Three Generations build a house together... Eco Friendy Urban Homesteading, being as frugal as they can...

Sunday, October 23, 2011

The Front Goes Up!

Having the back of the house all framed in brought a big sigh of relief to all of us.  Nathan wasted no time in starting on the front of the house.  He had a lumber load last Saturday, a friend of ours, Ed (an architect with High Plains) stopped by just in time to help unload.  :)  He was a good sport and said over lunch that he didn't get himself into anything he wasn't hoping for!  Another friend dropped off some huge tarps for us to use.  We have had more rainy days lately and we're able to cover a huge part of the house now AND all the materials.  We have nice people around us, that is for sure!

The part that is being framed now is the upstairs walls to our bedrooms & bathroom.  There is our master bedroom, a nursery/kid room and a bathroom. 


bathroom and nursery wall up

Nathan framed up a bit of roof on the west side.  After a rainy evening, we were informed by our neighbor that we MUST put the roof on this side.  It's a small chunk of roof, but after one night of listening to rain falling on styrofoam, Claudia had had enough!  Nathan started it that day.  A Baha'i in our community came over to help and it got framed up lickey-split!  This picture shows the detail of the roof line.  I'm quite taken with it.  It's a fussy detail, but it is worth all the hassle in my opinion!  On a more sunny day, I'll try to catch the underside.


We had the windows delivered this week.  They aren't the cheapest option for sure, but they were as efficient as we could get without getting into CRAZY money.  After seeing them, I'm SO glad we went ahead with them!  They are beautiful!  The green is fantastic and they just look...awesome!  They are triple pained, lovely details on the inside, wood windows with aluminum cladding, screens that have a tighter mesh weave to them, making them not so noticeable when you look out the window.  This will coming in particularly handy becuase we have bays of windows with only one bay operating (opening).  You won't have to look out the window and wish you could see out of it! AND it will be 'invisible' when looking through the in-operable panes.   They are also one of the highest performing windows we could buy, without going to a European brand.  Eurpoean windows are in the thousands of dollars range per window.  All that money gets you the highest performing windows in the world... The windows are also made in America, Minnesota.  We definetly paid a living wage on these!

Karen at Billings Window and Door ROCKS!  She knows her stuff (she's not paying me to say this!)  She's a bulldog (even calling her suppliers and asking why the Blanding's can't get a specific deadbolt locks...(sold as a set w/ the handles) but what if you live in NY and you NEED 3 deadbolts & you want them to all look the same...YES, Nathan said that to her, AND YES, she picked up the phone and asked the same thing of the suppliers!)  We went with Marvin windows.  Nathan took a trip out to Minnesota to the plant a few years ago and he was very impressed. 


Windows being hauled inside

Our patio door was ordered as a 'window'.  We did this because the door companies couldn't come close in R value to the Marvin doors.  We could have done a more normal door & had a great R value, but we are all so excited about having the dining room 'spill' out side that we decided not to cut it.  But the sucker is HEAVY.


Patio doors...and a delivery man posing nicely for the paparazzi!
 Thank goodness for the delivery guys!  The windows were so heavy!  Nathan saw one of the guys picking up one of the smaller windows, Nathan offered to help...that was about all he could do.  He tried to lift it and he almost hurt himself.  This was one job he was fine watching someone else do!  Those guys were TOUGH.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

One roof down, One to go!

We have one side of the house roofed!  Well, almost roofed!  Nathan thinks he'll have it done by the end of today.  He's running out of space and has had to spend some time shifting materials and tools around.  This is a huge load of his shoulders.  He's been (we've all been) concerned about the timing and the weather, but it looks like we might just beat it! 


roof, as of yesterday

We're not going to do shingles this year.  Shingles have that tar strip on them that adheres well when it's warm, so Nathan would rather wait until it's warm to get that done.  In the mean time, to protect the plywood underneath we are using a commercial water barrier.  It goes on like tar paper, but has waterproofing qualities and can be out in the elements without getting ripped to shreds. 



View from the sidewalk in front



Before the roof was sheathed & front part started