July 2012

Renovation // Transformation, This Modern Life

Glen and Molly’s Front Door

Another front door install… and while they get a little blog-monotonous after a while, each is a little different and worth of pointing out a few things — and validating a few more things.

(Shameless plug: We've gotten pretty good at these and they're looking damn-fine. If you're in the market for a new door in the East Bay area, drop me a line… soup-to-nuts, these run about $900-1000 installed (depending on options) provided there's not a ton of reconstruction to do on the jamb).

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Renovation // Transformation, This Modern Life

In Hot Water

As part of the pool install, we installed a wall-hanging, tankless hot water heater today… well, we didn't — Water Heaters Masters did. Casie discovered them through Angie's List.

We really didn't need a hot water heater, immediately — our old water heater had anywhere between 3 and 7 years left in it, but we're putting the pool equipment in the room, so (1) the space-saving will be nice, (2) we'll eventually need a water heater and pulling out the old tank over the pool equipment would be tough, (3) if we ever did want one, we'd have to upgrade the gas line (larger) and we already had a trench dug… so it just made sense to install one now and not have to worry about a hot water heater for another 25 years.

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Renovation // Transformation, This Modern Life

Erin’s New Door (finished)

One of the nicest elements of the single-garage Eichler design is the covered carport and the screen to the atrium. It creates a barrier, but still feels friendly and bright. Unfortunately, Erin's wasn't as inviting as it could have been.

What started as a simple door replacement found a replacement of everything but a single original redwood post in her entry. The previous version was in terrible shape — the post that secured the door came down with a simple kick — nothing was securing it to the foundation. The original door has a handle where the deadbolt used to be — a victim of a foreclosure and a few break-in attempts took its toll. The securing post was splintered and… not secure.

While it's weird to geek-out on things like precise strike-plate and hinge mortising, but these details really help to make an entryway sharp — and something that after a few door repairs, we've gotten good at. Coupled with a now-secure main post (and a great color scheme by Erin), the new entryway is ready for the 21st century.

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Uncategorized

Redneck Yard Sale, July 7th

This weekend, as part of the/our Forest Park Neighborhood Sale, we'll have stuff pulled out into our driveway for sale.

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Saturday, July 7th

8AM-2PM

4154 Phoenix Street, Concord CA…

We'll have some good stuff, including:

  • Nearly new Neuton electric lawn mower with lots of add-ons (3 batteries and trimmer attachment)
  • Dwell (2007-2012), Metropolis and Sunset Magazine
  • Tons of cookbooks
  • A gajillion DVDs
  • PSP and games
  • PS3 games
  • portable DVD player
  • housewares, knick-nacks and doo-dads.

Come on by and have a look-see.

This Modern Life

Bad, Amazon… Bad

It's not often that I openly rail on a vendor on this site, but the below is what I came home to today…

I had ordered 3 gate frames to replace the ones for the pool and the idiot vendor shipped them in the "shelf" box… one layer of E-flute cardboard with 30lb steel gates inside. You simply can't ship a product in the presentation/shelf box.

Yes, they're going back to Amazon. Yes, they're damaged. They're not even the right color (they're supposed to be black). I guess they'll eat the return shipping for their idiocy.

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