What started as a blog for the kitchen remodel is now a rolling chronology of all our major house remodeling projects. This is the first house we bought as a married couple, and nearly 9 years ago we did not envisions raising our family here. Alas, here we are and making the best of it. We have fallen in love with our neighborhood.
Friday, September 28, 2007
Who builds a house with a "90 degree" corner that isn't really 90 degrees? Apparently the builder of our house. As we were trying to finish up the framing (oh, two weekends ago), we determined that the corner into which we are inserting our deck isn't square. This means we couldn't finish the framing and will have to wait until the decking is down to "square" things up. Oh well ... two steps forward and one step back.
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
First, let's take a walk down memory lane to recall what the old deck looked like. It was small and low:
On Saturday, August 25th, Yobany and Denise came over to help us on deck work. Denise hung out with Jasper, while Yo, Drew and I dug the 2' x 2' x 16"deep holes. On two out of the three we hit big rocks that jutted into our hole space. We left them in place and just dug out around them the best we could. Drew then built box liners for the cement slab tops and took off for Home Depot with Jasper to pick up the cement.
Drew called me from HD to tell me he'd have to buy 12 - 80lb bags of cement. It didn't really sink in what that meant. That meant a 1/2 TON of cement. And as you might expect, our Pasat does not have a payload of a half ton. So Josh Benefield graciously offered to go to HD w/ Drew on Sunday to pick up the cement in his pick-up. I don't even remember how many bags they bought - but it was around a half ton. (After this project, I have a new-found appreciation for pick-up trucks. Our 4-Runner's payload is 300lbs.)
Drew poured himself into getting those slabs done during the week, and on Monday night he had blown through 4.5 bags on ONE HOLE and knew he'd need to head back to HD for more. He borrowed another truck from a coworker (Cha-Cha) on Tuesday and picked up more cement after work. He worked hard pouring holes on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday nights - working even when it was dark so that we could keep the project going. The only reason he didn't work on Wednesday was that it was my night to take a break from Jasper 24-7, and I went to see "Becoming Jane" with Kathryn. It also rained that night, so he wouldn't have been able to pour cement anyway. By the end of that week, we were both spent.
This is how the back of the house looked two weeks ago after the three cement slabs were poured.
They finished putting epoxy into the holes in the foundation and got all the bolts into the holes and then got both ledgers firmly attached to the house:
Andy hauled all the joists from the garage to the backyard (2"x8"x16") and helped Drew line them all up.
Drew then attached all the joists to the ledger.
And in the end, it really looks like a deck is just going to drop down on this surface. :) Our neighbor Dean came over to inspect the progress on Saturday and said "Wow!" We still have about 5 joists to hang, and I think we might try to knock that out tonight.
The overall dimensions are going to be 20' x 16'. It should be considerably more accommodating of a group of any size than the old one. How that old deck could accommodate more than one person, working around the three trees in the middle, is a mystery to me. We're excited about the prospect of being able to really use our back yard now with a more functional and safe and more aesthetically pleasing deck. Won't you come over to check it out?
More updates to come, as work progresses ....