This portrait, hung next to all their family photos, was found in the bowels of a building we affectionately call Lady Liberty, pictured below. They say since they hung the portrait there is no more creaking in the attic.
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Behind the Walls
Really you just never know what you will find behind the walls when you renovate. I once gave a client housewarming present of all the stuff we unearthed arranged in an apothecary case. It included milk bottles and prohibition bottles, dog tags and a communist manifesto.
This portrait, hung next to all their family photos, was found in the bowels of a building we affectionately call Lady Liberty, pictured below. They say since they hung the portrait there is no more creaking in the attic.
This portrait, hung next to all their family photos, was found in the bowels of a building we affectionately call Lady Liberty, pictured below. They say since they hung the portrait there is no more creaking in the attic.
Job Site Graffiti
My kids came to a job site meeting. The foreman was prepared with sharpies and crayons and set them to work on the shear wall and temporary protective wrap. You just never know what you will find behind those walls when you renovate.
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Red Dot Studio - California Home and Design Home Tour
One of my favorite editors at California Home and Design, Mary Jo Bowling, really captured the essence of our Sanchez St project. Check it out on their home tours link attached, A Twisted Victorian in San Francisco:
Banks St Construction Journal
Feb 2013
February 2012
I really love the Banks St project. I got carte blanche to design the space for resale but showcase quality craftsmanship. My client is a contractor named Aaron Gordon who is growing his business and capabilities. Given the relationship, I'm even getting to make tweaks during construction without going through change orders. So really it couldn't get more ideal. It is a teeny tiny house. 17'-1" wide stud to stud. I even love that.
I have sorta been holding my breadth while it is being constructed. I know I loved the idea of it in my head. I really did get the chance to get my idea out there and built as I imagined it without any unreasonable compromises. I have been feeling this really pregnant sense of "Will I love this child, will it be what I imagined?"
Today I began to settle into to it. I know that I will have hindsight is 20/20 moments... but today I kinda felt like it had a soul.
One of my non-change orders is adding glazing above the door to the master bedroom which you can see framed out below. One of the crew remarked how nice it will be to see the different pools of light the skylight will cast in the bedroom throughout the day with the glass transom. Gotta love a crew who gets it.
Nov-Dec 2012
The roof got buttoned up before the rains came. First the new skylight locations were set. Since they align with the edge of interior partitions the locations had to be just so. The walls will run right up to the skylight giving the light a surface to reflect on. One benefit of a small house is we are allowed to have a skylight at the property line, since we are under 1,000 SF a floor. This will get us a pool of light right at the stair landing and a feeling of height where the roof would otherwise comes down a bit low. Notice no ridge vent. AGC's foreman Chad costed out rigid insulation verses adding a ridge vent and edge vents for the cathedral ceiling. Turns out rigid insulation was cheaper in this application. (Don't you just love that shingle color Aaron?)
We have a great engineer on the job, Toft DeNevers and Lee. In order to remove the collar ties we hung a new ridge beam and sistered on new roof joists from below. This gave us maximum ceiling height without changing the exterior envelope. Below is the roof framing just getting started. All of the horizontal supports will go away once the new shear walls are in.
Look no eaves. That copper gutter sticking out is not a mistake. Though the crew keeps asking if it is. There will be a chain drain coming down and a rain barrel in the front yard. Rain will be a fun event at Banks St.
Fall 2012
Client is contractor. Contractor's business is growing. Aaron Gordon Construction, really good, look them up. Crew pulled from his own development project to work on other people's jobs. Very slow going. But when it does go it goes really well. The building inspector saw me on another job and told me how much he liked the work on Banks St.
June and July 2012
These months are best described as the big dig. Opening up two walls of a building without adding a moment frame, means we have strong walls and the concrete equivalent of the keel of a sailboat in the ground as ballast. We also excavated to fit in a complex system of pipes and materials to evacuate water from the building. Though dry as a bone right now we observed this ground through the winter when every exploratory demo hole filled with standing water.
June 2012
New floor height set. Sigh of relief. The new floor height upstairs feels good for the scale of the rooms. Downstairs feels like a real place.
May 8 2012
Setting new floor height. Our drawings measurements are spot on at the front of the building. Not so much at the back where the roof framing falls 4” in a few feet. Solution lift roof joists. But at the middle of the building where the stairs come up we are still 1-1/4” off. Not much but every inch counts. We need exactly 7’-6” from the landing to new ceiling. Solution more excavation below.
Finishing construction documents. Selected glue down cork floor for second floor. It is thin. Every inch counts. But how to deal with the transitions from the cork to the tile at the bathrooms? Don’t want a threshold. We have a plywood diagphram on the second floor. If we remove that and thinset the tile no threshold. Call to Kevin our structural engineer at Toft De Nevers and Lee. Kevin we want to remove the plywood at the guesat bathroom and master bathroom on second floor. Guest bathroom fine. Master bathroom hits exterior walls. What about adding straps around opening? Straps under the cork will telegraph through and you will see a bump in the cork. Solution add them at the underside of the plywood. These details need to be tight-in the good way.
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Lucky Seven Party February 1
We had a really great party. Thanks to Lauren Venell for letting us join her show. A huge thanks goes to Brian McHugh, a great friend and client. He made an interactive art project for the party -an 8' long see-saw balanced precariously with building blocks highlighting Divisadero Street old and new. Our job was to keep the see-saw in balance.
Brian playing with the blocks.
Seven years in business and I feel lucky. Lucky to have started when construction was booming. Lucky to have made it through when it was not. Lucky to have clients trust me with their homes, their businesses and their savings. Lucky to have developed a great team of contractors and consultants to work with. Thanks to all of you who have made me so lucky!
Please come help me celebrate Lucky 7 on February 1, 2013 from 6-9 at 600 Divisadero St. x Hayes.
The party is in the Rare Device store. Our office is located in the loft space at the back of the store.
As an added bonus local artist Lauren Venell will be showing her work and a curated show called Sustenance about the history of place that is 600 Divisadero Street.
Lauren's show description: 600 Divisadero Street has provided nourishment to everyone around it for over 150 years. Since 1876 this piece of pasture has housed an orphanage, a neighborhood meat market, and now, Rare Device and Red Dot Studio. Each of these institutions has fed the community--sometimes with food, and sometimes with more spiritual sustenance, as a place for neighbors to gather and feel at home. The community also feeds 600 Divis, much like tributaries feed a river. Generations of San Franciscans have flowed through here, sometimes stopping and spending time with the people, goods and spaces that have grown and changed here over time.
Thursday, January 3, 2013
Nantucket
We spent a week in Nantucket. The beaches were beautiful. The town was charming. Fun vacation but I wouldn't want to live there. Not because it is a sleepy town in winter with 12,000 residents which swells to 50,000 in August. I love sleepy abandoned winter beach towns. No for me Nantucket is just too Nantucket.
Our house was near town- gray shingle with white trim- Classic Nantucket. Actually all the houses are gray shingles with white trim. It is part of the charm which comes at the cost that even a blue door seems like a subversive act. I can't help but think of the planning and zoning codes that have emerged over time to keep it just so- preserve Nantucket. It also reminds me of our west coast version, Sea Ranch, where shed roofs and brown shingles have been codified. It leaves me with an uneasy feeling both understanding the impetus of master planning seeking to keep a place defined apart from the sway of cheap construction but leading to a stylistic conformity. For me the real charm of Nantucket isn't in the architecture but in the 75% of the island in land trust- limiting development and preserving the coastline. Ultimately that is what will keep me charmed with the island.
Photo is by Alison Seger.
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
Last year I got a paper-shredder for Christmas. Just what a small business owner needs.
My kids made snow and decorated our tree.
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