Thursday, October 30, 2008

Painting Continues

Since my last post, we've finished painting all the ceilings. Most of the walls are also done. Everything is getting two coats. The only walls we haven't painted are the two extra bedrooms, the closets, the laundry room, and the bathrooms. Those won't take much time because they're so small.

I've used two brands of paint: Behr and Benjamin Moore. I'm sure they are both fine products as far as quality goes, but I've noticed a difference in how they go on. Behr goes on with a nice consistency and covers very well on the first coat. BM seems thinner, and takes a good second coat to cover everything. The first coat soaks in and lets a lot of the white primer show through. Now, it doesn't matter because I'm using two coats no matter which brand I paint with. But it was a noticeable difference.

Here are some recent shots of the painted rooms, starting with the tile I'm probably going to use laid against the TV room wall:














Also, here is the concrete pad we made for the air conditioner unit in the backyard:


Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Painting Started!

Here are some pictures after the first weekend of painting work. We've finished the office, and moved on to the ceilings in the foyer, TV room and kitchen.






And here's a bonus picture of some other tile I'm considering. The one on the left is $3.90/sqft and the one on the right is $4.95/sqft. They're close enough that I would obviously go with the cheaper one. But I'm still looking at other tile as well.


Friday, October 17, 2008

Sewer Connection Done

The pipe is now laid under the street. I'm told that another crew comes later to rip up and replace the two pads of concrete that cost me $6,000. Here are some photos from the second day of work. Since then, they've refilled the hole and smoothed over it with dirt.

In the pictures, you can also see the other utilities running underground:


Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Interior Doors Delivered

I ordered by interior doors back in June. And I paid most of the balance at that time. Since I wasn't ready for them yet, I didn't press to find out what was taking so long. Finally, with the economy tanking, I decided it was time to start looking into the doors before the supplier or the vendor went under! When I called, he said most of my doors had been in for quite some time. They had trouble with the wooded door for my office and had to send it back 3 times because of defects.



In the meantine, I asked that he deliver all my other doors. They came last week. In addition to my office door on back-order, they delivered the wrong door that leads from the foyer into the attached garage. Instead of the Therma-Tru fire rated door, I got some door with a big glass pane. I sent that back with the delivery truck and called my salesman. He's looking into it.



Here's a shot of some of the doors laying around the house now. I've used Post-it notes to tag each one as to where it goes. This helped me check off the list to make sure I had everything.



Sewer Connection in Progress

My $9,200 sewer connection is being laid across the street. Work began yesterday, and they completed the first half: across the street where the main sewer line is. Today, they're supposed to finish my side of the street.





In the process, neighbor across the street had his yard torn up pretty bad. They had to dig down to the sewer line on the parish property part of his yard. They put all the mud back and laid the grass in place again, but it still looks pretty rough. After seeing the mounds of mud during the day, I was pleasantly surprised to see that it looked as good as it did, but it's a shame his yard had to be messed up.

I spoke to him last night and offered to help in any way to get his yard looking back to normal. He thanked me for the offer. He had already called the parish to tell them it wasn't acceptable. They told him they'd come back out if it didn't settle correctly in the next couple of weeks.


During the work day, the parish called to tell me they needed to know how deep the sewer line is as it comes out of my house. My plumber told me it was between 30 and 36 inches below the surface. The surface at the house is higher than at the curb. The parish worker told me that the main sewer line is about 5 ft below the surface on the other side of the street. So I should have plenty of room for a slope down to the main.

Garage Paneling Complete!

This is one of those jobs that seemed to drag on and on. We finished hanging the paneling in the rear garage last night. All that's left back there now is to put moulding around the top and down each corner.




Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Biting the Bullet on the Sewer Connection :(

Yesterday, I went to the parish office to give them a $9,200 check for installing my sewer connection. It was a sad, sad day. :(

I had spoken to just about everyone in parish government that would talk to me and also two lawyers. The lawyers took time to call some contacts they had. Everyone confirmed that there was nothing I could do to avoid this. So, I wanted to get the ball rolling.

This is because the main sewer line is across the street from me. My particular lot doesn't have a sewer connection running across the street. Remember, my lot used to be part of the lot next door. When it was subdivided, the people built on the half with the existing connection. I could do something like run my sewer line laterally down to the neighbor's line, but I'd need the neighbor's permission and I'd have to pay to replace the driveway that would be dug up in the process. I'd rather have a direct line across the street.

I was told that the ticket will be passed to the sewer department and a work order will be created in 5 days or more.

When the work begins, my neighbors are going to be inconvenienced again. Replacing two pads of concrete in the street is going to create a big work area. I'm not sure if they'll do one side of the street at a time or if they'll block off the entire street since people can get out by going the opposite direction.