Week 6: Foundations

Week 6 of the remodel was a big one: Enzo and his team started laying the actual foundation for the new sections of the house. Hence, the title for this post and the accompanying photo gallery, which I’ve been itching to use for weeks.

As you look through the pictures in this set, you can see the progress the team made from Tuesday through Saturday. On Tuesday, the rough concrete foundation was in place, but it remained encased in the wooden molds into which it had been poured. By Saturday, the molds had been removed, the concrete had been topped with a sill plate to which the frame will be anchored, and floor joists were in place for most of the new great room. The sole unfinished area was the back corner of the old garage, where the old garage wall was still standing: they’re still using our original electrical box, despite the fact that the temporary power pole has been in place for a several weeks now.

Unfortunately, as hinted at last week, this stage of construction led to the loss of the rose bush near the kitchen window, as well as the Nile Iris that had been a fixture in our yard since the day we moved in. I’m trying very hard not to think about the amount of landscaping work we’re going to have to do to fix things up when construction is complete.

As of this writing, we’re still trying to work out a solution to the problem with our fireplace I mentioned last week. The architect had hoped that perhaps there was enough shear wall support in our existing master bedroom walls to make further work unnecessary; she even asked us to dig up the plans from that remodel, which the previous owners had graciously left us. Unfortunately, that avenue did not pan out, which leaves us to decide whether we want to relocate the sheer wall, which involves additional construction (and perhaps some paperwork and back-and-forth with the building department), or have the fire box inside the living room. We’ll probably have to make a call in the coming week.

Gallery: Week 6: Foundations

Week 5: Groundwork

A bit behind schedule, we have another set of pictures to share, this one covering week five of our remodel.

This week, having previously cleared away the old garage and patio and dug out space for the new foundation and additional footings required to support the second floor of the house, the team set up wood frames—I’m sure there’s a better word for these—to shape and form the foundation itself. Looking at these pictures, we’re finally starting to get a sense for how the first floor of the house will come together. We can see where the dining area and kitchen will be. And, seeing the size of the garage, we’re beginning to reassess our original plan to put the charger for my car inside the structure.

Luckily, we managed to get good photo of the rose bush which sat outside our kitchen. We bought it as a Mother’s Day gift for Julie a while back, and it struggled for a long time. The last two years, however, it really took off, producing a steady stream of blooms all summer long and well into the fall. I took a picture because I was happy to see it had survived the construction work thus far, and I had a flash of hope that it might make it to the end of the project. You can probably guess how this story ends; it‘s a good thing I got the picture when I did.

Gallery: Week 5: Groundwork

Week 4: Digging

We have relatively few photos this week, but that’s probably a reflection of the fact that the rate of visible progress has slowed somewhat. There’s not much left of the house to tear down at this point, and we’re not far enough along that any substantial construction has started.

What is happening is work on laying the foundation (literally!) for the new sections of the house. The team has been digging out the space where the foundation will sit and putting down rebar to strengthen the foundation and footings. They also dug out the areas in the old portions of the house where new footings will be required to support the mass of the second floor. This apparently required cutting through the carpet in our master bedroom—previously, it had merely been folded back—so I suppose this means we’ll be getting new carpet next year. I’m rooting for a shade of green that’s not dissimilar to what we have now, but Julie is looking for something different.

The crew also removed the hardwood flooring that had been revealed when Julia’s carpet was pulled up, much to my delight at the time. I thought that they might try to save that floor, since it’s in the general area where the dining room and mud room will lie, and we’re obviously going to need some kind of flooring there, but apparently not.

We ran into a few hiccups this week, as well, though nothing insurmountable. First, PG&E threw up some procedural roadblocks that got in the way of setting up the temporary power pole that will be needed for the team to continue working after the wall with our existing electrical box comes down. Given that we’re dealing with the power company, it should come as no surprise that the solution involved a transfer of funds from us to PG&E.

There was also a bit of a mixup regarding the plans: the structural engineer had assumed that our chimney was going to be removed completely, and surmised that he could use the north wall of the living room as a shear wall. Unfortunately, this would leave no space for the firebox of the converted fireplace, unless we want to have it project into the room. We don’t want that. Luckily, the contractor caught this discrepancy early in the project, and has been working with the architect and structural engineer to come up with a solution, which may involve converting one of the walls of our master bedroom into a shear wall in place of the living room wall.

We’ve also made some progress on other fronts. Enzo put us in touch with a window salesperson he likes to work with, and he’s working on putting together a bid based on the specifications in the plans. And Julie has been working with Lesley, our designer, to hash out some of the decisions we need to make early on with respect to the interior of the house. They’ve already picked out toilets, tubs, and tile for the upstairs bathrooms—the toilets are actually sitting in our storage unit as I write this—and have settled on a color for the kitchen cabinets: white.

It’s good to feel like we’re taking positive steps forward.

Gallery: Week 4: Digging

Week 3: Goodbye, Garage

Going into the third week of the the remodel, it seemed like the most dramatic aspects of demolition were complete: Julia’s room was gone except for the floor; the kitchen had been removed except for one short piece of wall that is theoretically staying after all is said and done; and the garage felt like a distant memory, as all the walls had been knocked down except for the tiny corner where the electrical panel hung.

It hadn’t really occurred to me that there was a lot left to do with the garage (and also the patio): in order to support the new living areas that would be constructed above them—including a couple second-floor bedrooms—significant new sections of foundation would have to be laid. That meant the garage floor would have to go; that’s where much of the work was focused in week three. The floor and patio were broken up by Tuesday and removed by Thursday. When we went by at the end of the week, the concrete base of the garage walls had been cleared away, as well.

That wasn’t all that happened, of course. The ongoing task of attic cleanup continued, producing piles of insulation, flooring, and various pieces of boxes that we’d left behind. And work started on the fireplace, including removal of most of the chimney: we’re planning to make use of the bricks to piece together trim for new sections of exterior wall, in the hope of saving a little bit of money and ensuring a good match with the existing brickwork.

If you look carefully, you can see the last scraps of kitchen wallpaper and floor, still tenaciously hanging on in the face of all this destruction. Time will tell how long they’ll hold out.

Gallery: Week 3: Goodbye, Garage

Credits: Julia Neva Wong contributed many of these photos.

Week 2: Demolition!

After the interior work done in week 1 of our remodel, Enzo and his team got serious in week 2, as you can see in our latest set of photos. Chekhov’s excavator, which sat menacingly in our driveway at the end of the previous week, was put to extensive use in week 2.

Julie and Julia visited the site during the week as work was progressing, and by the time the whole family made the trip on Sunday, little was left standing of the portions of the house that are scheduled to be removed: a bit of the front kitchen window, which will become part of the garage wall; the back corner of the garage, which was only spared to preserve access to power, as that’s where our electrical panel is situated; and the roof, pretty much all of which has to go eventually.

Julia’s room is completely gone except for the hardwood floor, and there’s a crack in the wall of our master bedroom where it appears that the machinery was a bit too voracious. Likewise, the planter of boxwoods under the kitchen windows has been removed, as have the garage and the painted brick corral where we stored the garbage cans out of sight from the street. They’ve even started tearing up the patio to clear the way to put down the foundation for the new sections of the house. I suspect the large rose bush in front of the house, which we bought for Julie for Mother’s Day a number of years ago, but only really came into its own last year, is not long for this world.

Having lived in this house for nearly two decades, it’s a pretty remarkable sight.

There are glimmers of hope, however. On the floor near where Julia’s closet and the hall closet once stood, the crew has marked off where the mud room walls will eventually sit. It’s not much, but it’s one of the few signs we have thus far that the project will change to a more constructive mode sometime soon.

To lighten the mood a bit, we’ve included a cat picture or two and some photos of the kids playing in the pool. Toward the end, there are a few pictures of Joe and Julie bravely taking a late-night swim. The pool light casts a beautiful glow in and around the water, but I suspect it was a bit chilly.

Gallery: Week 2: Demolition!

Credits: Julia Neva Wong took many of these photos.

Settling In

We’ve been in our rental home for nearly a month at this point, so I thought we might share a gallery of pictures showing what it looks like filled with all of our stuff.

In fairness, most of these pictures were taken a week ago, and we’re slightly more unpacked now than we were then. A few things remain unchanged, however: Julia and Joe’s rooms are still furthest along; the garage is stuffed to the gills; and the office continues look as though a bomb went off. If it weren’t for virtual backgrounds in Zoom, I’d be too embarrassed to attend work meetings.

We’re hoping we have another couple weeks before the rainy season starts to make room in the garage for the kids’ bikes and scooters, which are currently stashed in the side yard.

Gallery: Settling In

Remodel Week 1: Interior Demolition

You might think, knowing that we’ve been planning this remodel in one form or another for about three years, that we would be fully prepared for the emotional impact of starting construction, but it turns out that it’s easy to talk about knocking down walls and replacing rooms in the abstract as you fantasize about the amazing new edifice you’re going to construct. It’s much harder to see the nursery you carefully painted and decorated for your unborn daughter—who is now just a couple years from heading off to college—gutted. Of course, this is exactly what we signed up for, and Julie has been very good about reminding me that things will feel better once the crew is doing something constructive rather than things that are purely destructive, but it’s still something of a gut punch.

Here are some pictures from the first couple days of interior demolition work, and an additional set covering the entire first week of the project.

The construction crew made amazing progress in the first couple days of work, largely stripping the garage, kitchen, and Julia’s bedroom. By the time we came back at the end of the week, the interior of the house was largely unrecognizable, as most of the distinguishing features of those spaces—including the boundaries separating rooms and hallways—had been removed.

And, at the end of the week, a small excavator was parked in our front yard, a harbinger of things to come.

The demolition process revealed some interesting facets that we’d never really examined in our time in the house, like the older wallpaper hidden behind the cabinets in the kitchen and the surprisingly well-preserved hardwood floors under the carpet in Julia’s room; maybe we should have refinished that surface at the same time we removed the carpeting in the hallway. There was a surprising amount of symmetry and intentionality in the layout of the hallways and doors that was more apparent when everything was stripped bare than it had been when the house was filled with the artifacts of everyday living. I hope we can bring some of that thoughtfulness and care to the new configuration.

It also dredged up emotions and memories, reminding me of simple, physical things like the chair rail we put up in Julia’s room in the last few weeks before she was born; it remains one of my favorite things that we’ve done to the house. Other memories bubbled up to the surface of my consciousness as well: lying in bed, listening to the sound of the kids’ feet as they crept (or stampeded) down the narrow hallway to our room; chasing them around the winding, looping path through the kitchen, dining room, and front hallway, confident that they’d never catch on to the fact that I could double back and catch them unawares going the other direction; and countless meals in the kitchen, from Julia’s first, thin spoonfuls of oat cereal mixed with breast milk to family dinners with all five of us crowded around the kitchen table, with thousands of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches packed into lunchboxes along the way.

Sometimes these thoughts keep me up at night, as I reflect on the fact that not only will I never hear the sound of Julia’s door creaking open, followed by hushed whispers as little feet tiptoe down the hall, but no one else will have that experience, either. That door and that hall are gone. Julie rightly and kindly reminds me that this is Not My Problem: we get to keep our memories and our joy, and the next family to come along—after we are beyond caring—will make their own memories and invest their emotions in the house as they know it, not in what it once was.

Also: people move (we moved when I was William’s age, and I solemnly swore to buy back our old house when I was grown); homes are lost to fires, floods, and financial ruin. This was our choice. Our situation is far from tragic and anything but unique.

I know all of that. And still, it’s hard.

Galleries: Days 1 & 2, Week 1

Credits: Julia Neva Wong took many of these photos.

Rental

As part of the process of renovating our house, we had to find a new place to live—the changes we are making are much too dramatic to allow us to stay at home during construction. We initially explored a few different options, including buying an RV to live in for the duration of the project and selling it when we were ready to move back into the house. I have some friends who made that work and lived to tell the tale, but it’s worth noting that they have just two children, both of whom were under the age of twelve at the time. It’s not at all clear how many of us would survive a year in an RV with two teenagers and a first grader.

So, we elected to pursue a more conventional strategy and began looking at apartments, townhomes, and houses to rent. We started out with a couple fairly strict requirements: enough space for Julia to have her own room and a Felix-friendly neighborhood not too close to very busy streets. The fact that we’re still, as I write, in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic added some additional wrinkles: we needed enough space for each of the kids to do distance learning, and I needed a space in which I could work from home and participate in meetings without completely disrupting the kids’ classes.

Despite the pandemic, the rental market in the Bay Area remains somewhat absurd. It became clear very quickly that it was going to be difficult for us to stay within the housing budget we’d set up. And we learned from a few experiences early on that we couldn’t afford to hesitate when we saw a unit we liked: almost everything was snapped up within a day or two of appearing on the market.

One place we could afford was a cute little house just a block away from home, on Ellen Avenue. It was a cute little home of about the same vintage as our own, and seems likely to have been built by the same builder: it shared some of the design flourishes that we’ve grown accustomed to over the years, especially in the kitchen. It was a bit on the small side—getting all of our stuff in likely would have been a challenge—but the price was right. The problem was that the owner was looking to begin a remodel herself and was only looking for a tenant to stay six to eight months, or long enough for her to get her building permit. Our project is scheduled to take eight to ten months, assuming nothing goes wrong, so ultimately there wasn’t a way to make it work, as nice as it wouldd have been to be a five-minute walk away from home.

After that option fell through, we—well, mostly Julie—kept looking, checking the online listings daily and making appointments to see anything that looked promising. Finally, she came across a very nice looking house a near downtown Campbell that seemed to check all the boxes: bedrooms for Julia and Joe; a separate office; and a large, two-car garage to help store all the stuff we’d be pulling out of our garage, workbench area, and attic. As an added bonus, it came with a feature that I had never really considered: a swimming pool. Julie and Joe went to see it after school one afternoon and quickly came to the conclusion that it was likely our best option, despite the fact that it was at the upper end of our price range. There were a few other places still on the table, but none of them had the same appeal. With that in mind, despite the fact that I’d never actually seen the house in person, we put in an application, fearful of losing our chance if we waited.

Even moving as quickly as we did, there were other applications in play, but we were lucky enough to to be selected. The house is owned by a very nice family with two older kids—one just out of college, and one in high school; they were moving to a larger home in Almaden Valley because the wife’s parents were moving in with them. We started the lease a couple weeks before our planned moving date of September 8, which in turn was a couple weeks before the tentative start of construction on September 21. The hope was that this would give us plenty of time to empty out our house before the construction crews started knocking down walls, and the plan mostly came together, a few late nights notwithstanding.

The rental itself has been wonderful. Julia and Joe have plenty of space to deal with school comfortably, and we’ve more or less dedicated the living room to William’s schoolwork and toys. The office is more than adequate for my needs—in truth, it’s probably nicer than the office will be in our house when it’s finished—and after school, when William wants to play Minecraft with his friends, I move over to Joe’s room, as he usually doesn’t have too much in the way of homework. The boys have been making good use of the pool, jumping in a few afternoons each week, and there’s a lovely park about half a block down the street with a playground for William and plenty of open space where Joe and I can play catch.

The only minor downside is that the house doesn’t have air conditioning. We thought we might have timed things such that we would miss the hottest part of the year by moving when we did, but the weather has not cooperated: temperatures have reached the middle or high 90s as often as not the last couple weeks. It’s been a little uncomfortable during the day when I’m cooped up in the office in meetings and my computer is continuously generating heat, but on the other hand, the hot days have given us more opportunities to use the pool before the rainy season starts.

To convey a sense of what the house looked like before we filled it with all of our stuff, we’ve posted a few pictures taken in the days immediately after our lease started. It’s a bit messier now, but we’re settled in and as comfortable as we can reasonably expect to be as we face what looks to be an interesting year ahead.

Gallery: Rental

Preparations and Moving Out

It’s finally happening: after years of discussion and seemingly endless back-and-forth interactions with the city planning department, we are finally beginning construction on a renovation of the home we’ve lived in since 2002. Our permit was issued on September 16, just five days before the start date we had set with our contractor, September 21. The fact that the permit went through on time was one of the few things that has gone right, schedule-wise, for this project: we started talking about adding onto the house all the way back in late 2017, with the hope that we’d be moved in by the middle of 2019. We are a bit behind schedule.

Of course, in order for construction to begin, we had to vacate the premises. Our official moving day was Tuesday, September 8, when a crew of movers arrived to take our furniture over to the house we’ll be renting for the next year. We chose that day because it fell just after the long Labor Day weekend, which we thought would give us a chance to get most of our non-furniture possessions moved ahead of time so that the kids could attend school online from the new place and avoid missing classes.

This plan mostly worked. Tuesday morning, Julie got the kids up early and ferried them over to the new house, where the Internet was mostly functional (more on that another time); I stayed behind to meet the movers and let them know what was staying and what was going. They spent four-ish hours loading everything onto two separate trucks and broke for lunch before heading off to deliver the load. I headed straight over to the rental to help Julie stick felt pads onto the feet of all our furniture so that it wouldn’t scratch the polished wood floors and to let the movers know where everything was supposed to go.

That part of the move went fairly smoothly, mask discipline on the part of the movers notwithstanding, but there was still quite a bit of stuff to pack up at the house even after the movers came and went. Fortunately, we had a couple weekends to clean up these loose ends before the contractor was due to show up and start knocking down walls. Even with that buffer, however, things came down to the wire: we drove away from the house with our last load of stuff at 1:30 in the morning the night before demolition was due to start.

We’ve posted a few pictures highlighting the process from the day movers came to our final moments in the house, with a few pictures of Julia’s room from before this all happened for the sake of comparison.

Gallery: Preparations and Moving Out

Back to School 2020

We managed to survive the summer of 2020 with our sanity largely intact, despite the fact that we were mostly cooped up in our home while the COVID-19 pandemic raged. I’ve been working from home since mid-March, and the kids spent the last two-and-half months of the school year doing distance learning with varying degrees of success.

The unusual circumstances made the end of the school year a bit anti-climactic: we were all home all day, anyway; only the schedules changed. Because of the circumstances, we were a little more relaxed about things like screen time than we would have been otherwise. In William’s case in particular, playing Minecraft with his buddies was the only meaningful social interaction he had.

This isn’t to say that the summer was entirely without stimulation. We put together a vegetable garden after having taken a year or two off (in the process of turning over the soil, I learned that William is deathly afraid of earthworms, which greatly limited his participation in that phase of the project), and we are still reaping the benefits of our labors in the form of a seemingly unending supply of tomatoes.

In July, Julie and Joe took on the task of repainting our patio furniture. This project got off to an inauspicious start when they went through several cans of paint without coming close to finishing the first chair. Even after a return trip to the hardware store for more paint, the problem persisted: each can stopped working after a minute or so, which didn’t bode well for the cost effectiveness of sprucing up the chairs.

Fortunately, after a phone call or two, the very nice folks at the spray paint company speculated that the hardware stores in the area might have gotten a bad batch of paint, and offered to send replacements. When the new paint arrived a week or so later, everyone was much relieved to find that it actually worked, and we now have patio chairs that are a beautiful shade of sage green. The refreshed chairs—Julie also bought new cushions—helped to make the patio a really pleasant place to spend time, which came in handy when I was forced outside to work because the boys were playing with their friends online in our bedroom.

For the first time ever, we even managed to grow actual sunflowers!

IMG 5232

After a bit of cajoling, I convinced Joe to try his hand at a little bit of programming. I’m not sure it’s his favorite thing to do—there are, after all, limitless videos on YouTube to tempt him—but it was fun to work through some problems with him and see things through the eyes of someone who hasn’t been coding for the last 30 years. He got the hang of things pretty quickly, and though there are still a few chapters left in the book we’re using, I’m hopeful that he’s seen enough to know that it’s something he could do if he wanted to. We’re planning to spend more time working our way through the book during the school year.

Of course, all things come to an end, including—no, especially—summer vacation. School started for everyone in the second week of August the same way they ended in June: at home. We’re very fortunate to high-speed Internet and access to the equipment the kids need to participate and do their work. The older kids have hand-me-down laptops and spend their days holed up in their rooms. William has an older, but still functional, iPad in a ruggedized case to help it survive the rigors of being handled by a first grader on a daily basis, and he hangs out at his craft table in the dining room, which is bright and sunny and close to busy spaces like the living room and kitchen so he never feels too isolated or alone.

The change in circumstances called for an update to our usual first day of school pictures. Instead of posing in front of the car with their backpacks and lunchboxes packed and ready for departure, we snapped some photos of them holding their devices, ready to face a day of video chats, online lectures, and electronic assignments.

The album also contains a few shots of one of our last summer projects. For weeks, William had been asking to to make a special snack that one of his substitute teachers brought to class last year: rainbow jello. Through no small effort, Julie was able to acquire the seven (!) jello varieties required and, with a little help from William, put them all together to make the delicious treat you can see in the pictures.

Update: Please note that the rainbow jello pictures were taken by Julia.

Update #2: Corrected the color of the patio chairs from forest green to sage green.

Gallery: Back to School 2020