Archive Page 2

Dumping stainless

Stainless steel certainly has that cool “professional” look, but looking to the future I think going with a darker, less maintenance-needed style will fit our personalities a little better.

It will also save us around $200 per appliance. So that’s another plus.

For example, the Fridgidaire GLGF389G range below has five burners, a griddle attachment (hello pancakes!), convection oven, and can be had for ~$800.


And with refrigerators, the non-stainless versions seem to have a lot of the cleanliness and price advantages as well.

Down to doors

Sometimes reusing what you’ve got is more trouble and more expensive than going new. That stinks.

So even though we have a stack of the original wood doors we’re going to put new interior doors in the house. The time and cost of stripping, sanding, repainting, and rehanging the doors we have is prohibitive. We may end up using some of them in another project (a rustic desk perhaps?) once we get into the house.
Here are some of the options I’ve found for door replacements, listed in my order of preference:

1. Craftmaster Clermont

2. Jeld-Wen Cambridge

We’ll see what Agnes has to say about it ;)

Any thoughts?

Update from The Dellwood House

I apologize for the lack of updates, but it’s been a busy couple of months. Between Agnes re-launching her photography business’ “brand” and website over Labor Day weekend, a trip up to Columbus to visit my mom, and a bunch of work at the house, I’ve been slacking badly on the blog updates.

So here’s the latest: The place is really starting to look like a real house! We’ve got insulation. We signed a contract with the drywall guy and his crew will be starting on Wednesday.
Instead of doing the slideshow thing I’ll just post some pictures with captions:

1. The duplex door is finally gone! Can you believe they had a cheap interior door in place there before?

2. The inside — freshly insulated!

3. From the top of the stairs.

4. The laundry room

5. Next to the laundry room — from the inside of Agnes’ walk-in closet.

6. Agnes’ walk-in closet

7. The master suite (it’s big).

8. More master suite.

9. Inside the master bathroom.

10. The master toilet room. Eat your heart out, Al Bundy.

11. The other bathroom, the one with a tub.

12. Bedroom 1 — this will be Agnes’ office.

13. Another view of Bedroom 1. Check out the floor - we had the closets pulled out about ~2 feet to make them, like, actually useful.

14. Inside Bedroom 2.

15. Downstairs, the main room.

16. Agnes walking from the kitchen (the plywood area) into the dining room. The kitchen will have cork floors (the white boxes sitting behind the trash can).

17. We had the ceiling insulated in the studio/presentation room to cut down on the noise from the sound system. In the center you may be able to see the rough-ins for the ceiling speakers. We decided to go with the Polk Audio speakers after all.

18. The back of the studio/presentation room.

Toyota debunks the Hummer vs Prius myth

For those that don’t know both Agnes and I drive Toyota Prius hybrids. Hers is a 2006 and mine is a 2005. I was a Prius zealot before I even owned one, but once we got the 2005 Agnes became one as well. We’ve even convinced a few friends to go the hybrid route when they purchased a new vehicle.

Here’s a [nerdy] picture of us and our cars:

Us and our Prii/Priuses

I could go on and on about why the Prius is probably the best car for most people but here’s a short list:

It is much larger than you’d think. It’s comparable to the pre-2006 Camry in interior space.
It gets incredible gas mileage. I’ve never had a tank under 45 MPG.
It’s reasonably priced, with models that start at $22,000.
It’s a Toyota.

About the only downside of owning a Prius is that I’m constantly being challenged by people with the “latest news” about why my purchase was a mistake, not actually green, etc. The anti-Prius crowd can be downright nasty at times, with their hatred of my car going past a simple disagreement and bordering on psychosis. It’s like the anti-hybrid people want to make me ashamed to drive a Prius while they run me off the road in their Chevy Avalanches.
I can thank the Detroit-funded shill CNW Research — the “Research” in the name being used loosely due to their questionable methods and findings — for the latest round of “proof” for the anti-hybrid. Basically the CNW report tried to say that from production through useful life the GMC Hummer H3 was a much “greener” vehicle than the Toyota Prius. While the findings in this “report” flew in the face of reason and common sense, local news affiliates were quick to republish the findings as fact and muddy the waters.

Thankfully Toyota debunked that myth.

From Toyota’s Hybrid Synergy View newsletter:

HEARD THE ONE ABOUT THE HUMMER?

Some readers of Hybrid Synergy View say they’ve heard about a report that claims a Hummer H3 sport utility vehicle uses less energy per mile driven than a Toyota Prius sedan. Not surprisingly, Prius fans who take pride in their cars’ energy efficiency are confused by this claim.


The report, published earlier this year by CNW Marketing Research, Inc., is titled “Dust to Dust: The Energy Cost of New Vehicles From Concept to Disposal.” It is said to measure in dollars and cents all the energy used in creating, building, operating and disposing of each vehicle over its entire lifetime. The report says a Prius costs $3.25 per mile to operate, versus just $1.95 a mile for the Hummer H3.

In May, a response from the Pacific Institute said of the CNW report, “The little supporting evidence that it has released suggests that the contentions in the report are, at best, unproven, and are likely wrong: the result of faulty analysis, untenable assumptions, manipulation and misuse of facts and data, numerical mischaracterization, and inadequate review.”

Because of its remarkable claims, however, the CNW report has been circulated widely and quoted in the media, continuing to spur questions from consumers.

Vehicle life and lifetime miles
For example, the Prius is assumed in this report to be driven only about 9200 miles a year, and to have a service life of less than 12 years and 109,000 miles. CNW assumes the average Hummer H3 will travel 207,000 miles over a lifetime of 15-plus years. The H1, incidentally, is assumed to have a lifetime of nearly 35 years, with 379,000 total miles.

According to data from the New Vehicle Consumer Study by Maritz Research, Prius owners plan to drive their vehicles an average of over 14,600 miles per year. And if Prius hybrids last only the 12 years assumed by CNW Marketing Research, Inc. — also an unsupportable assumption, given the substantially greater service lives of other Toyota vehicles — they would still rack up more than 175,000 miles in their lifetime.

Production costs versus operating costs
Using another puzzling assumption, the CNW report seems to assign the majority of a vehicle’s lifetime energy input to its design, development and production. We turn again to the Pacific Institute, which cites five independent studies showing that the operation of a vehicle is responsible for at least 73 percent and as much as 90 percent of its lifetime energy cost.

One of these studies, from the Argonne National Laboratory, is quoted as concluding that “around 74% of all hybrid and internal combustion vehicle energy use comes from the operation of the vehicle.”

Pacific Institute quotes the MIT study “On the Road in 2020″ as saying that a comprehensive life-cycle energy analysis found that “80% to 90% of all energy was used in the operation stage, 7% to 12% in the materials production stage, and the remainder in vehicle assembly, distribution, and disposal.”

So, with lifetime energy cost divided by lifetime miles, as in the CNW report, Prius’s per-mile energy input would be substantially better than is shown in that report, and better than that of a Hummer.

Our method of measurement
Toyota, meanwhile, employs its own standard to measure each new vehicle’s environmental “footprint.” Toyota’s Eco-VAS, or Eco-Vehicle Assessment System, is a tool for predicting and reducing the environmental impact of its vehicles. It also measures the energy required in a vehicle’s production and operating stages, but goes beyond analysis to provide a framework for design changes that improve environmental performance.

Toyota’s engineers use Eco-VAS all through the process of design and development and leading to production — measuring a vehicle according to six critical standards: fuel efficiency, exhaust emissions, external vehicle noise, lifetime environmental impact, recyclability and the reduction of substances of concern.

In design and production, these standards lead to the replacement of hexavalent chromium, lead and other substances of concern, lower the use of in-plant energy, and employ some plastic parts made from agricultural products rather than petrochemicals.

In the operating stage of a vehicle’s life, Eco-VAS improves fuel efficiency, produces fewer greenhouse gases and smog components, and cuts the impact of batteries, tires, oil and parts used in maintenance.

And, in the recycling and disposal phase, Eco-VAS standards improve the collection and reuse of recyclable materials, provide for easier dismantling and prevent the production of harmful waste.

The bottom line
The people at Toyota are no strangers to environmental awareness and to the positive changes that benefit both our consumers and the world they inhabit. With Eco-VAS, we’re taking giant steps to do even better.

And Prius owners, knowing the facts about the gentle environmental impact of their cars, continue to be proud of the choice they’ve made.


Editor’s note: Readers interested in CNW’s full 458-page report may find it at:
http://cnwmr.com/nss-folder/automotiveenergy/DUST%20PDF%20VERSION.pdf
The Pacific Institute response can be seen at:
www.pacinst.org/topics/integrity_of_science/case_studies/hummer_vs_prius.pdf
The Summer 2006 Hybrid Synergy View article on Eco-VAS is available at: http://www.toyota.com/html/hybridsynergyview/2006/summer/ecovas.html

And now for something completely different

I used to be a huge fan of new music. Sadly, nowadays I listen to more old stuff than new and don’t even know what’s coming out…except this:

Today I sent my pre-order in to Amazon.com for Argentine Federico Aubele’s Panamericana album, scheduled to be released September 18.

Panamericana - Federico Aubuele's new album, 9/18/2007

Here’s a blurb from his record label, Eighteenth Street Lounge Music’s (think Thievery Corporation) website:

“The highly anticipated follow up to Federico Aubele’s critically acclaimed debut, Gran Hotel Buenos Aires. Aubele delves deeper into rich latin sounds with virtuoso guitar playing, hypnotic rhythms, smoky dub atmospherics, and the sensual vocals of Amparanoia, newcomer Natalia Clavier, and a collaboration with Calexico.”

From the few tracks I’ve heard on MySpace, I’m 100% convinced that this album purchase won’t let me down.

Gran Hotel Buenos Aires - Federico Aubele

My days as a music reviewer are over, so I won’t try to write a whole article on this. I’ll just say that “Postales”, “Esta Noche”, and “Contigo”, are all superb songs and that Aubele’s 2004 debut, was a slick, Latin guitar-over-beats magnum opus.

Go buy it!

Yikes!

I was writing a quick email to a good friend about the status of the house and realized a couple of things:

  1. We’ve been kind of stuck for the last few weeks because we needed the electrician to do a few more things and he was waiting on us for stuff like bathroom fans and speaker wire.
  2. I don’t visit the house enough in the weekday evenings to get stuff done. I was gangbusters at first but now I’ve been so wrapped up in the photography stuff that I’ve let the house stuff get shuttled to the back burner.
  3. I shouldn’t beat myself up much because it isn’t like I’ve been sitting on my butt playing Nintendo Wii or anything [during daylight hours at least].

Here’s what I told my friend:

“We’ve been at the almost-drywall stage for a while now. Our electrician is supposed to have everything inspected this week so we can install insulation. Then I get to get all itchy trying to put that stuff in the walls. Fun fun.

The drywall guy says it should only take a day or two to get the rough drywall up. Once that’s done we’ll actually have, like, a real house. Then I can start using my power tools (cue images of Tim “The Toolman Taylor” Allen). I’ve got a compound miter saw and a nail gun. It’s going to be crazy as hell…

We’re many months away, but I’m not sweating it. Things will start to pick up steam once the walls are up. Then we can start doing the finishing stuff and get the floor guy in to refinish the wood floors and patch some spots.

Yikes… this list keeps getting longer every time I type it.

And by no means is the short message above a definitive list of things that need to be done even in the short term. I’ve got to rip down some drywall that we left in place because we thought we could save it (no point). I need to whittle a block to fit in the big crossbeam in the front room to fill in where the termites feasted. I need to…

So much to do. I guess I’ll be over at the house tonight destroying more drywall…

Tools for trim & stuff

A coworker of mine just pointed me to a tool that will be extremely useful in our next phase of reconstruction: trim & finishing.

The FINECUT Flush Cut Power Hand Saw from Bosch. $99 at Lowe’s.

3.5 amps
2,000-2,800 RPM
Blades mount on left or right side for excellent visibility and total versatility
Precision sawing, including flush cutting in wood, wood composites and plastics
Variable speed, match speed to workpiece and task
Flush-cutting ability - Blade can lie flat on work surface while cutting
Extended Protection Plans are available for an additional charge

Storage in unlikely places

I may not have to build bookshelves after all…

Bibliochaise by .nobody & co. (Italy)

Bibliochaise

The update you’ve been waiting for…

Update: I just ordered our cork floors. They should be on their way in a week or two!
Here’s the latest slideshow from the Dellwood House (Click on the picture).

thehouse_06252007_8858.jpg

Here’s where we are:

  • Lead boots have been attached to the roof over the new plumbing vents.
  • The gas line has been installed with a tap for an outdoor grill!
  • The kitchen floor has been cut to extend the plywood base out to the edge of where the cabinets and island will go.
  • The laundry room now has Hardibacker concrete board down for tile and hookups for the washer and dryer.
  • The plumbing has been roughed-in and inspected.
  • We have a new PVC sewer pipe — at least to our neighbor’s fence.
  • Our walk-in shower has been mostly framed (above) and the shower liner is in.
  • The tub has been installed.
  • The shower valves have been installed. We’ll have a rain shower in the bathroom with a tub.
  • The upstairs closets have been extended out about 1.5 feet on both sides, giving us roughly 4-ft deep — actually useful — closets in the upstairs bedrooms.
  • The dividing wall for the master walk-in closet finally got built. That took me all day on a Sunday and most of a Tuesday evening.

I’d love to say that there were some incredible physical limitations that prevented me from getting the wall up in less than a day but the real limitation is that I’m an awful framer.

First I cut the studs 1″ too short the first time because I didn’t consider the slope of the floor and only measured from the center to the ceiling. What’s really sad is that I managed to get seven 10-foot 2×4s into my Prius (diagonally) and ended up almost wasting them when I cut them down too far. Luckily I was able to throw an unused 2×4 from a wall that I had pulled down at the bottom of the wall to make up for that 1″ gap.
Here’s what’s next:

  • Finish the closet expansion/reconfiguration.
  • Have the electrician finish wiring through the new wall.
  • Get a final electrical inspection.
  • Wire studio/presentation room for sound & volume controls with 14/4 + Cat 5e cable. (I may also extend the wiring out to the kitchen and front porch)
  • Buy insulation and put it in the exterior walls.
  • Have drywall contractor begin his installation.
  • Have the floor restoration company begin his work.
  • Install floating cork floor in kitchen.
  • Install tile in laundry room, front entrance (?), and upstairs bathrooms.
  • Install glass tile in the walk-in shower.
  • Install less-expensive tile in the other shower.
  • Cut baseboards and new window trim and install.
  • Install our IKEA kitchen.
  • Buy appliances.
  • Move in!

I’m sure there’s plenty I’m forgetting, but, hey, that’s a pretty long list already!

Green lawns in Florida = ridiculous?

I read a story on Treehugger that showed a pretty stark image of where we’re at with our water conditions at the moment.sprinkler-head-480.jpg

While many people feel it’s nice to have a big lawn but is it really worthwhile, cost effective, or even necessary?

Having a lawn: Pros

  • Provides a soft surface you can walk on.
  • Looks pretty.
  • Keeps dirt & sand in place.
  • Kids can play in it (if the lawn is big enough)

Cons

  • Requires regular watering to keep alive…
  • …If you’re able to keep bugs from eating it.
  • Costs money and time to maintain.
  • Attracts dogs that like to poop.

As a solution I’m really digging the idea of a lawn with fake grass. I saw a bunch of them in Las Vegas and was struck by how awesome they looked and how smart it was to give up the dream of growing grass in the desert.

I’m not sure how the city and historical would feel about it, but I’ll look into it. It sure beats contributing to the water problems the state is experiencing.

And you don’t have to mow it!

virtuallawn.jpg

Brilliant! ideas

brilliant.jpg

Updated with the link to the Laurey PerfectMount guide.

In a previous post I mentioned that I like to read other home-improvement blogs. To be totally honest I have to admit that it’s about all that I read at this point (except for some photography blogs).

There are just too many good ideas out there. When I say “good ideas” I mean actual things that I can do or techniques I can employ to, like, not screw up and do things efficiently. I saw this one today on IKEAFANS:

A marked hole guide for making sure cabinet hardware placement is consistent.

holeGuide.jpg


What will they think of next?

I hate to admit that I’m a complete dope at times when I’m over at the house working, but after last week’s closet wall fiasco (more on that in a future post) I finally figured out — on my own — that having a template is a good way to ensure that things are spaced out correctly.

It’s actually sad that the rebuilding is almost done and I only now figured out how to do things the best way. I was about to get all rueful about how this knowledge will die because I sincerely doubt that we’ll take on a project of this scope…

And then I remembered we haven’t even started working on the back building…

thisoldhouse7289.jpg

House-related blogs, forums, and sites

When you’re the [adventurous/cheap/masochistic/stupid] type of person who embarks on a custom home building/remodeling project you look for other people going through a similar experience. The Blog Revolution has been great for connecting do-it-yourselfers with each other, at least over the Internet.
I check the following blogs, forums, and sites quite frequently.

For help, inspiration, design ideas, useful tips, deals, and so on:

IKEAFANS - “Personalizing the IKEA Experience”

To see green and new building techniques in actual use:

Building a house in Central Florida - An environmentally friendly ICF home in Lake County, FL.

Woodswell Blog - An ICF home in Tallahassee, FL.

To commiserate:

Gottfried Green - Ex-New Yorkers trying to build a family home as green and sustainable as possible.

Nashville Modern Prefab - Documenting an attempt to build something interesting near downtown Nashville.

When I haven’t slapped my forehead enough:

Dream Home Diaries - A married yankee pair of writers (and consultants) who have a “commuter marriage,” two separate homes, a $250K strip of land on Anna Maria Island, and a dream to build a cozy beach cottage retirement home… with an elevator. For roughly $350K.

It’s a combination of faux-naïveté, disingenuousness, and whining about property taxes. So far they’ve tried to keep a pennywise yankee tone while unveiling house plans for a structure that couldn’t be built for less than $750K and bellyaching over a $5000 tax bill… on their third home.

As a side note on this particular “blog,” I have to say that The New York Times has really frustrated a lot of readers by letting the authors continue on the way they have because the arc of the posts has gone past ridiculous and into ludicrous speed territory. The comments from blog readers have gone from light and helpful to acidic and sarcastic ever since the writers revealed that they haven’t even come close to breaking ground yet.

More links:

Because I’m a big fan of the modern design and prefab movements…

Hive Modular - Architecturally Designed Modular Housing.

BoKlok

The Dwell Homes by Empyrean

Rocio Romero’s LVL Home

MoCo Loco: QUIK HOUSE

New sink ideas + This is not a home stereo blog: Part 2

The Bathroom Sink

The bathroom sink issue may have been solved. It’s not nearly as beautiful or elegant a piece as the Lacava one.

What do you think — two IKEA kitchen sink cabinets surrounding a center cabinet with drawers?
46964_PE143760_S3.jpg46774_PE150879_S3.jpg46964_PE143760_S3.jpgWith a nice white kick plate, a custom Caesarstone countertop and some undermounted sinks we’ll have a decent alternative. I guess it will do…

It’ll have to do because it’s like 1/20th of the price!

Stereo Stuff

After work I stopped by The House of Stereo, a local custom home theater store that built my parents’ old system. We’ll probably give them a chance to put together a system quote for us.

This is not a home stereo blog

But I’m going to use this post to compare different home theater in-wall speaker and A/V receiver options.

Speakers

Basically we need a good-sounding, reasonable cost, and reliable set of speakers for the studio/presentation room. I’m not sure what the configuration will be, but I think we’ll end up going with something medium-end with a preference on price and ease of installation over building, like, The Most Awesome System Ever. I won’t launch a tirade against the home theater industry, but I’ve always been a bit dumbfounded (emphasis on dumb) by the difference in price between virtually identical sounding systems. It is my position that the audible difference between McIntosh ($10K+) and Bose ($3K+) and Sony’s Home Theater-in-a-box systems (< $1K) is a lot smaller than audiophiles and custom home theater experts would lead you to believe.

I mean the difference between really really awesome (McIntosh), pretty awesome (Yamaha, Bose, Polk), and pretty good (JBL, Ultralinear) is not worth thousands of dollars when you're just going to be playing Internet radio, listening to MP3 files, and showing slideshows (set to MP3s).

With that said I’m thinking we’ll go with a combination of Polk Audio in-wall speakers, some other manufacturer’s ceiling speakers, and a center channel from somewhere else.>

The Polks are apparently a great-sounding speaker and look pretty easy to install…but they cost roughly $400 for the pair of in-wall ones + another $45 for pre-construction brackets. I’m torn between keeping with my pretty good design credo and going with something a little less expensive, like these $180 Infinity speakers at Crutchfield, or the $280 Polk Audio RC85i speakers instead.

We’ll probably go with the Polks because they can be mounted in the drywall and have a much better reputation.

I guess a matching Polk center channel may do the trick since the screen will drop down pretty far, but then again I’m not really sure!

A/V receiver

After having an Onkyo receiver for so many years I’m definitely going to stick with that brand. B&H sells a model for ~$500 that seems to be the one.

From B&H:

The Onkyo TX-SR674 Home Theater Receiver packs a punch with 7.1 channels at 95 Watts…blah blah… the TX-SR674 Home Theater Receiver will look great and, more importantly, meet your home theater and audio needs.

Key Features
• 95 Watts of Power/7.1 Channels…
• Dolby EX, Pro Logic IIx, DTS-ES, DTS Neo:6, DTS 96/24…
• Component Video Upconversion…
• XM Satellite Radio Ready…
• Powered Zone 2
Enjoy an independent stereo audio source in another room with the two dedicated channels playing a second source. For example, play a full 5.1 channel movie in the living room while sending the audio from a music CD at the same time to another room.

That sounds pretty slick!

Research Links:

Yamaha Receiver

The cost of going green: Insulation edition

So here are our options for insulating the house:

  • Fiberglass batts. Basically the standard Pink Panther Owens Corning insulation.
  • Spray-in foam. All the rage in the home-building industry.
  • Recycled cotton insulation. All the rage in the green home-building industry.

As you can imagine, the greenest option (cotton) is the most expensive, the laziest option (spray-in) may be even more, and the easiest — though itchiest — option is the cheapest.

I’m not sure what this all means yet, but I’d be interested to see what the real pros and cons of spray-in insulation are for older homes. I have a feeling that houses like ours weren’t designed to be perfect little insulated bubbles because underneath the house there is a constant cool air flow and the attic is hot like the second level of Hell.

I’ll have to check with Bob Vila on this, but it’s looking like the Panther may win out over my green-leaning.

Research Links:

http://www.bondedlogic.com/ultratouch.htm

http://chemicaldesigncorp.net/Cotton_Batt_Insulation.html - Distributor of the UltraTouch cotton insulation. Rutlege, GA.
http://www.airtightinsulation.com/store.html - Another distributor

http://www.thisoldhouse.com/

Wiring the studio/presentation room

There’s a lot left to be figured out for the studio. As I sit here I’m almost stricken by a Tony Soprano-esque panic attack when I ask myself: “Where do I start?”

First thing is to get some 14/2 or 14/4 wires. I also need to make a decision on in-wall and in-ceiling speakers, like today!

Here’s the list:

  • Room Lighting
  • Automatic dimmer for recessed lights
  • Wall sconces
  • In-wall wiring
    • Speakers
    • Video (to the projector)
  • Automation
    • Lighting (X10, Lutron?)
  • Controls
    • Lighting
    • Sound
  • How much can be wireless?
  • Reference Links:

    http://www.hometheatermag.com/bootcamp/163/

    http://hometheatermag.com/bootcamp/140/

    http://www.lutron.com/cms/default.aspx?appid=1059 - Lutron Home Theater Lighting solutions

    http://www.lutron.com/cms/default.aspx?appid=1009

    http://www.hometoys.com/htinews/apr04/articles/x10/affordable.htm

    http://www.pegasusassociates.com/MetalWallSconcePWAO16202.jsp#description









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