
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Cherry on top
Here's the sink we also picked up at Green Demolitions, donated after a Villeroy & Boch trade show. Again, the exact style & width that Erin had spec'd. Ah, the imminent joy of brushing our teeth side-by-side!


Green Kitchen
So, many of you have heard the incredible story of the kitchen we found at Green Demolitions. Here's the summary: GD raises over $1M/year to fund substance abuse treatment in CT by reselling donated kitchens. Most of them are fairly large country & suburban kitchens. Rarely do they get anything modern or apartment-sized.
So, the night before we were to meet with Erin (our architect) to go over the contractors' bids, we were desperate to find savings. Steve went to bed and THIS popped up on GD's website at about 11:30. I stayed up until 2 am measuring and scheming. At 15' it was EXACTLY the width of our desired kitchen but L-shaped where our drawings called for a straight line. Still it looked gorgeous in walnut & black granite.
At 9:30 am we were in Erin's office sweating until GD opened. We called at 10:00 sharp and found out the kitchen was still for sale and the price had dropped further! But they wouldn't hold it for more than three hours. Erin was great and agreed to hotfoot it up to Norwalk with me to check it out in person. A couple hours later I asked him what his gut said and he answered, "I don't think we should fight this."
So this is the "before" photo of our recycled kitchen in the original owner's Manhattan apartment. Fingers crossed that it will look this good in our space in a couple months. The appliances were not included.

So, the night before we were to meet with Erin (our architect) to go over the contractors' bids, we were desperate to find savings. Steve went to bed and THIS popped up on GD's website at about 11:30. I stayed up until 2 am measuring and scheming. At 15' it was EXACTLY the width of our desired kitchen but L-shaped where our drawings called for a straight line. Still it looked gorgeous in walnut & black granite.
At 9:30 am we were in Erin's office sweating until GD opened. We called at 10:00 sharp and found out the kitchen was still for sale and the price had dropped further! But they wouldn't hold it for more than three hours. Erin was great and agreed to hotfoot it up to Norwalk with me to check it out in person. A couple hours later I asked him what his gut said and he answered, "I don't think we should fight this."
So this is the "before" photo of our recycled kitchen in the original owner's Manhattan apartment. Fingers crossed that it will look this good in our space in a couple months. The appliances were not included.
Yikes!
Last Saturday Steve & I were doing our usual weekend inspection and realized that the wall separating the master BR and master BA/closet was about six inches farther into the room than we'd assumed from the plans. Instead of dropping straight down from the beam, it was creating some very funky chi around the doorway and crowding the bed. Six inches doesn't seem like a lot until you feel it.
With the plumbing roughed in, we also realized for the first time how ugly it would be to see the toilet (or worse yet, the toilet user) through the bathroom doorway. Y'know, you look at your drawings a million times but some things only hit you in 3-D.
The fortuitous part of the story is that Sunday night, Maya, Mini & I were coming home from Times Square on the subway and ran into our upstairs neighbors Tai & Cass -- the architect duo from 11C! I hijacked Cass for the entire ride and she basically came up with the fix right then & there: reverse the sink & toilet placement and make it fit by stealing a few inches from the closet for a small toilet alcove. Brilliant! Tai was very helpful too. Nothing like 18 years of living in and thinking about the same floorplan.
You can see that the risers leave plenty of space for the new configuration, so we bit the bullet and put in the big first big change order. See second photo below for new wall framing and third photo of the ceiling that shows where the first wall was framed, then torn out. The pink color is plaster sealant. See very first blog post for comparison pic of the riser wall intact.
Ah, feels right now.


With the plumbing roughed in, we also realized for the first time how ugly it would be to see the toilet (or worse yet, the toilet user) through the bathroom doorway. Y'know, you look at your drawings a million times but some things only hit you in 3-D.
The fortuitous part of the story is that Sunday night, Maya, Mini & I were coming home from Times Square on the subway and ran into our upstairs neighbors Tai & Cass -- the architect duo from 11C! I hijacked Cass for the entire ride and she basically came up with the fix right then & there: reverse the sink & toilet placement and make it fit by stealing a few inches from the closet for a small toilet alcove. Brilliant! Tai was very helpful too. Nothing like 18 years of living in and thinking about the same floorplan.
You can see that the risers leave plenty of space for the new configuration, so we bit the bullet and put in the big first big change order. See second photo below for new wall framing and third photo of the ceiling that shows where the first wall was framed, then torn out. The pink color is plaster sealant. See very first blog post for comparison pic of the riser wall intact.
Ah, feels right now.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
We Have Framing
Our new walls are being framed & the new ceilings dropped. Maya's room is now closed off from the public spaces and, while I miss the flow of light & air, she won't need as much therapy down the road....
The new drop ceilings in the foyer & ex-hallway look GREAT. They're functional because they hide all the electrical lines but they also help to define the K/DR and LR which are taller by a foot -- whoosh!
The closets are going in and they seem HUGE to us. We are determined to limit our wardrobes and stuff to only what will fit inside i.e. no dressers in the room. Now that we'll also have a separate office, I have dreams of reading in a chaise lounge by the window...

The new drop ceilings in the foyer & ex-hallway look GREAT. They're functional because they hide all the electrical lines but they also help to define the K/DR and LR which are taller by a foot -- whoosh!
The closets are going in and they seem HUGE to us. We are determined to limit our wardrobes and stuff to only what will fit inside i.e. no dressers in the room. Now that we'll also have a separate office, I have dreams of reading in a chaise lounge by the window...
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Election Break
Brooklyn for Obama! Yes, like many of you, we got completely swept up in the jubilation. See our election photo diary:
http://www.kodakgallery.com/ViewSlideshow.action?&collidparam=42866929103.872363685603.1227214506343
Saturday, November 8, 2008
Blueprints
Inside & out
Bad news/good news
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