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More than enough?

We are currently packing up the few belongings we have here at the rental preparing to move in less than a week.  A co-worker is coming to take our shelves, table and chairs (she is grateful for the free stuff, we are grateful it will be GONE!).  My son and DIL came by yesterday for my grandmother’s nesting tables — promised to me by my mother but in my possession for only a few months.  Ah well, at least they will stay in the family. My niece is taking the microwave, but I’m not so sentimental about that.

I am very pleased to see how much storage there is in the new place — in the kitchen cupboards, the bathroom cabinets, under the stairs, even in some of the furniture.

But as I pack I am confronted by items for which there will be no space.  Baskets on the shelves, with no correspondent shelf to place them on in the laneway.  A set of plastic drawers that were perfect in our old condo for storing small things under the bathroom sink. Our new bathroom sink already has drawers,

godmorgen

And the two bathroom cabinets, stacked along a wall, are not deep enough to hold the unit

Lillangen

 

There’s plenty of room to hold the things that are in that cheap, dollar-store set of plastic shelves, but no room for the shelves themselves.

Shall I find a new use for those shelves?  Or just toss them?

Now imagine making decisions about dozens of items — not precious or expensive in any way — just THERE.

NOW imagine the process of going through all the boxes in our storage space, repeating this over and over again.

That’s what downsizing means — and that’s why it is going to take us so long.

We will be doing this for months…maybe longer.  It’s tiring, it can be exhausting.

But it’s liberating, too.

Real life and reel life small apartments in New York

Who hasn’t dreamed of moving to New York, at least for a couple of years?  Pretty much everyone, which is why living space is at such a premium in that city.  And when people pay such a lot for such a little space, they get pretty creative with how they use their limited living area.

A recent discovery of mine, YouTube program SPACEStv brings us this super sleek space-age apartment — completely finished in recycled materials.  Watch this and learn more about it:

Incredible that this space was built by just one guy!  It looks like something from 2001 (the movie, not the year).

And from Inhabitat we see a similar space but a completely different take.  The HBO series Girls features a very home-made looking space-saving studio suite built by and for the character Charlie. As in real life, this apartment uses every square inch for living.

girls-charlies-apartment-leWhereas the first apartment had everything — even the kitchen stove — hidden behind slick plastic and stainless steel, this suite has everything right out in the open. But it feels warm and welcoming.

The space was designed by production designer Laura Ballinger

girls-charlies-apartment-5Surprisingly, I could see myself living in the fictional home before I would feel comfortable in the actual home. There’s something about the “Tron” apartment that looks a little toooooooo white and clean.  But since the builder/occupant is an environmentalist it was important for him to get away from the dirt and the garbage he deals with every day.

Which would you choose?

War, war, war-drobe!

Guess who was watching Gone With The Wind the other night?  Do you know Olivia deHavilland is still alive?  97 and kicking.

But I digress.

Pattern

A couple of months ago I ran across a very interesting and inspiring blog post by Nadia Eghbal.  A former fashionista, she wore the same outfit every day for a year.   Did people notice?  Maybe, but no one followed her through the halls pointing and giggling (she doesn’t work in a high school, obvs).  Her uniform was a pair of jeans, a t-shirt, and a scarf.  That can carry you through almost any situation.  She also kept a couple of formal dresses for special occasions, but she got rid of all her other clothes.

That really resonated with me.  I thought about it for quite a while and then I realized the reason why I got such a charge out of that post.  I wear a uniform almost every day, too.  I take the bus to work in all weather, so I usually wear slacks.  I have about five pairs so I wear one a day for the work week — jeans on Friday, natch.

I top the slacks with a short-sleeved top in the summer and a long-sleeved top in the winter.  A couple of cardigans. Three or four scarves.  One necklace.  That’s it.

So do I need too much else?  No, I really don’t. I buy a lot of clothes at the Gap because they are comfortable and affordable.

Now that we have to squeeze two wardrobes into one PAX system, I’ve got to pare that wardrobe down to the basics. But it’s not like I have to re-invent myself.  I’ve been doing that for years.  I just have to get rid of the stuff that doesn’t fit my re-invented lifestyle. And buy new clothes that do fit it — and me.

It helps that I’ve lost some weight in the last year.  No, it didn’t just fall off me, every pound was hard-fought, and I have to keep working at it to keep it off.  (I know what you’re going to say, “If you lost that weight, how come you’re still….plumpish?”  **Hard Stare**.) I still own several ensembles that are just too big for me.  I’m tossing them.  And I have lots of tops that I can still wear, but they are my old size and make me feel…plumpish.  So they will be replaced one by one by tops that fit me better.

We want to start travelling more.  That means clothes that can be rolled up and squeezed into carry-on luggage.  Tops that can dry overnight after being washed in hotel sinks. Slacks that can be worn on long flights without bagging at the knees and bum.

I won’t need a lot of clothes, and I won’t have the space to store clothes that can’t meet the criteria.

Next weekend — I will gather my forces to get rid of that sad pile of ill-fitting clothes, and fight the battle of the Droop Mountain.  I knew I’d work in Gone With The Wind somehow.

Keeping us comfy — the uber-modern way

Although we are visiting the house several times a week, you won’t be seeing many new pictures.  It just doesn’t seem fair to show you the work in progress when we are so close to completion.  The kitchen cupboards are already looking very impressive, but it’s not fair to the manufacturer/installer to show you the product with the doors and countertop missing.  Nor is it fair to the finishing contractor to show you a giant saw in the middle of a partly-floored room.

When we visit, we see the finished product through optimistic eyes, but photos will not bring you the same image.

For instance, where the thermostat will be, there is just a wire sticking out of the wall.  You can’t see the Nest thermostat — DH’s choice for the technical way to keep us comfortable. But it will be there.

Right now we are living in a rental with radiant floor heat.  And it is very nice, a good preview of what we will expect when we move to the laneway.  But it has a regular thermostat.  When I get up at 6 am during the week I turn it up.  Theoretically, when DH comes to bed after the late news he turns it down again.  But if he forgets I wake up in the middle of the night and get out of my now-sauna bed to turn it down.  And I don’t want it turning on at 6 am on the weekends when I want to sleep in.  And what happens if we leave the house for the day?  It’s a waste of energy and money to keep the house at human-comfort temperature when there are only two fur-covered cats there to enjoy.

So we purchased a Nest thermostat to be installed in our laneway.

Nest

The Nest learns how to keep you comfortable as you set it every day.  Or you can program it, say to turn on every morning at 5:45 except on weekends. You can program it remotely using an app on your phone if you leave the house without turning it down.  It will tell you when you are saving money.

It was developed by the guy who brought us the iPod, Tony Fadell.  Here’s an interview with him about how and why he developed it.

You don’t expect someone who brought us the iPod to think about thermostats.  But lucky for us, he did.  And he didn’t like what was available.

“It was 100 percent personal annoyance, not only at the product itself and how ugly they were but also at the fact that – in the case of the heating and cooling – it was annoying for my wife, and then it was very annoying for me we got the bills at the end of the month and had no idea about what we were doing right and what we were doing wrong.

Another take away from the interview is that only 40% of the homes in the UK have thermostats.  Whaaaaaat?  How do you regulate the heating in your homes?

And thanks to Ian of the Home Discovery Show, who originally turned DH onto the Nest.  Try as we may, we cannot keep up with all the new developments without help.

 

A studio with real style right here in our home town

That I am a fan of Houzz is no secret.  I look forward to the twice-weekly updates in my email, and always have lots to pin.

This week I pounced on the story of a Vancouver woman who has squeezed every bit of style and comfort out of her 450 square foot studio apartment.  I’m always interested in these stories because, although I love to see homes with lots of technical fixes and built-in storage solutions, that’s not the way most people live.  Studio apartments are often rentals, with restrictions as to attaching things to ceilings and bans on ripping out walls.

Megan Close of The Cross Design has separated the “bedroom” space from the “sitting room” space in her studio suite with a simple dresser from IKEA which she painted white.

Eclectic Living Room by Vancouver Interior Designers & Decorators The Cross Design
In fact, a lot of her furniture is from IKEA, which keeps down the cost while pushing up the style quotient.
The dresser is topped with two vintage mirrors, which further blocks the view of the bed and gives Megan a place to primp.
Eclectic Spaces by Vancouver Interior Designers & Decorators The Cross Design
The mirrors including the large one leaning against the wall in the top photo bring more light deep into the suite, and give the illusion of more space.
A DIY pallet headboard provides a solid mount for the lamp while hiding the wires (can’t open up the wall to hard-wire the lamp in a rental).  Putting the lamp there means she just needs a small table beside the bed, and this delicate pedestal doesn’t take up too much visual space.
Eclectic Bedroom by Vancouver Interior Designers & Decorators The Cross Design
That “chandelier” also disappears into the background for a subtle whimsical touch.
See how she combines the IKEA sofa with the custom ottoman?  A great use of her budget for the most style. That art piece on the wall is a flea market find.
Eclectic Living Room by Vancouver Interior Designers & Decorators The Cross Design
Megan added an MDF shelf to her kitchen pass-through so that she can eat there, and she tucked another shelf higher up for some decorative pieces — all transparent or in matching colours to cut down on visual “noise”.
Eclectic Kitchen by Vancouver Interior Designers & Decorators The Cross Design
Read the whole story to see how Megan has made the most of the smallest space with an eye on the bottom line.  It’s another example of creative design trumping tight restrictions.

Downsizing. Again!

We have been living in our small rental for nearly six months now, and although we downsized a lot when we moved here, we realize that we have been enjoying a luxury of space that will not be available in the laneway home.

For instance, even though the kitchen is tucked into a corner of the main living room, the rest of the room is large enough to hold a small dining table and two chairs, a sofa and armchair, a coffee table, set of shelves, and TV cabinet, plus several large plants.

Our new home will have less than half the room.  The kitchen will be larger, with more built-ins and counter space.  But we will lose the table and chairs and will eat at the counter with these stools (except in white)

KitchenStool

DH picked them up yesterday and they are ready to go.

The kitchen counter will have to be kept spotless and clutter-free.  That’ll be easier with the built-in microwave and the appliance garage, like this one:

ApplianceGarageNote the electrical outlet within the garage — we’ll have that as well.

Plus the garbage, compost and recycling will be tucked out of sight in a pull-out drawer under the sink.

And we are thinking a lot about how to get every square centimeter of use out of the kitchen.

Back in our old kitchen, I stored spices on two turntables in an upper cupboard.  Although in principle it was a good idea, when you needed a spice it was always in the centre of the circular turntable, which meant moving spice bottles around a lot, and some would fall off onto the counter, and some would fall off into the back of the cupboard and stop the turntable from moving.  It was not an ideal situation, and it drove DH nuts as little bottles would cascade out of the cupboard onto his cooking projects.

So we asked for, and got, a nice pull-out drawer with shelves that fits in right beside the stove.  Something like this:

SpiceDrawerWith adjustable shelves.  We would store the spices on the shelves, but we wanted a method to store the spices in uniform containers that we could identify from above, as we would be seeing them from above when we pulled out the drawer.

So I got a bit crafty.  We buy our martini olives in short, cylindrical jars.  When we empty the jars, instead of putting them in the recycle bin, I recycle them as spice jars.  Some chalkboard paint on the side makes a label that I write the name on with a white pen.  And a dab of the same paint on the lid allows me to write the name there, too.

SpiceJarsSpiceJars2

Problem solved inexpensively and while saving the planet from more glass.

Now on to the next dilemna.  Do we need that container of ladles, spoons, etc. beside the stove?  Or should they be stored in a drawer?

Packing style into 500 square feet

We are coming down to the final weeks of our project, and we are just picking up a few things we’ll need for the laneway house decor.  Like a sofa, a bed, a rug, a closet.

We are keeping things pretty simple upstairs, with mid-century modern and just one or two accent colours against the neutral background.  The big pieces of furniture will be the same grey/brown as the floor.  We like to keep it simple to keep it serene.

But not everyone feels like that.  This family from LA likes to stir it up with a lot of colour and texture — and still manages to fit it into 500 square feet.

Here the Barcelona chair — usually covered in plain fabric or leather, gets a bright floral makeover.  The stack of books reflects the books on the shelf over the window.  The traditional rug pattern adds more movement to the design.
 
Here’s more colour and texture tucked into the main bedroom (can you believe a family of four fits into this small space?).
The bookshelf holds lots of different shapes for more interest.  
And see how the stripes in the bedroom have different scales?
Altogether a lovely home.  Get the whole look at Houzz.  

Cute and little house in the woods.

Trying to fit as much living space — and style — into 500 square feet can be a real challenge.  You can see how that challenge is being met on the Vancouver Heritage Foundation Laneway House Tour on Saturday, October 19.  Get your tickets now for a great afternoon of discovering all the ways designers meet the constraints of building a home in a tightly restricted size limitation.  Our place and one other are the smallest homes at 500 square feet.  Some of the others go up to nearly 1000.  But in every one you will find lots of great decorating and renovating ideas.

Be listening to the Home Discovery Show Sunday morning, October 13, for a chance to win tickets to the tour!

Far away from Vancouver’s urban densification, homeowners outside of Golden, Colarado found themselves with a similar dilemna.  They wanted to build a studio/guest house close to their main dwelling, up in the Rocky Mountains.  But they were restricted by building codes to build in the footprint of a recently-demolished shack — to just 500 square feet.  And they wanted the new structure to fit in with the rustic style of their existing residence.

As this story in Houzz shows, the answer was a delightful little “Hobbit House” seemingly growing out of the granite of the hills.

Rustic Exterior by Golden Architects & DesignersTKP Architects pc

From the quaint rounded front door to the slate roof, every detail was carefully planned and executed.  Guests can make themselves at home in a loft bed

Rustic Bedroom by Golden Architects & Designers TKP Architects pc
Or a Murphy bed
Rustic Bedroom by Golden Architects & Designers TKP Architects pc
And the “kitchen” is actually a studio for the owner, a jewellery designer
Rustic Living Room by Golden Architects & Designers TKP Architects pc
There’s a modern bathroom that still fits the quaint esthetic (a custom concrete sink keeps the theme going).
Rustic Powder Room by Golden Architects & Designers TKP Architects pc
And the fireplace and open beams are a perfect way to incorporate “Hobbit” charm. The mullioned windows along one side are actually doors that slide open to the deck.
Rustic Living Room by Golden Architects & Designers TKP Architects pc
Once again we see that good design can overcome site difficulties.  Who wouldn’t want to make their way to this guest house after a day of hiking or skiing?
Rustic Exterior by Golden Architects & Designers TKP Architects pc

We will live a well-insulated life in our laneway

The laneway house is now on an accelerated completion schedule.  Because we have to be ready for the Vancouver Heritage Foundation‘s Laneway House Tour, we will be working hard to present a nice looking, almost-finished house to the participants. And by “we” I mean our builders.

So it was good to meet with Laurel and Angelito from Novell this week to see what’s happened and talk about what will be happening.

The rain-screening is complete on the exterior and just needs the sign-off from the home warranty inspector before the Hardie Board goes on.

The interior has all been insulated — and well-insulated, too.  We have a combination of batten and spray foam.

Here's a combination of batten and closed-cell spray foam

Here’s a combination of batten and closed- and open-cell spray foam

Here is batten above and open-cell spray foam below.

Here is batten above and closed-cell spray foam below.

Upstairs you can see the south-facing wall and the ceiling/roof:

20131004UpstairsSouth

Here’s the gable over the stairs with spray foam.

20131004Gable

And here’s what’s going to keep us toasty in our shower:

20131004Shower

You can see the packages of tiling here — ready to be installed once the special water-resistant drywall is in place.

The spray foam is a combination of open-cell and closed-cell.

Monday we will meet with the landscaper.  There’s not a large area to be landscaped, but we want it to be extra nice, for ourselves of course, but also for the people in the Main House and for the neighbourhood.

Next week we’ll see huge changes:

  • drywall
  • hardscaping
  • by Friday – tilework to start / doors installed / green roof and deck tiles installed

After Thanksgiving (Canadian Thanksgiving is the second Monday in October) we’ll see even more changes:

  • flooring
  • cabinets and appliances
  • smart garage door
  • plumbing and electrical finish

It may be a little cool in the house for the tour, Fortis isn’t scheduled to come in until October 22 to hook up the natural gas for the heating system, and we probably won’t have the counters installed in the kitchen.  But for the most part we will have a completed house.

Can you make your neighbourhood better?

DH and I were taking our customary walk down the alley from the rental to transit a couple of weeks ago, and he stopped and said “That’s what I’m afraid of at our place.”  It was graffiti, and not the nice stuff, either, just crude tags and initials.  But someone had used brown spray paint on nearly all the garage doors along one part of the crescent where we live.

graffiti

Like this but more obscene.

It was plain why they had chosen that particular set of homes.  The alley does not face other garages and homes, but rather a line of dense conifers hiding the lane from a very busy street.  Further along the crescent where garages face onto a lane flanked by a busy thoroughfare there was little or no graffiti.

Plus the yards along our alley all have high fences and two- or three-car garages, virtually a solid wall all the way along. You can’t see into your neighbour’s yard.  What we can glance through the occasional gate are more parked cars on concrete slabs and one rusting collapsed metal shed.  It’s like it was built just to accommodate graffiti.

And litter.  At one point there were five abandoned sofas mouldering on the boulevard, plus cardboard boxes and discarded stereo equipment.  That’s been removed, thank goodness.

These seemingly inconsequential transgressions can actually have a serious effect on the safety of the neighbourhood.  Studies have shown that in neighbourhoods with litter and graffiti, people become more disobedient.  Some people call it the “broken window” effect.  In areas where small “incivilities” are not repaired, like broken windows or graffiti, crime like theft and vandalism goes up.

This is something we all have to watch out for and fight against.

In our laneway neighbourhood the alley is a lot more friendly.  Fences are not as high and gates are usually see-through, giving you a glimpse into the yards.  There are some lovely gardens that are tenderly cared for.  You are likely to see a neighbour out on their deck or in their yard, and interact with them.  But I hope that another factor that will lead to a safer and tidier back lane will be….us.

The laneway will be nicely painted and we will have plants by the front door on the lane side.  Windows and our deck overlook the lane, which is well-lit.  We will put our garbage and compost cans around the garden side of the house so they won’t be visible from the lane.  And we hope that will make the alley way more livable.

From an article in Houzz comes proof that just doing some small improvements can have a much larger effect on your surroundings.

Good social behavior spreads, whether we realize it’s influencing us or not. The findings, published by Kees Keizer, a behavior scientist and professor at the University of Groningen, Netherlands, confirm the belief that setting a good example can positively affect others. But this study ventures even further to show that when we observe others caring about society, we end up caring, too.

We hope that there will be no tagging on our pristine new garage door.  I think, personally, that graffiti “artists” will be more reluctant to spray paint on someone’s house than they are to deface fences.

It’s also nice to know that having a tidy house is not just its own reward, but benefits the neighbourhood, too.

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