Friday, June 7, 2013

Losing Myself in Planning



I think when I bought this house, I thought I could get projects done quickly by focusing on one room at a time. I've mostly followed the one room at a time thing, except work that I had to do for renting out my second floor apartment and some yard work. Last night I sat down and started putting together a list of things that need to be done to finish the East Room. 

Now that I'm finished, it feels a little daunting. I may have to get more help on this than I had planned. Not so much that I can't do it, but because I'm living in about 550 square feet and I'm feeling pretty cramped. Also, I'm trying to have something of a life. Anyway, here it is. It should read more like a dependent schedule than an outline.

  • Attach Subfloor
    • Initial Mason Repair
    • Rebuild cellar entrance to allow full access to North windows that are currently non-existent (one is actually a boarded-up door).
    • Perimeter wall framing
      • Install new North windows & frames and repair masonry around windows
      • Install new exterior door & frame and repair masonry around door
      • Install new spigot (old one is too low)
      • Install new electrical
        • Install perimeter wall insulation
          • Finish walls
            • Install ceiling insulation
              • Finish ceiling
                • Install floor

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Problem Doors

So my goal at the moment is to move closer to getting insulation into my East room. Since insulating inside of a brick wall involves extending the walls four to six inches deeper, this means the door and window frames need to be altered. The doors have an especially big change, since the door has to be on the inside of the wall to open properly. That means I need to build or buy (custom) a new, deeep door frame, since the wall is already nine inches deep. 
Well hello, crawlspace

The other day, I decided to take apart the sill and see what I'm working with. Not picture above is a one inch cap covering the original sill and the front of the cap. From what I can tell, the original sill (show above) cracked at the overhang and they basically put trim over it to make it look better. Unfortunately, the sill plate did not overhang the kick plate that they installed. In fact, it butted up against the kick plate. Any good carpenter will tell you this is going to cause moisture problems behind the kick plate. Any good mason will tell you that trapped moisture and bricks will cause problems.

Monday, June 3, 2013

Bridging Gaps


It's been a while long time since my last post. The Great Laziness set in on me for the winter, then I had to go to LA for a couple months for work. Extended trips tend to leave me in another state of laziness when I get home.
Now, I'm back to being productive in my East room wing. I spent my Sunday installing bridging between floor joists in an attempt to stiffen things. First, I tried the metal single-nail tension bridges. It worked between a couple joists, but most gaps between joists were too wide. I ended up putting a 2x8 bridge between most of them. It helped some, but, like I expected, there's still a fair amount of bounce. Securing the sub-floor and finished floor may help some with that, but most likely I'll install a beam underneath to keep things from bouncing.
If you're wondering about the black strips on the joists, that's roofing felt. It's often used on top of sub floors to get rid of waviness or general unevenness. I decided that since I had a few joists that were 1/8" or 1/4" too low, they could be a good solution to even things out before installing the subfloor.
One thing I need to figure out is how to fasten the subfloors with strips of roofing felt below them. The normal method is to put down construction adhesive and nail the floors down. I've planned on using screws to hold the subfloor down. At this point, I can't decide if that's enough since construction adhesive on the top layer of roofing felt wouldn't do anything. Maybe I'll just break down and glue every layer of felt beforehand just to be safe. After all, it's only 4-8 layers on 5 joists for 13 feet.
Actually, that doesn't sound too bad.
In the meantime, I need to research thermal breaks between the wall and floor's edge and also research putting up new framing for the walls. I've decided that I should frame in new walls 6" from the exterior walls and put in insulation. In other words, I may have this room finished in less than a year and a half, but it might be closer to two.