Tiling in The Twilight Zone by Scott Newland

The tile setters on the house are doing an outstanding job.  They take care with alignments and uniformity, and the quality shows.

Shower glass is on the construction schedule to be completed by May 10.  Plumbing fixtures are scheduled for completion by May 11.  We look forward to closing on May 18!

If you notice something odd about the previous paragraph, you're right!  The project has somehow gotten unstuck in time, like Vonnegut's Billy Pilgrim.  Except that things are out of sync, there are no answers to questions, the title company is wondering what's going on, and we need to move in 9 days.     So it goes.

Unsettled by Scott Newland

I realized today that it's been well over a year since we had a "normal home life"; where we knew instantly where everything was, where we could make a mess and leave it that way for a while, where we didn't care so much what the cat was up to.  It was early April 2016 when we had the old house staged and available for showings.  For almost 8 months we lived in a showroom-like curated version of our house, and by the holidays, when we finally had a signed purchase agreement, we were in packing mode.  Now, after nearly 4 months, we've been living ("exiled") in this dark one-bedroom apartment in central Bloomington.

As the long and winding road to our new house approaches its end, the anticipation of MOVING HOME is getting stronger. Having ¾ of our stuff inaccessibly stored is getting old, and the lack of direct sun in this apartment will make the light-filled spaces of the new house feel absolutely wonderful.

Maybe all of this will be worth it.

Held up by rain by Scott Newland

While the interior finishing is nearing completion, key aspects of the exterior are awaiting another stretch of dry weather.  This week's rain has delayed concrete pours (sidewalk and garage apron) and painting (window trim and board-and-batten siding).

The wrap-up, in earnest by Scott Newland

Things are entering the final push all over the house.  Painters, tilers, carpenters - all are at work in multiple locations.  Reviewing progress at end of the day, I liked a lot of what I saw.  This was a good antidote to the heaviness of yesterday, when I learned that we wouldn't be closing this week as previously scheduled.

Shown:
1) The cool Kesseböhmer blind corner device.
2) Finishing the hardwood flooring on the main floor.
3) Painting the upper level rooms.
4) Kitchen backsplash tile.
5) Main floor bathroom tile.

Landscaping begins by Scott Newland

Grading has been nominally completed, and yesterday I had several dozen stones moved from a client's backyard in Uptown to the new house.  Today, I started moving the stones to their new home.  Some of them are now in place as small retaining wall off the southeast corner of the house.

Doppelgänger by Scott Newland

A 7-year old version of what we're building.  Sort of.  Many of the elements in this fantasy design survived, albeit in a more conservative form.  I still like this design a lot.

A 7-year old version of what we're building.  Sort of.  Many of the elements in this fantasy design survived, albeit in a more conservative form.  I still like this design a lot.

Standing seam roofing by Scott Newland

The prefinished steel roofing is over half done now.  It's a light gray standing seam application that will last many times longer than asphalt shingles, and the runoff will not contain loose granules or petroleum-related material leaching.  Future photovoltaic panels will easily mount to the ribs.

Light by Scott Newland

The kitchen countertop was set yesterday.  One of the qualities in the house we're most looking forward to is the amount of light.  Light both in terms of sunlight and the pale, clear-finished maple, birch and pine wood surfaces.

The countertop is HanStone Quartz, "Aurora Snow".

The countertop is HanStone Quartz, "Aurora Snow".

Exciting images and progress... by Scott Newland

Lots happening on the job site, thankfully.  Doors are going in, tile is progressing, hardwood floors are being nailed down, and the metal roof is being installed.  Tomorrow will see final grading and countertop installations.

This image shows the slats alongside the stairwell.  They are continuous from the basement through the top level, providing the code-mandated barrier while allowing peek-a-boo glimpses through it.

This image shows the slats alongside the stairwell.  They are continuous from the basement through the top level, providing the code-mandated barrier while allowing peek-a-boo glimpses through it.

Frustration by Scott Newland

This blog is intended to offer glimpses of the design and construction process for this new house venture.  It's fun to show exciting images and progress, but it's important for me to also present the "dark side" when it becomes the dominant item of the day.  Right now, the frustration du jour is on helplessly waiting for things to happen that were promised but haven't happened yet.  I won't list them all, but big and small they are many.  With the upcoming closing date with our mortgage banker and our need to move out of this rental apartment, I'm anxious about having things get done so these major milestones can happen with some assurance.

Porch, continued by Scott Newland

Today, I finished putting up the salvaged cedar slats on the porch wall (about an hour after I took this photo).  When the weather warms up later this week, I'll stain the wall and ceiling.  The board-and-batten wall beyond will be painted…

Today, I finished putting up the salvaged cedar slats on the porch wall (about an hour after I took this photo).  When the weather warms up later this week, I'll stain the wall and ceiling.  The board-and-batten wall beyond will be painted dark blue.

I Am Curious (Yellow) by Scott Newland

As the project's completion is on the horizon (a fog-shrouded horizon, but it's out there we're sure), questions remain which will be answered this weekend:
- Which ceiling fans should we go with?
- Which closet system to commit to, and in which closets?
- Where do the new trees get planted?
- What is the last paint color (or two) that we can agree on?
and:
- Should we go with a yellow basement floor?

Porch by Scott Newland

The main reason for building this house to have a screened porch.  A screened porch with a house attached behind it - that's all I want, really.  I started staining the cedar band around the perimeter today and will continue tomorrow.  The porch "ceiling" is the salvaged, planed fence slats from the original house's backyard fence.

The warm stained cedar will closely match the fir front door finish and will mediate between the deep blue board-and-batten walls and the white lap siding walls.  The black-stained PSL columns will get another coat and there will be additional …

The warm stained cedar will closely match the fir front door finish and will mediate between the deep blue board-and-batten walls and the white lap siding walls.  The black-stained PSL columns will get another coat and there will be additional framing infill to create the screen frame supports (ScreenEze) and screened door.

Predicting reality through BIM by Scott Newland

Many months ago, as I modeled the house in BIM (computer software: "Building Information Modeling"), I did some semi-photorealistic renderings to help communicate the design to JoAnn. Now that the built conditions are approaching completion, it's interesting to compare some of the initial images to what things look like at the house.  Here are two examples:

Composite image of LR rendering and April 2017 construction.jpg

Above: View from the dining area to the living room and the entry/desk beyond.

Below: Overview of the kitchen.

Flooring by Scott Newland

Upstairs, the 4-¼" yellow birch hardwood is going down.  It's a more random blend than we'll have on the main floor; a callback to the tradition of using a lesser species or grade on upper levels than on the main level.