Remodeling

Don't walk on that floor!

Monday morning I realized I needed to stop over at our Floral Dr project. That is the "honey do" project we are finishing up which I wrote about on my January 7th post "Cross that off your list!". http://www.applewoodremodelers.com/carpenterandtheartist-blog/. I had a ton of things to do but I knew I had to go shoot some pics of the project.

It was a good day to stop. They were just starting to install the hickory wood floor. I have never seen a wood floor installed. Now I know why they are more expensive. It's major prep before the first piece is stapled down!

To start.. the wood needs to be delivered and sit stacked in the environment where it is to be installed for at least a week. You can see in the photo below how it was stacked to acclimate... even that is interesting!

Then each and every piece must be placed so no end seams line up. This is called "racking" a floor. And each piece comes at random lengths from the supplier. It's a lot of bending over and trying sizes. I think I'd lose my mind! Not to mention my back.

After a few rows are laid in place and prepared... then the stapling can start. Each piece is moved forward and fitted into position. Piece by piece. A special tool is used called a wood flooring stapler. 

After all the wood is installed then it gets sanded, seams get filled with wood filler, sanded again, then "water popped" (a light coating of water so stain goes on more evenly), stained, then two coats of polyurethane. Welcome beautiful wood floor!

I had no idea. I will never look at a custom wood floor the same again. I might not ever want my own custom wood floor.. I might not allow anyone to walk on it! And certainly not little muddy puppy paws.

 

Its January 21, 2016…

by the Carpenter

... and we have had very few cold days and very little snow so far the winter. We had a pretty good cold snap last week, but it was short lived. And we were inside for a change! We have another two weeks or so before we go back out.

We will be starting a fairly involved exterior/interior remodel project. Yes we will be starting outside, that’s just how it goes. But it is almost February, which in my book spells spring. The days are definitely getting longer, it hit 21 degrees today and they say maybe 30 again this weekend. If you are a fan of Joe Soucheray of "Garage Logic" fame http://www.1500espn.com/shows/garage-logic/, you already know we are in the middle of spring. In "Garage Logic" land, spring started December 22nd, the day after the shortest day of the year. The first day of summer is March 21st. Unfortunately that also means the first day of fall is June 22nd, the day after the longest day of the year, but we won't think of that right now. I will continue to enjoy being in the "middle" of spring for now. (this is how you have to think if you live in a part of the country that gets long winters!)

I need a good long dry spring. Our up-coming project will be starting outside. We will be handling a variety of areas with this project. Removing stucco, replacing old shingles, framing new roofline details, adding insulation, installing new windows, doors, siding, soffits/fascia, wood floors, carpet, and interior trim. We are in the middle of meetings with the homeowners, building inspectors, architects, engineers and subcontractors. Yesterday I had our lead carpenter up in the attic and down in the crawl space, getting more information for the engineering that has to be done to satisfy the inspectors.

There have been several design meetings, many hours of tweaking drawings to give the homeowners our best ideas to assist them through the planning phase. The goal being to land in a place where they are happy with design, products, colors, and the overall feel of the home.. all within their budget. We are getting there. 

All that is happening along with another addition we are bidding on, another interior remodel, and I think now I have four bathrooms on my desk (make that six, I looked at two more last week) that are in various stages of the bidding process. This jigsaw puzzle is growing. It will be a good challenge to see how all of it fits together. One of my brothers recently asked me why I keep pricing things when so much is happening already. The answer is.. nothing is for sure. Ever! Easy come easy go. In a blink of an eye, those projects you thought were solid can disappear in a heartbeat. Through the course of this past fall and winter, I had three projects. I thought they were for sure. Had proposals on two of them. I usually know I have the job before I type up proposals. One of those projects I was actually meeting with the homeowners to sign the proposal and receive the down payment and they decided to pull it. Put it on the shelf for a while. Yep, nothing is for sure.

If everything happens to go our way, well that’s a good problem to have. It will put our backlog well into summer. It will help nudge along the task of building our crew, and maybe, just maybe I will get one of those new shiny shoulders I have been admiring through the front window of the "New Shiny Shoulder Shop" on 5th and Main.

Ok, time for bed. I told the artist I was not going to work tonight and all of a sudden I have been working on this for over an hour.

Good night Gracie!

 

 

Cross that off your list!

by the Artist

image1.JPG

I've had a super busy week. Who hasn't you say. I have done color consults for two of our projects. One a kitchen project (Deerhills Drive- http://www.applewoodremodelers.com/recent-projects/) we completed early fall. This was my second consult. The original gray we chose was just too blue. Sometimes you just have to live with a color for awhile. We offer design assistance as part of the project. And even if the project is long finished.. if the color doesn't work, we make it right. 

The second consult was for a current project- Floral Drive. We are helping to finish a number of interior renovation projects, that were never completed.

This was my first time at the project. I met one of the homeowners. She has been living with unfinished projects for quite some time. A number of factors have contributed to the situation. I felt her frustration. She just wants it to be done. It didn't start with us.. but we need to be sensitive to the situation and do our best to move quickly and as quietly as possible. The kitchen is completely unusable, the ceilings had to be scraped, the sheetrock work finished, walls painted, wood floors installed. With sheetrock taping and mud, the house is closed up and humid, and there of course is dust. 

Remodeling is stressful. Even if you know you are getting the kitchen of your dreams. Or the bath worthy of a King and Queen. If you live in the house during the remodel you will live with mess and stress. We want to be sensitive to that. Today made me aware of that again. We are working in a private home. 

Getting back to the consult.. the homeowner had great samples for me to look at. New chair material, a new area rug, a countertop sample, even a floor plan of the project! That was so helpful. The Carpenter brought the chosen flooring with two stain samples. We were able to choose wall colors, and even talked about window treatments. I hope that helped the homeowner. She was able to cross some more decisions off her list! And that brings her that much closer to living in a beautiful completed space!

 

The beginning of a new era (actually continuing the journey)

by the Carpenter

Yeah, you know the journey I’m talking about. The journey I have written about so many times. Yep, the one I have said it's time to pull back and let the employees carry more of the load.

We have been fortunate to have finally hired again, what’s the saying?  Fourth ones the charm?? Or something like that. 

We have great hope that Jason is the fit we have been looking for. He seems compatible with Adam. He comes with experience yet not arrogance, and he is very eager to learn. A cool aspect of him is he is from Hayward Wisconsin, and as you know Hayward is a very favorite area of ours. He does come with one serious flaw however… he is not a coffee drinker!!! I told him he has two weeks to convert or it’s down the road! ;) Hey, I have converted five of my ten Minnesota nieces and nephews, there is a chance! Hahahaha.

Onto projects of the day..

Keep following us and hopefully we will be talking about a really cool job we are currently pricing. It started almost a year ago. The customers went through a real transformation in the process of talking to a couple of contractors, trying to decide on design, and trying to stay on a budget that worked with them. It got very overwhelming and it was put on hold for the summer.

They re-grouped and re-focused and we are one of the contractors they have called back to table. Needless to say I feel very fortunate to have the possibility to be involved again. It is an exciting prospect. One of those that I have always said I love. A project that takes a creative mind, and has the potential challenge of tackling a few unknowns (but what job doesn’t have those). When it is completed (no matter who does it) the build process will totally transform their home into a place they will be able to live in and love for a very long time. 

As Thanksgiving has passed already, I want to thank each and every one of our customers that we have had in 2015, and also those that gave us a chance to win them as a customer. It is very important that everyone knows it does not go un-noticed. Thank you.

 

 

 

 

Battery heated coat?

by the Carpenter

Another dry spell from the blog….. These months just keep flying by.

Help, we need a carpenter! That’s the main reason I have not written much, there is just too much to do.

We have been in a stretch of many months now looking for help. We have been interviewing a few; none have had what we are looking for. Sometimes I think I may be too fussy, I don’t know, maybe.

It is funny how the job search works these days. We put out an ad that asks for a carpenter with at least 5 years experience in residential remodeling. We get responses from 40 to 50 year olds looking for a career change with no carpentry experience at all, to guys with a lot of experience looking for $70,000 salaries plus a new truck. Where is that middle guy?

Needless to say we have not found the right fit yet. In the meantime we manage with our subs, and with being in tune with the jobs as we possibly can be. I’m sure the guys are tired of hearing me say….”we need to be productive today”.

As if we can be unproductive any day, hahaha.

Summer is over. The turn in the weather is just a breath away. I think this is the 36th winter I will be entering since this carpentry gig started.

I have to laugh. More years then not it seems, I am looking at a winter of outside work, coming off a summer and fall of more inside then outside work. This winter may not be different. I have been looking at a battery-heated jacket the last few years, may have to quit looking and start buying. No wait, I’m hiring a carpenter for that! 

PS from the Artist… I had to find out if a "battery heated" coat exists! Well it does. Check out this link. http://www.amazon.com/s/?ie=UTF8&keywords=battery+heated+jacket&tag=googhydr-20&index=aps&hvadid=33825823795&hvpos=1s4&hvexid=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=15963518070457027836&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=b&hvdev=c&ref=pd_sl_2jll98li1h_b 

I think I know what I'm getting the Carpenter for Christmas…. 

 

For real.

by the Artist

C&A_test.jpg

At a recent interview the Carpenter was asked if there really was an "Artist and Carpenter". The Carpenter looked at the guy and said.. are you serious? You are looking at the "Carpenter". It made me think about that. What is obvious to us isn't ever as obvious to someone else. And in this digital age.. what you see on a screen is not necessarily real or true. 

Well I just pinched myself. I am real and as of this morning.. the Carpenter is too. I am an artist- trained in graphic design. I now work in our company doing all the marketing, and I assist with any design needs for our projects. And the Carpenter has been pounding nails and loving what he does since age 18. We are married. We work every day to make it in this digital world, to be a presence, to keep the work that we do relevant and hopefully from time to time.. fleetingly interesting to you.

This week we started a large exterior remodel. Click on this link to see the album I set up on our Facebook page. https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.924098774343969.1073741922.342655239154995&type=3 These are our favorite type of projects. We are excited to share with you. Prior to starting this project we both spent quite some time meeting with the homeowners to gather information, present design concepts– to be given the opportunity to partner with them to achieve the goals for their home. This is a huge responsibility. We are up for it!

Tuning in.

by the Artist

I love the show "Flipping Out" on Bravo. Mostly because I get to see how Jeff Lewis the owner relates to his employees, and how he manages multiple projects at the same time. I particularly love Jenni his main assistant. I admire her sass and how she handles the subcontractors and clients. The show for me is more about human interactions then the end product. 

Recently I watched an episode where Jeff and crew were updating a home's interior from the walls (remodeling) to the furniture (interior design). Towards the end of the project Jeff realized that the homeowner wasn't happy with how the project was turning out. But his wife was very happy. 

I suddenly saw behind the obvious of the episode. I couldn't believe that it had gone that far in the project. Who wasn't really listening? Did they sit down and talk prior to the project start? Or did they all just get caught up in the momentum of the process. Jeff and his crew were syncing with the wife on all the design decisions. But the husband wasn't and had checked out of the process. And it appeared that no one took the time to ask him what was going on– they knew he was unhappy but didn't deal with the elephant in the room. Yet. At least this is how it appeared from how the situation was presented. 

I thought about this. What if this happened to us? I would feel terrible. What did I miss? It made me pause. It confirmed to me that we always need to "know" our customers before any larger project begins. To have a clear understanding of what they like, don't like, what their "style" or lack thereof is, what their dreams are for their home. We do this. I do this before I offer a single suggestion, sketch or wall color.

The issue on this episode was resolved. An honest conversation ensued where Jeff and the wife admitted that they had neglected including the husband in on the decisions, and had ignored his apparent unhappiness. And the husband was honest about how he had been feeling– that he felt like a stranger in a home he no longer knew– all his favorite things gone–replaced by sleek contemporary. From that point things improved. The husband was given the voice to choose what he wanted. And ironically in being given the freedom to choose he came around to embrace the newly designed interior, along with a comfy chair for his office!

So here's to starting off right. Staying in communication and always checking in, and mostly.. listening.



Thirsty anyone?

by the Artist