Sunday, March 22, 2009

Our Bedroom

I've been quite slack in putting updates here. I had my first vacation in a year over Christmas break, fortunately Cornell has year-end shutdown. I celebrated by giving our room a make-over! With Baby on the way, we figured doing it now was the last chance we'd get to take care of it for a while, so I went for it.


Here are some before pictures of our lovely room. We had green plush carpet that ran into the bathroom. We had a small closet in one corner and a pseudo-closet (left picture) that was built into the rafters. It wasn't particular useful, it was deep with no headroom, and kind of trashy. The room was also very dark, partially because of the thick drapes we had never gotten rid of, partially because of no overhead lights, and partially because of the dark carpet. So in our plan we wanted to fix the floor (it was sloopy and creaky underneath that awesome carpet), get rid of the lovely floral wallpaper, add closet space, add a ceiling fan, and improve the lighting. So we set out to reinforce and flatten the floor, put down new hardwood flooring, remove the wallpaper, add a overhead light/fan, and increase the outlets so that we could place more lights around the room.

Reinforcing the floor was pretty much the same trick as in other rooms, except here I was able to use 2x glued and nailed to the exisiting joists. The picture below on the right shows the first reconstruction. This was a new floor that was built as a second level expansion in the mid 80's on top of what was an original closed-in porch. The porch was converted to interior space at the same time. It means that the framing in this area is some what chaotic. Load-bearing walls aren't always where they should be, and things are a bit strange. The beam running parallel to the window runs through the center of the room and marks the original exterior wall. There is a faux beam in the donstairs underneath this. Most of this section was in fairly good shape, but the connections to the now exterior wall were feeble, and some of the connections to the beam weren't right. On the far right of the picture are new joists that extend and are tied directly into the joists on the other side of that beam. Before, there wasn't much holding the ends of those up.














The picture on the right shows the other problem I came across while tearing things up. All of our windows have crappily applied aluminum trim and water has been leaking through. Things weren't too bad once I got everything out. The wood was still in good shape, the drywall and insulation was gross. I replaced two of the moldier cripple studs, scrubbed everything down with bleach and caulked outside. This spring, I'll need to remove all of the aluminum trim and fix the actual problem outside. I did the floor in halves, so I left the flooring on one side, while I replaced the half by the window, then put down new OSB subfloor, and replaced on the other side. The old subfloor was (as expected) an amalgam of sorts. There was a layer of 1/4" underlayment over everything, then below that, half the floor had plywood, while the other half was the original T&G with floral linoleum on top.
The wallpaper didn't come off well, so I ended up replacing more drywall than I had intended. The ceiling is only about 7'6 in this room, so there was barely room for the ceiling fan. We decided to move the bed and placed the ceiling fan centered over where the bed would be. With the bed in place it looks fine, but it may be trouble f we ever want to move the bed. The bottom of the light is only about 6'6", so it's tight. The ceiling is low due to a mildly botched insulation job, I would have only gained 4-5" inches in trying to fix it, and it didn't seem worth it. So I left it alone. We'll just have to deal with a low-ish ceiling.















I decided to do built-in closets that would sit in the room. I glued and screwed 1/4" maple plywood to the wall behind where the closet will go and then built modular carcasses out of maple and stacked things up. As usual, I built things a little large, I made the boxes 27" deep, which is about 6" too deep. Foolishly, I took the depth of a reach-in close and used that as my dimension, but that doesn't make as much sense for cabinets at waist level. So there's going to be an awful lot of wasted space in the cabinets that are a full 27" deep and above waist height.
The cabinet that has a bottle of glue in it, is the poster child for this closet. I ended up reducing the size of the cabinet in the middle of the main closet area in the picture above. That area of the closet is where the closet rod goes, so that cabinet will be a 18" deep and 18" wide, so there's more room for a bottom closet rod. Eventually (cough), I'll build cherry face frames for the carcasses. We put 6" cherry hardwood down in here, and used maple plywood for the cabinets. I'll either use cherry or maybe walnut, something dark to set off the light cabinet wood.