:

Day35Large

 

 

And when the wooden structure was built:

20130711.4

 

We just couldn’t see ourselves and our stuff in such a small space.  But when we moved in it was clear that the place is exactly the right amount of space and roominess that we need, and anything that does not fit in here is just extra stuff that we don’t need.

We love our little home so much.  We are so comfortable.  And we are so happy when friends and family come by and we can show them around.  Everyone says they love the design and the feeling of cosiness, and we have to agree.  It’s also nice that it takes us about 10 minutes to tidy up the place for visitors.

There are still a few deficiencies to be addressed.  But we are super comfortable and find our neighbourhood to be perfect for us.

So what is ahead?  This blog was built to chronicle the building of the laneway home.  And now that is done.

But I still find things to write about.  Our life and our move to a more minimalist lifestyle.  Other small houses, the tiny house movement.  So the blog will go on. (yes, that is Celine Dion you hear in the background).

Besides, laneway housing is still news, as was shown in this recent story in the Toronto Star shows. The Dunn-Roy family finds

“This has been such a fun experience. I absolutely love my little house,” says Dunn-Roy. “It’s functional, it’s forced us to totally declutter and we’re no longer rattling around in that big house.”

And other people are still interested in living the small life.  This architect built a 200-square-foot home.  In Idaho.  By herself! After a divorce and losing her home to foreclosure (sounds like she had kind of an up-and-down year herself —  she broke her back falling off the roof.)

So you’ll be hearing from me.  And I hope I hear from you, too.

Christmas at the laneway house

Back when we had a natural gas fireplace in our condo, I loved to light it when I first got up on a winter morning.  No matter how grey the day it always made me feel better to see the glow. I thought I would miss it, but of course, we adapted to get what we needed.

XmasFire2013

The cable company runs a continuous Yule log that we’ve got going all day.  It looks toasty but it doesn’t make the room uncomfortably warm (as a real fire would).  I’ve even recorded it so we can have it even when the Christmas season is over and we need that little glow in the evenings. Thank you, electric hearth.

Over in the corner with the sectional we’ve put up an IKEA star and I’ve made some covers for our cushions that were a little more festive.

XmasCorner2013

And our Christmas tree?  Well we don’t have room inside for a tree — so we’ve put it out on the deck.

XmasTree2013

We’ve put outdoor lights on a white tree, set on our patio table.  We can see it from our sitting area, and it just adds the right touch of Christmas.  We’ve had some snow and that adds to the seasonal feeling, too. It looks especially nice in the evenings, when the lights glow through the “needles”.

XmasNightTree

We’ve definitely had to cut back on the decorations from when we were living in a larger place, but that’s OK.  We still get a Christmassy feeling, and we are so looking forward to Christmas day, and carrying our casserole (world-famous broccoli cauliflower souffle, recipe a la Susan Mendelson) across the yard to the big celebration, and being able to imbibe without worrying about getting on the road to get back home.  The whole family will be there, including my sister, niece, old friends, and even an ex-spouse.

We have so much to be thankful for this year.  We have this beautiful home that we love so much, and we are so close to the people we love so much.  There have been some tough times, too, and I am missing my parents a lot, but somehow being in this new house with new traditions makes it easier.

And we hope everyone is having the best holiday season ever!

Decorating for a tiny Christmas

Of course Christmas is not tiny — it’s as big as you want to make it!  But finding room for Christmas decorations can be tricky when you have so little space.

Tomorrow I’ll let you know what we’re doing here at the laneway house, but meanwhile here are some clever ideas on how to finesse setting up that massive tree.

You can go all Charlie Brown and get a simple twig or two to represent the tree.

XmasCharlieBrown1

Put it in a container on your table top, or attach it to the wall

XmasCharlieBrown2

Or why bother with the tree at all?  Attach the ornaments directly to a nice blank space of wall.

XmasOrnaments1

Make it as small or as big a display as you wish:

XmasOrnaments2

See the nice mix of scale?

Or you can create your own tree with wooden sticks suspended or nailed into a tree shape:

XmasBranchTree2

Keep is sleek and modern, or make it more old-fashioned and nostalgic,

XmasBranchTree1

Don’t have the time or the energy to make a Christmas tree?  That’s what you think.  All you need is some Washi tape and string:

XmasStringTape

Even if you don’t have room for a tree, you can always include a little Christmas decor on the corner of a shelf.  Here’s what I’ve done this year with a few ornaments that have been in our family for years;

XmasOrniesNext year I’ll take off the wire hangers, this was kind of an experiment this year.  But it looks great on our shelf, and is the perfect touch right there.

So squeeze a little Christmas into your small space.

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