Sunday, February 26, 2012

wall to wall good times!

Yup... the old wall is gone and the new one is going up!  First we carved off all the old stuff...
Ain't no thing.  Look how unconcerned Wylma and I are.  Look at all those ancient layers of stable prehistoric stuff... just like the Grand Canyon!  Next we dug some holes for pilings...
By "we" I mean some incredibly tough guys who know what they're doing, not me & Sarah.  A bunch of concrete is going in there -- tomorrow in fact.  They call it "shock-crete" which sounds cooler.  I guess it's stronger (shockingly so) than regular concrete.  Then it's time for the grade beam, that goes along street level...
More shockcrete going in there.  Then a rebar frame up to the top...
 Whoops don't fall in!  Stay tuned for our next post... prepare to be shock-creted!

Friday, February 17, 2012

AT LAST!!!

We finally got that darn permit to rebuild the front retaining wall and stairs!  Good lord, was that ever a long and difficult process.  We really had no idea what we were getting into when we bought the house.  We could never have gotten that permit without the best wall & foundation people in town, Alpha Structural, who were at long last able to get all the various city desks to sign off on our project.  The house was probably built on top of a little hill in 1895, near the dirt farm road that later turned into Glendale Boulevard.  Then at some point somebody built Laveta Terrace, and paved it, and built the sidewalks, and gradually carved our hill into the steep little rise you see today.  And for the last couple decades, the house has been fronted with pipe & board walls and lopsided stairs, which finally deteriorated to the point of condemnation you see here...


You can imagine why the city would be reluctant to approve a new wall for this site.  Well, we can imagine it in hindsight... when we bought the place we didn't think it would be such a big deal.  But a big, year-long deal it was.  But finally, we got them to sign off on a rebuild, thanks to Alpha.  So first we cleared the vegetation, and removed the ratty palm tree that was growing up into our power lines...


Kinda looks like you could fit the whole house in that dumpster, right?  A trick of the photographic perspective my friend.  Anyway, we do prefer it without the palm tree.  We'll plant some cactus and stuff, you'll love it.  So right after this photo, we finally got the darn permit, signed sealed & delivered, and demolition commenced immediately!!!


So far, it's speeding along... if all goes well, our last month in the apartment will be March and we'll kick off the springtime in April at 335 Laveta.  There's still a crazy amount of work to do, we're not out of the woods yet, but we're almost there.  Stay tuned to this station for more photos as work on our wall & stairs proceeds!


the doors of perception

Sarah inspired us to get all crafty like and buy cheap, old, beat-up vintage doors for our back porch and the rental, and then sand & paint them and fit them in just like they do on home fixup shows.  I even glazed in one of the glass panels my own self.  True enough, it does add a lot of charm.  Bob Vila was right all along!


Our back porch door, in its original farm-fresh state.


Addin' a little paint & primer to the rental front door... neato hardware & handle too...


The third tone emerges!


From color pair to color scheme!  (Still gotta scheme on that one kitchen window a bit.)

ye olden farmhouse bed

We were looking for a neat old bedframe with really high clearance underneath for storage and stuff, and we found one! It's actually a rope bed, though we removed the wooden side rails with holes through which you would thread a network of ropes on which you would rest your mattress -- we replaced them with iron side rails. This, apparently, is the origin of the phrase "sleep tight" -- if your ropes are tight, your mattress rests firm & snug.