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Category Archives: Laneway House

Day 123 — a meeting with the builders

We always get so much accomplished when we meet face to face with our designer and builder from Novell. Last evening Angelito took us through the place and showed us where work had been accomplished over the past two weeks.

20130905TorchOnDeckOn the deck the lights have been installed and the torchon applied.  In fact, all the torchon has been applied to the flat roof areas, too.

20130905TorchOn

Here’s the area that will hold the living roof right off the deck.  That’s a kitchen window you see to the left.

We really noticed the difference inside between the roof with the torchon and without.  Previously there was a small lake in our downstairs bedroom from the heavy rains we’ve been getting.  Now everything inside is nice and dry.

The living roof is nearly ready for us — but we are not ready for it.  A few weeks of work have to be finished.

Inside all the wiring is done.  Plus the sprinkler system is installed.

20130905UpperStairwellWiringWe have electrical wiring for the lights, low voltage wiring for the AV (with speakers in the ceiling), and more low voltage wiring for the alarm system.  It’s going to be so good to have all this hidden behind the drywall.

20130905SpeakerHousingsDownstairs we see where the pocket door is going to go to close off the closet and bathroom from the hallway.  I’ll have my own private dressing area!

20130905PocketDoorThen we sat down with Laurel to talk about finishes.  It’s surprising how much there was to discuss when we have narrowed down the choices already.  The cabinet finish (walnut, with the grain on the horizontal), the floor (a grey-brown engineered floor), and the trim (very plain, baseboards only, no crown trim).  We chatted a bit about the paint colours.  And we chose the tiles for the bathroom. Two by two grey-brown for the floor, two by six white subway tiles for the shower and white hexagonal tiles for the shower floor and niche.  We did talk about putting in larger tiles on the floor, but we love the non-slip aspect of the smaller ones, especially since we will be aging in place and safety is a big consideration.

We also talked about the window covering.  This is going to be tricky because the windows go right to the ceiling, plus they open to the inside, so we may be going in a totally different direction than we had thought.

What’s next?  Well the sheathing inspector just wants to see a letter from the engineers about the torchon (we think he is being extra picky about the living roof, a reasonable consideration) and then he’ll sign off.  The water has to be connected before the drywall is put on, but I talked to the city last week (didn’t contact the Mayor’s office as had been suggested, just the Engineering office) and they were pretty sure the water and sewer would be connected early next week.

Then there will be insulation (a combination of spray foam and batting).  Then the drywall!  What a difference that will make.  Everything is on track for the millwork, and the lights are on order.

A great meeting and we continue to be thrilled and excited!

Do I really need that?

While we are waiting for the great strides that the laneway house will be making in the next few weeks, we are busy doing some decorating for the new place? Compensating? Maybe, but the tasks have to be done and we will do them.  Ordering lights.  Arranging for a headboard to be built.  Checking out the bed situation.

Plus this evening DH told me that he would like to go up to the storage space this weekend and see if we can winnow down the amount of, well, crap that we have there.  Even if we just organize a couple of boxes to be carted off to the Salvation Army we’ll be further ahead.

As if to emphasize the point, tonight I managed to break the coffee grinder.  Not the whole thing, just the lid.  Necessary to grind coffee as it contains the switch to turn the grinder off and on.  Do we have another grinder?  Of course!  Plus another lid.  But not here.  No, they are put away in the storage space.  If we are lucky we will run across them when we are rooting around the storage space this weekend.  If not, we will have to buy our coffee pre-ground, because we must have coffee.

At times like this, it’s good to review a few rules for thinning down our belongings.  Here, we see “10 Decluttering Principles to Help Anyone Clear the Clutter”.  Things to remember:

1. Stop the Flow of Stuff Coming In.

We’ve already started cutting back on the papers entering the home, switching to emailed bills that are stored online, and we refuse to buy anything new.  New books go straight onto the Kindle.  But that doesn’t include furnishings for the new place, we have boxes of lights piled about.  So there’s still a little work to be done there.

2. Declutter at Least One Item a Day.

OK, noble aspiration.  But it’s difficult to find one item per day.  I have managed to get rid of some decorating magazines by passing them along.  And I’ve been throwing out my shabbier socks.

Let’s skip ahead.

5. Decide to Not Keep Things out of Guilt or Obligation.

This is the tough one, isn’t it?  Especially since I’ve got so much of my parents’ things to dispose of.  What is an extra dish or glass, what is a relic?  Something to work on.

But it’s all summed up with the final suggestion:

10. Do Not Waste Your Life on Clutter.  Every item you own takes time out of your life: time to manage it, clean it, repair it, and maintain it; time to choose between objects of a similar category; time spent shopping for it… and that doesn’t even mention the time spent earning the money to pay for it in the first space. Decide to sacrifice less of your precious life on the pursuit and ownership of stuff.

That’s the goal.  to live life with the minimum of belongings to weigh us down and complicate our lives. Because you can get trapped by your extra stuff.

It not just clutters your life, it can cost you money.  We are paying for a storage space every month.  But some people pay a lot.  

In the basement of Tribeca’s newest luxury high rise, the storage wars are underway. 56 Leonard just sold a 200 square-foot storage unit for $300,000 — that’s $1,500 a square foot.

More than we are paying.  But why pay anything?  Better to just rid ourselves of the stuff we aren’t using.

Decorating a small space for the most impact

While we wait for the laneway to be completed, we are working hard to make sure we have all the decorative components ready to install when the time is right.

We are challenged by the small space, of course, but we know we can have a smart looking home — a jewel box of a house — with lots of special decorating touches.

This article at Apartment Therapy sums up the challenges and offers some rules to follow:

1. Don’t be afraid of drama.  We are counting on our lighting to add a real punch to our spaces.  Already on hand are the sputnik light for the bedroom.

sputnik2

I’ve always liked the idea of a chandelier hanging over the end of the bed — but we needed one that would fit in with our mid-century modern decor.

The kitchen will have a saucer lamp, another icon of mid-century modern.

lampsaucer2

and of course, there’s the nut lamp to hang over the garden door.

nutlamp

2. Use every nook and cranny. And

3. A place for everything and everything in its place.

This is a no-brainer as far as I’m concerned.  A lot of people like open shelves in their kitchens, and I can see their charm.  But our kitchen is also our sitting room, so we are putting everything we can behind closed, walnut-clad doors.  Including our appliances that would ordinarily sit out in the open, which we are putting in an appliance garage.

Another handy rule:

6. Install wall-mounted shelves.

Our designer has planned for built-in shelves along the wall beside the staircase.  These will serve not only as the repository for books and family pictures, but also as a “landing strip” for our keys and the mail when we come in the door. We’ll put baskets or decorative boxes to hold them out of eyesight but close at hand.

7. Bring in as much natural light as possible.

Another no-brainer.  We are challenged in this regard by the slope of the lot that the home is built into — we have limited access for putting in windows.  It worked out for us as we want our “quiet, dark” bedroom downstairs.  Upstairs we put in windows wherever we could, a glass door out to the deck, and even a window between the upper cabinets and the counter.

8. Use multi-functional furniture.

Our bed will have storage underneath, and we are putting in drawers in our bottom stairs in the hall, so we get this message loud and clear.  We are also looking at how we can have storage put into an ottoman for our sitting room area.

Good ideas all, read the whole article for more great suggestions.  And stay tuned for more news on our decor!

Look, up in the sky!

I was looking at a new weather app to check when the late-summer drizzle was going to stop and got a nasty shock.  A rain warning.  We live in Vancouver, a notoriously rainy city.  A warning that there will be heavy rain has to be taken seriously because we usually just pretend that it’s not happening. But as climate change happens (and happens to us, we can’t avoid it) we must expect more hard rains, more frequent, more severe.

it seems to me that we have chosen the perfect roof to handle this kind of weather.  The living roof will soak up the hard rains, holding the bulk of the spate so that it doesn’t overwhelm the water run-off system that can overtax the sewers.  The rolled steel roof will slide the water right onto the rain chains and along a pathway we’ll build for it so it gradually gets absorbed.

The rolled steel roof is being installed now — yes, in the pouring rain.

20130829_3Here’s the bit of roof right over our bedroom — that will provide us with lovely sound when we are sleeping beneath it in the rain.  You see the edging slipped over the under layer, and the steel panels lay over that.  Above that you see the window that will nestle between the kitchen counter and the upper cupboards.

Here’s what will be going on with the outside walls:

20130829_2That’s strapping holding down waterproof paper, with a solid plastic flashing at the bottom, and white flashing around the bedroom window.

Here’s what the finished roof looks like on the side gable — sharp!LWHTime8

More work has been done on the inside — the sprinkler system is in place.  We’ve decided on a security provider, so that’s one more thing off our list.

Looking forward to the next few weeks, there’s so much work that will be done in just a little while.

 

Sweeping clean — more decluttering

Living in the rental space has shown me where my own personal mindless clutter comes from.

Mostly it’s paper.

I’m definitely a piler, not a filer, so I’m trying to work out how best to organize my papers.  The first step will be to find “an underused closet ” to put a series of bins or baskets in.

Spaces by Fort Lauderdale Closet & Home Storage Designers NEAT Method, South Florida

And the system has to be super-accessible, so I can just drop papers in every day when I go through the mail — and not have to save them up to “file properly”.  I don’t need lots of bins (I have been honing my tossing skills) but just a couple to hold work receipts, manuals,  and notifications.

Plus it has to successfully hide said paper, so DH doesn’t have his “mess alarm” tripped.

And I’m going paperless when I can — bills, bank statements, receipts, etc., but I still have a few.  This little interlude is giving me the chance to figure out how many baskets I will need and how they will be labelled.  There’s no sense buying them until I have a space I can put them — I want them to fit into an unobtrusive place and I don’t have one of those yet.

These are just steps to the final product — a clutter-free home. For. Ever.

Half way through the build!

Well we are at the half-way point of the build and although we had a slight setback we are still on schedule and set to finish on time.

The hiccup in the plans is because they insist on hiring people to inspect our building!  Everyone has a slightly different set of criteria — although the goal for everyone is a finished building that is the best it can be.  Although our builders have a lot of experience they did not have everything this particular inspector was expecting — and so they have to do some more work before the sheathing inspection can be completed. But Angelito and his crew are working hard to get everything done so the inspection will go ahead next week.  Then insulation and drywalling can go ahead.

We had a lovely chat with Novell tonight at our regular debriefing.  We received their assurance that this blip on the radar will be overcome and everything will go ahead as planned.

The electrical and plumbing are done.  The breaker box is in:

20130823breakerbox

right beside the front door.  The wiring is all done upstairs

20130823upstairswiring

with the switch inside the planned appliance garage set up so it can’t be used unless the garage door is open.  Downstairs is ready, too with plumbing and wiring all set

20130823ShowerLights for the bathroom and the bedroom are either in hand or on order.  The hallway lamp is ordered (from Germany), and we are in the process of picking the perfect lights for outside the front and garden doors.  The deck lights will be installed very soon.

The rolled steel roof is going on next week, and the roof is being prepared for it

LWHTime7

Compare that with the first week of the build, 15 weeks ago

LWHTime1

Rue Britannia?

I embrace the idea of living in a small home — I’d be an idiot not to, when I’m going to be moving into less than 50 square metres of living space in a few months.

I don’t pretend it’s for everyone, but it’s perfect for me and mine and for many others.

So I was quite surprised when I read several articles from British newspapers disparaging the trend for smaller houses, calling them “rabbit hutches”; and decrying the decreasing size of houses and apartments in the UK.

According to this Guardian article by Penny Anderson,

The UK has the smallest new-build houses in Europe

a situation she called a “crisis”.  I could almost see her point.  Although her OpEd piece is rich in hyperbole and short of actual statistics, according to her anecdotal info many homes are too small to live in.

miles of single-fronted new-builds with awkward open-plan kitchen/diners/spare rooms/lounges, almost entirely free of storage. Then there are converted homes in older buildings situated in desirable areas where the market is febrile, which are often the worst low-space offenders, with bathrooms or even kitchens, squeezed into what used to be cupboards, and the original bedrooms sliced in half.

Apart from giving me a new word (febrile = feverous), she paints an ugly picture indeed.  Rapacious builders squeezing every square inch of living space out of small plots of land “to maximise profit”. “Bedrooms … as cramped as prison cells”.

Even the hard facts in this Telegraph article seem to bear her out.

Of the 2,500 owners of private new homes who were questioned, 57 per cent said there was not enough storage space, 47 per cent said there was not enough space for furniture and 35 per cent said there was not enough kitchen space for appliances such as toasters and microwave

Newer houses are definitely smaller than the traditional detached home, as Simon Bowers says in The Guardian:

In 1920, the average semi-detached new-build had four bedrooms and measured 1,647 sq ft, according to the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA). Today’s equivalent has three bedrooms and is 925 sq ft. Typical new terrace houses have shrunk from 1,020 sq ft and three bedrooms, to 645 sq ft and two bedrooms.

But is the problem size?  or design?  I know that our North American ways are not theirs.  As Anderson says

add in the need to dry laundry inside when it’s raining, with one or more adults working from home and you have a problem.

because in Britain very few homes have clothes dryers, an appliance we take for granted.  Take into consideration other specifically British realty idiosyncracies

unlike other countries, houses in the UK are sold on the number of bedrooms rather than square footage…. The result is a lot of small rooms. And UK consumers like gardens, which leads to smaller houses.

The rise of solo living is another factor. People wanting to live alone trade space for having their own flat.

OK, I’m beginning to see the problem here.  I’ve been to Great Britain, and I know that I was surprised at the housing there.  People seem to either live in detached or semi-detached homes, or in massive blocks of flats (these are often in the less-desirable sections of large cities).  To me, a Canadian used to very wide very open spaces, I was amazed that they could fit so many people into such a tiny area without resorting to a) Hong Kong style apartment houses reaching to the sky, and b) vast housing tracts despoiling the English countryside.

But I think those days of “and Englishman’s home is his three-bed and two-bath castle” are through.  It’s time they faced up to some hard facts.  Brits can no longer expect

enough room for a two-, or even a three-seater sofa, a dining table with chairs, and a little space for those things you can’t bear to part with.

Instead, they will have to accept some compromise.

The UK has a housing crisis. A shortage of homes has pushed prices out of the reach of many hoping to get onto the ladder. But once they get there, they may be disappointed – the UK has some of the smallest properties in Europe.

Many of the problems cited (lack of storage, fitting furniture into open plan spaces) can be overcome with good design.

Happily living in a small home is first of all about psychology, says Hannah Booth, homes editor at Guardian Weekend. “You can live without much more than you think.”

Apartment dwellers in New York and Japan know the secrets of this lifestyle, she says. “They’re the masters, they eat out a lot, spend a lot of time in the park. In the winter your home can be a nice little cocoon.”

I get the impressions that these new, small homes are still following traditional building styles, separate living and dining rooms,

All of us who live in areas where building space is at a premium are having to change the way we live — not just our domiciles.  Some people are sharing gardens.  Many are using dual-purpose furniture to get the most use out of the least amount of space.  Everyone is carving storage out of spaces they never thought of before.

And we are living with less, certainly fewer of “those things you can’t bear to part with”.

But what is the alternative for British homes? How are you going to fit more people into that extremely finite space?  They can either accept living in smaller places…..or ????

Just one more quote, from Quentin Crisp:

The British do not expect happiness. I had the impression, all the time that I lived there, that they do not want to be happy; they want to be right.

 

A peek inside the nursery

We are being delayed by an inspection that hasn’t been completed.  It’s complicated (as you may have guessed) but since inspectors are human and since they each have their own criteria as to what should be completed when, we have to get some more work done before the sheathing inspection is completed and signed off.

This is a disappointment, of course, we will be meeting with the nice folks from Novell on Friday to get everything straightened out.

But meanwhile, back at the ranch, er, farm:

realroofIt’s a baby living roof.  More to the point, it’s OUR living roof, growing up all big and strong out in Langley, waiting to be delivered to us and placed on our home in just a few weeks.

All together now, ‘Aaaaaahhhhhhhh’.

Just in passing, I was downtown the other day at a meeting and during a break looked out the office window to see this:

GeorgiaRoof

 

A live roof many storeys in the sky.

Ours will look nicer, of course, but it’s an idea of what we can expect.

 

What I learned on my summer vacation

BC has an embarassment of riches as far as vacation locations go.

This summer I’ve already been to Nelson and Christina Lake, British Columbia (sweet!).  But for our regular summer vacation, we always head to Penticton.  We stay at the same hostelry every year, perfectly placed for maximum walkability, close to the beach, pool, friendly owners — we love it.

Penticton

My favourite view of Penticton — toes, beach, lake, hills.

But what did it teach us about how we are going to live in the laneway? Well, we lived in a small suite with one suitcase full of clothes (between us) plus mis-matched pots, pans, dishes, and glasses.  And it was fabulous.

We bought food, drink (thank you, Okanagan wineries) and two beach towels (remind me again why storing things in a storage place is a one-way ticket to wasteville — our old beach towels are somewhere in “there”).  We spent money on experiences (miniature golf, restaurant meals, ice-cream cones) (hey, ice cream is an experience!).  And the wifi in our room is so dodgy we could only pick up our email if we stood at the kitchen counter or teetered on the balcony (we booked the same room for next year, so, yeah, we like picking up our email once a day).

Letting go felt great.  Of course we don’t believe that we are are going to be living such a simple life when we move. But we do understand that living with less is doable — and attractive. Sure it was only for a week, but it left us wanting more…..more “less”.

Back home I am looking for ways to get rid of some of the papers that flood into our home.  It’s a good start, and we will find a way to keep it to a minimum.

Baby steps. Inspired by a week without mail.

Day 102 — the calm before the storm

We dashed back after our week amid the beaches and peaches of Penticton to see what changes had occurred in the laneway and were significantly underwhelmed.

From the outside, it looked as if nothing had happened.  But when we got inside we could see that the electrician had been very busy.  All the pot lights are installed in where the ceiling will be — that is going to be one bright home — and we could also see where the receptacles and switches will be.

We are still trying to figure out one key part of the plan — the bedside lamps.  We thought we had found the perfect lamp, but then heard from Laurel our designer that the electrician had said, yes, they could be installed, but they could not be hard wired in, and that meant a visible cord running down the wall.  Why bother? We want built-ins!  So we just slipped into the Penticton branch of a local lighting store and hope that we’ve found the perfect one.  We’ll go over to their local branch to see if they can help us out.

We got a little too clever for ourselves and looked in furniture and accessory stores for the bedside lamps before we went to a lighting store.  We have learned our lesson.

I also discovered a free computer assisted design program, Sweet Home 3D.  I’m still learning the program, but it allowed me to use our plans to draw a 3D rendition of our kitchen and sitting area:

upstairsMetro.jpgIt’s still crude (like I said, I’m still learning) but we are able to visualize so much better — I cannot look at two dimensional drawings and “see” in my mind where things will go.  For instance, we were hoping to use our current coffee table, actually a carved wooden chest with a slab of glass on it.  But when I tried to fit it into the 3D rendition, it was clear that it would block the flow to the deck door.  It looked possible in the floor plan, but in 3D it was unworkable.

What is ahead for us is:  electrical and outdoor sheathing inspection, building paper and rain screening, then the metal roofing and siding installation.  Then more inspections and then…..DRYWALL!  So we are going to see some major changes soon.

Also we are waiting for the city to connect the water to the main house and the laneway — that will mean the main house can fill in the trench that currently leads from their front yard to the laneway — ugly and dangerous with a toddler around.

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