Friday, October 30, 2009

West gate underlayment- both sides now

$ 11.24 is what I spent on this project. That was for the sand to grout the joints of the brick. This landing greatly improves the experience of passing through this gate, particularly when putting out the trash and bringing the empty trash containers back. This project is both a Gardener and a Craftsman project. I charged the sand off to the Gardener account. I hope that my construction techniques endure for decades.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Project finance review

This is all the refuse I had out for Wednesday pick up. All the old paint cans are out of the house. Now it is time to clean out the storage unit. I put my monthly rent check in the mail today. It is $ 83.85 every month. We have a few boxes of records and some of our Christmas decorations in it but other than that it is full of junk. I desire to empty it out and apply that money to improvement projects on this house. I could get a great return on that money. This much of the "Goodbye old paint" project cost about $9.00 in kitty litter. I have about a quarter of a bag left over. I have spent and done the following: $ 11.24 for sand to grout the brick underlayment at the west gate 59.96 for parts for top notch dryer duct system 9.01 for kitty litter to congeal paint in cans = $80.21 total $80.21 is not enough to pay someone to do any of these vital jobs. I doubt I could find anyone to do things like this, anyway. I would still have $3.64 to roll over to next month, if I were using the mini storage rent payments of $83.85 for my revenue stream. Next month I would have $87.49 for Argenta Craftsman improvements. I gotta get that done.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Good bye old paint

This is the last bit of old paint cans that came with the house. It was in the basement and I stashed it in the crawl space under the house to make room in the basement for our stuff when we moved in. I decided to advance another step to getting rid of these old paint cans when I was under the house replacing the dryer duct. The city will pick up the stuff if you pull off the tops and stabilize the paint material with an absorbent like kitty litter. The pick up day is Wednesday. This being Wednesday and having the need to get rid of some ivy we had pruned, I hastened to prepare and put out the stuff for pick up. You can tell by the pictures that I put a light above where I was working so I could see. It is a small halogen work lamp. Then I dumped the kitty litter into a bin for ease of access. Next I sorted the containers and opened them up. I poured off the fuller cans into the empty cans to even them up. It averaged out that all the cans were about half full. Then I scooped in a generous amount of litter into each can and stirred to blend. I had to add more litter into the cans until the contents were solid. When I was satisfied I had a done good jobbie I took them out to the street. I was happy to finally have this mess cleared out. All the old paint cans in the house are gone and legally disposed of. It is something worth celebrating!

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Dryer duct in the basements

The top photo is of the four way elbow protruding into the basement from the laundry room above. I like how this closes off a large gap in the barrier between the wet, moldy basement and the living area. I took the middle photo from beside the elbow connector pointing towards the discharge end. For the basement duct I used two eight foot sections of aluminum duct. I used an aluminum connector and two clamps to join them. I carefully stretched and twisted the duct into a good, free flowing position and secured it with a strap. The bottom photo is the connection to the discharge to the outside. When I started the dryer and checked, the velocity coming out at the discharge outside was at least three times what it was when we first moved in here. The clothes never really got completely dry. Big improvement! I spent a total of 59.96 on parts and we have a completely new top of the line duct work system. If I was charging for this it should go something like this: Parts x 2 = $119.92. Labor: 6.5 hours at $50 =$325.00 making a grand total of: $444.92. I would be happy to provide photo documentation of the project. I am surprised at the guys that we paid to clean out this duct that they would do what they did. I'm sorry for them. They've lost my respect.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Dryer duct fix

This is what I did from inside the house behind the dryer. I got this white plastic couple that enables the dryer and a lead of duct to be disconnected from the rest of the duct system. I put a piece of duct which has four adjustable elbows onto the flange of the connector which screws to the floor. That is the piece in the top picture. In the middle picture I have put the connector with the elbow thing on it into the hole. That's the light from the basement showing. Beside the floor couple there is the other connector and the piece of aluminum duct which I will use as a lead from the dryer to the connector. The third picture shows everything assembled and ready to go. I just need to twist it on as in the bottom picture and work the dryer and the duct into place.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Dryer surprise

This morning I moved a load of clothes from the washer to the dryer. I went outside to look at a project I'm thinking on doing. I was standing by the dryer vent and I thought I would check to make sure the screen was clear. I noticed right away that there was no air coming out of the vent. Not even a warm whisper. My first thought was that what ever the problem it would somehow work it's way out. Then I came to my senses and went to find out what the problem was. I pulled out the dryer and saw what the bottom photo shows. I pulled on an old fleece, grabbed the flashlight and the camera and headed for the basement. I crawled into the crawl space and the air was hot and wet. Everything was covered with lint. The environment was thoroughly damp. I made my way to the place where the vent hose comes through the floor and I discovered what I photographed in the top picture. We paid money to a company to clean that duct just a month or two ago. I found that the hose was split and that an attempt to use tape to effect a repair had been made. If those guys just carried a splice it could have been easily repaired for less than $5.00 in parts. They are fired. I began then and there to make this right.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

tunspan

This is a copy of the Argenta plan by this design firm. Here is a link to their web site. http://www.tunspan.com/argenta/docs/Argenta_Workshop_Plan%20Oct15-09.pdf

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

West gate underlayment

This is my excavation, underlayment and paving of the gate landing. I think it is good enough for now.

Monday, October 19, 2009

West gate inside brick landing improvement

This is my most recent improvement project. The top photo is before and the bottom is after. If I have a solid path system all the way around the house it would be a strong positive. I want to be able to walk barefoot all the way around the house in the summer without getting a chigger bite or getting my feet dirty. I also must be able to move the mower and sweeper unhindered. A path system would be worth...$15,000 in the total property value. I value this improvement at $1,500 including materials. I had to spend $11.24 on sand. The rest was material on hand. I will show in the next post that this is a solid piece of work.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Windows - thoughts so far

Our Argenta Craftsman Home has these steel casement windows. I was a painter for many years and I can say that I have never seen a house this old with the windows in such good shape. I think every window in the house opens with the exception of maybe one. And that is due to it being wedged shut because of the brick settling. They shut tightly and all. But, even though the glass panes are almost a half inch thick they are not energy efficient. The air passes freely between the inside and outside. Outside noise also seems to pass into the house freely. Only some of the windows have screens. The screens work like cabinet doors on the inside. You have to pull open the screens which are like doors to open the windows. The window situation must be improved. In my thinking fixing the windows are part of the front porch and overall brick work. I have three plans in mind as follows: 1. There are a couple of companies that make Plexiglas inserts that mount inside the window frames which will make them air-tight. What you could call custom made interior storm windows. The downside is that we would not be able to open the windows. But the widows would be much more efficient and the noise level would be lower. This would be the lowest cost improvement. 2. Pull off the interior trim of the windows and completely rework the whole frame of each window unit. In the Historic Preservation Briefs of the National Parks Service there are extensive directions for the restoration and improvement of steel casement windows. This may cost more than replacing the windows with top of the line modern casement windows. Here is a link to the National Parks historic preservation brief that covers steel windows: http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/briefs/brief13.htm But given my experience as a painter, I could probably do this level of workmanship. In addition to the re-work work we would figure out some way to have the interior storms and screens. If I did the work the monetary outlay would be low, but the commitment in time would be very high. I estimate 30-40 hours per large window unit to do it federal grade. 3. Replace the windows with modern top of the line casement windows. According to our friend and neighbor Tom, an Architect who works in the state historic preservation office, this ain't gonna happen. Becky and I were gung-ho about Argenta getting the federal historic district designation to preserve property values, but that means the historic district commission has rule over us in such matters. If they say "NO" then "NO" it is. I have copied from the preservation brief what is the only condition where replacement would be allowed: Repair of historic windows is always preferred within a rehabilitation project. Replacement should be considered only as a last resort. However, when the extent of deterioration or the unavailability of replacement sections renders repair impossible, replacement of the entire window may be justified. So our choice will probably be #2: Re-work each window completely. Then find some system that will give us screens, energy efficiency, and noise reduction. Approximate cost?: $500 each window? $1,000? $250? Times something like 15 windows. That estimates to be... $3,750- $15,000. Actually that would be cheaper than replacements. It would just take an eternity of time. I was just dreaming of having these new Pella casement windows with screens that were beautiful and functional and Tom just killed that dream with a bureaucratic "ha-ha". But the necessary results are screens, efficiency and quiet. I bet the actual cost comes in at $250 per window and the time of 30 hours each. this means I would be messing with these windows for a year. If we did something that required changing storm windows with screens, spring and fall, a storage cabinet would have to be constructed somewhere handy to specific dimensions to hold them. But letting the idea of new windows die makes room for ideas of screens and insulating windows. I should be able to think of something for half the cost of new windows. The more money we have to spend on each window should equal less time I have to spend in restoration.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Argenta Neighborhood Aspirations

http://www.tunspan.com/argenta/ http://www.citygrovetownhomes.com/ Argenta is the subject of a master plan creation. North Little Rock city government along with certain private developers have commissioned the firm of Tunnell-Spangler-Walsh and Associates to create this plan for the future. I have their link to the project above. I also put the link to the largest developer in the neighborhood and their their big project. We are very excited at the prospects. The developers could build things that would "gentrify" the district, in the words of the T.S.W. representative, but they have chosen, instead to work towards making this area accessible to all comers. We like that. This link to tunspan.com pretty much tells all we know. They had neighborhood meetings last week which were well attended by enthusiastic neighborhood people. I am not sure which phase of the plan we are currently in, but I do know they were going to post the findings of last week's round of talks and explorations on this website this next week. They will be busy back at their drawing boards preparing for the presentation of the next round. In attending this visioning conference, Becky had a mountain top experience. She got really excited. In one of the meetings she leaned over to me and said something like, "...When we build the garage apartment...". It was as if we had never talked about building a carport. The garage apartment had been completely off the table. She made an instant decision to do the garage apartment. The next day she found the plans on the internet. Now it is just something she is doing. To her it is done. But I am glad, because that is a big part of my purpose in publishing this blog. That is to take the vague ideas and push them down the path to crystallizing into reality. You know if you take an idea and decide to do it, really do it, maybe something like getting married, that decision makes you change your inertia. It brings something previously non-existent into reality. We had thought about doing improvements to this house over the next three years and then selling it for a profit. I told Becky, "If you really believe that this is what we are going to do you will begin to make everything in your life conform to this condition." It is a state of mind. Maybe what we end up doing is moving into the garage apartment and renting out the house. Then we could travel, and maybe get another residence somewhere up north that is in the country. I would like to have enough room for Brody to have a couple of sheep to herd around. We saw this two-story bunkhouse in the parking lot of a Lowes somewhere in Texas. It was there along with all the other prefabricated sheds. We thought something like that would be neat to put out on some land somewhere. It was just one open room upstairs and one open room downstairs with bare stud walls. The staircase was just simple risers with treads.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Car park - first summary

This is my first summary of three plans for the car park. Plan "A", the least expensive would be a simple carport built along the lines of this picnic pavilion down by the river. The second plan, "B" would be more substantial. It would have a work shop/ store room incorporated into it. I wrote this plan up in a previous post. Plan "C": A full blown two car garage with an apartment above which we would rent out. I will guess at cost estimates, if for any reason, just to have figures taking up spaces which can later be revised over and over again. PLAN A...........................$ 8,000 PLAN B........................... 12,000 PLAN C........................... 60,000 Plan "C" is the most expensive, but it should add the most value, by far. This was our first idea a long time ago, but we dropped it because we did not want any relatives living in the apartment, not paying fair value rent. That is something we cannot afford. Not only are we officially encouraged to add rental property, but an apartment that produces income for the owners would be a very strong selling point of this property. How we would pay for this, I have no idea at this point.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Design Connection, LLC - Garage Plan #DT0102

Design Connection, LLC - Garage Plan #DT0102 Posted using ShareThis In keeping with my objective with this blog to create three, separate plans for each area, this is a drawing for a garage apartment plan Becky found on the internet, with the link to it. We looked at several plans and this one is something like what she envisions. The first calculation is the money. Conversations Becky has had with our mortgage banker and others who know about such things, the rent of an apartment like this would cover the monthly payment of it's construction. However, if we construct something like this, our house would have to be brought up to the same standard. So this is the gold plan for the car park. The idea for this district begins with density. That means increasing the population of residents and workers here by something like ten times, at least. We have been told that there is a push to change zoning regulations to encourage residents to do this kind of expansion: an owner occupied residence with attached rental property.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

The target

These are the three projects I am taking aim at doing for this house. One is the carport/workshop. Another is the south addition to the house, and the other is the front porch/ brick work. Do we really need to do these projects? I think we should develop a comprehensive plan from three conceptual plans to continue improving this property. For one thing this is a 1928 Craftsman in the heart of the historic district. It can't be torn down. To me this is not much different from buying a small business and building up it's profitability. This house was valued at about $94 per square foot when we bought it. Appraised at 1800 square feet the price was around 164-169K. The addition in back will add 372 square feet. The carport will add 432 square feet. All these improvements would boost the overall square foot valuation. In this historic urban neighborhood, there are some expensive properties. The new, modern town houses and condos offered around here in the urban core on both sides of the river are priced around $200-$750 per square foot. These improvements could really make this a very strong property. Also, we have a yard and no property owner association fees. We are a block and a half from Main Street. Our house is the closest single family residence to a trolley stop. It's just steps away. In this light the idea does not seem so far fetched after all. Most recent s.f. appraisal.....2000 addition s.f......................+ 372 new s.f. subtotal======= 2372 guesstimated new value x $220 per s.f. sub total============ ==$474,400 garage: 432 @ $75 / s.f. + 32,400 New property value=======$506,800 That is absolutely the most we could hope for. I have no idea of the construction costs. Of course this is just euphoric crazy talk at this stage. I have this huge challenge to create three levels of improvement plans that we can "take to the bank". Getting that done is the work at the present and of this blog.