Monday, December 30, 2013

Busy busy busy...

Sorry for the lack of timely updates.   No lights yet, so interior shots are next to impossible and the bulk of the work has been going on inside... where we also have no heat and it's winter.  Hubby and I spent several unbearably cold days leading up to Christmas painting the basement walls with water-sealing masonry paint after the walls started seeping.  That was fun (or would have been if we were either penguins or masochists.  We are neither.)   Then the wiring began in earnest... this has been a family affair with my brother-in-law, sister, their son-in-law, a close family friend of my brother-in-law and us all there working side by side.   We have the basement and garage wiring yet to finish, a couple more cable outlets and we have the phone lines to run, yet.   After the wiring is finished and the HVAC guy finishes up a few more things, there's some framing yet to do, primarily in the basement, to enclose some things that could not be enclosed, yet.  Then insulation and drywall.   OH and we've been waiting several days for the power company to show up to activate our permanent electric service and install our gas service.   Not sure what the hold-up is on that, but hopefully, we won't be waiting much longer.  My assigned single point of contact is on vacation until next week, so I can't reach her to find out what's going on with that until next week.

The last few days saw some changes to the exterior, with Tyvec going on and the brick work starting:

Except for sinking ankle deep in mud trying to walk up to it from the street, it's more house than hole, now.  I'm told that we're within 45 to 60 days of completing the transition from hole to home.  This is the second time I've heard that in the last three months and I'm not home yet, so...  we shall see.



Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Progress-a-Plenty

Lots got done yesterday and today:


The front porch was poured.

The garage floor was poured.
The front porch roof was built and the garage door framing went on. ("eyebrow" roof over garage, door & front windows are still coming soon.)
The HVAC team arrived bearing goodies that included my fireplace (pictured) and my furnace (not pictured because it's pitch black in the basement and I couldn't get a pic.)

In addition to the above, a couple of wall changes we wanted were completed, my sister and my brother-in-law started prepping to wire and quite a bit of the moat was filled in (not all of it, yet, unfortunately.)  


Monday, December 2, 2013

Not A Soul.

Update: 6pm.  Spoke with our site coordinator and, as always, feel much better for it.  He's on the same page I am about getting this concrete poured before we lose our break in the weather.  Everybody keep your fingers crossed the weather holds just awhile longer. 

As of 9am, not a soul at the job site.  No framers - who aren't finished.  No roofers - who aren't finished.  No cement truck or even prep crew.  Checked my email - no answers to the questions last week and no response to the photos I sent showing something I'm concerned may be a serious issue that needs to be taken care of before anything can progress.

I can't mark for my outlets, switches and light fixtures because wall corrections that were to be made  before the holiday last week have not been made.

I can't have my new electric service trenched in or my gas service installed because back-fill is not complete.  And we need to be trenched in before the ground freezes.

We're not weathered in - and can't be weathered in - until the front porch is poured, which was supposed to happen weeks ago, but hasn't.

I'm stacked to the ceilings in the rental and my van is packed full with electrical supplies I can't off-load until I can lock the house -- which I can't do until we're fully weathered.  AND I'm not done buying what we need for that, but cannot finish buying what we need until I have the space in my van back to go purchase more.

The weather has certainly been an issue with getting the concrete poured. Today and tomorrow are supposed to be unseasonably warm and dry.  And then it's supposed to get wet again and the temps are supposed to take a nosedive and it's likely we will not get good concrete-weather again until spring.    Our deadline, not just to be back in the house, but to replace content I have nowhere to put until after I'm back in my house as well as our deadline for alternate living expenses (iow, the rent that is more than double what our mortgage was and that we cannot afford)  is Feb 22.  At the moment, it's not looking good to make the deadline.

Panic is setting in.  Again.


Sunday, December 1, 2013

Quick Pick Dec 1.

View of the back of my house from pool deck - Dec 1, 2013.
Home is so close, yet so far away.  

Getting There... SLOOOOOOOWLY.

Not sure why we've fallen behind schedule, but we have.  The framing crew was there every day that the weather cooperated and made good time.  Concrete that was supposed to be poured weeks ago is still not poured.  We were supposed to be plumbed and wired by now -- not fully weathered in to begin either. Our roofing crew was making great time and then suddenly disappeared on us -- not sure if they've stopped until the concrete is poured and the porch roof is on or if something else happened.   A way too huge, expensive window I did not want and do not need was custom ordered, without my or my contractor's authorization, by the lumber yard -- they're refusing to take the window back and refund my money.  I'm currently weighing whether it's best to engage the services of an attorney or to sell the window for what I can get out of it to offset its cost (suing means valuable time spent in court battling it out over just one window.)  If I pay for it, it had better be delivered into my possession.

Here's a visual diary of what's happened since my last post:


They finished framing the upstairs and rafters were delivered.  Putting the rafters up was delayed several days because of impending storms that later resulted in the devastation of much of my state (including destroying the town of Washington, IL that is just 5 miles from my oldest daughter's house!)


The rafters went up and they started sheeting the roof.

After the framing crew left for the day, I spent some serious "me time" in my bedroom.
 This is the view from where my bed was / will be. 
They finished sheeting the roof -- and it rained and rained and rained.
While the roofing crew shingled, the framing crew put in some of the windows and the back door.
This is the back door.  It currently opens onto a 10' deep x 2' wide  moat that's weeks overdue to be backfilled.
This is the view of Mount Muddenrubble from my computer room window. This should have been used to backfill the giant moat around my house, before now. 

And that's pretty much it, so far.   No work was done over the long holiday weekend.  We didn't expect there to be.   I've had to put off delivery of the tub for the master 4 times for lack of clean, dry garage floor to put it on - that I was told several weeks ago would be laid within the week. We're not fully weathered in - which cannot happen until after the front porch is poured.  We're not backfilled.  The power company is probably never going to come out when I call again after bringing them out to run the gas service and the site not being ready for it.   I'm pretty sure sewage pipes were placed where my furnace and one of my hot water heaters go, so I may have to have all the basement walls ripped out and reconfigured (that or the concrete floor... and the floor is a lot more time/cost intensive to replace.)   Our deadline is Feb 22.  And because I'm up against content deadlines, as well, I need to be in by Jan 22 at the absolute latest -- if the pace doesn't pick up, I don't see how that can possibly happen, at this point.  Especially with weather not cooperating and so many no-work holidays coming up.    

And I keep hearing how exciting it must be to be getting a new house.  NO.  It isn't.  IF I had been designing my dream house and searching for a location for it and then found the perfect location and the house I'd imagined building was being built on it -- THAT would be exciting.   That is not what's happening here.  This is rebuilding what I already had, but different because of code changes since the original house was built and because of errors on one sub's part... not being in my own home while my new home is constructed... designing it without the proper drafting tools and while under extreme stress... hating it because I feel like I was forced to trade my kids' baby pictures for it and being back into a 30 year mortgage when the end of our previous mortgage was finally coming into sight.  It's not exciting.  It's exhausting.  It's taking too long.  It's heart breaking.  It's stressful.  It's expensive.  It's also pushed our retirement age back 15 years.   AND I get to live in a winter-build.  Something I very much never wanted.