Is this some special fruity tile. Orange peel finishes are hot this year.
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^ everyone told you to stay in dentistry school.
^^^ Still, they're wise words. In reality, we'd have done well to consider spending more up front on our current house and just getting one that had already been updated as opposed to buying something older and then remodeling it ourselves. Remodeling sucks when you're paying good contractors what they're worth and trying to live in the house during the process. Maybe some rich dentists can afford to buy a fixer and make it super nice while the live in one of their various rentals during construction. But, for the rest of us, it just sucks to live through the process and fund it with cash.
I am afraid of the remodel, for sure. We looked at real estate for a long time, and even if we could somehow manage the buy/sell at the same time, even if the market wasn't so hot that we could move at a reasonable pace on it all, the reality was this: there was no updated home that we could afford. For the amount of money we are spending, we could have gotten the same house in a "better" neighborhood or a house in our neighborhood (maybe) with slightly better stats. Nothing really updated. We would have to move out of Boulder to find an updated home that we could afford, and we don't want to move out of Boulder (or more accurately, we'd be ok with moving out of Boulder, but not ok with selling our foothold in Boulder).
Expect to go over budget is all i can say. We are four months into adding a master bedroom upstairs which involved opening our roof to add an almost house wide dormer. Along with some other maintenance and improvement things we had done..doors, exterior painted, new cedar fence, etc...we are landing at about 175k when it finishes up here soon. We stuck to mostly upper middle end fixtures and features. The windows, quartz countertop and custom built-ins had the most inflated costs imo. Still made more sense to do this than buy another house. Real estate has gone up 24% in the last 2.5 years here. And its all time and materials here, no bids since anyone with skills is busy. Will be happy to get carpeting in and wrap this all up soon... Good luck to you and have fun! ;)
yeah, I hear ya. We're trying really hard to choose cheap options as much as possible. For ex, some of those mosaic tiles are cool, but nope. And we saw a marble tile we loved at $10/sqft, and a porcelain tile that we liked at $3/sqft. No marble tile for us. Heck, I don't think my wife even wants to spring for the heated floors in the bathrooms, due to expense.
We know shit is going to go over budget. We've watched enough house shoes on TV to know that they're going to knock down some wall and then go "uh oh, this is a problem."
Well as long as they're not standing in the rubble of a collapsed roof when they say it, it'll all work out.
I don't get the heated floor business. I've never stood in my bathroom and thought "damn, I wish this floor was warmer." But then again, I've got one plastic foot, so maybe you bipeds have stronger preferences.
The electric heat floor came with our house. Never had it before, but it's kinda nice.
Re: budget - if you expect to go over budget, you will. If you budget for contingencies, you'll probably be OK. Shitty contractors view any inconvenience that a professional should have been able to foresee is an "egregious concealed condition". A budget is not "it would be nice if it cost XXX".
I don't have tiled bathroom floors, but I do notice that the kitchen floor is cold in the morning, and my kiddo notices. My wife said she's never noticed, but then she puts on slippers when she wakes up so it's kind of hard to notice cold floors with fuzzy fleece things on your feet.
next best thing to floor heat are these:
http://a3.zassets.com/images/z/1/5/0...-MULTIVIEW.jpg
http://www.zappos.com/haflinger-as-c...=pd_brand_page
$73 for slippers? Really?
We added on a bathroom, office+closet space, storage room, water heater room for a new tankless. Wound up getting a bid from our GC for foundation, framing, drywall, roof, rough plumbing and electric, including WH and installing the plumbing and electric fixtures after we purchased. Contractor was to bid on the finish carpentry, etc but we wound up buying and installing our own cabinets, I built some custom size cabinets and did the finish carpentry. We hired a tile guy and someone to do the shower enclosure and countertop (Kerrock, great stuff but not widely available). We painted. Doing it that way maybe saved a little money on the painting and finish carpentry, but mainly it made the bidding process a lot easier, without having to think of every thing ahead of time. On the other hand, we didn't have a final price in writing. We had a couple of thousand in extras--decided to go with 2x8 framing to match the engineering specs on the footing and for extra insulation (north side of house), paid the excavator a little extra to move some rocks around. All in all bidding it that way was a nice way to go.
BTW-in the North Tahoe Truckee area Ron Adams is a great contractor, even if he is a knuckle dragger/hard core metal lover. And contrary to popular opinion buying cabinets, doors, lumber, etc and hiring people locally has repeatedly turned out to be both cheaper and better quality than shopping in Reno, especially when you figure in delivery.
Maybe you're doing it wrong? Diet adjustment, shower?Quote:
Smearing shit all over yourself with dry paper is for savages.
I like a clean bung as much as the next guys but never felt the need for a bidet. Question for the expert, how do you dry your self after a bidet session? A dedicated towel?
Well, the fanciest toilets I used in Japan (of course) would not only get you squeaky clean with laser precision and perfectly warm water, but it'd even blow dry you off when it finished. One stop shopping. Man, those were awesome. The heated seats weren't too shabby either.
I have a bidet for when things get serious. Some call it a shower, but whatever....
We also have a bidet. Makes shitting without one shitty.
On the other hand, the country that brought us the bidet also still has some hole-in-the-floor shitters and hasn't figured out how to plumb a bathroom so it doesn't stink.
$3000-$4000 depending on the model. You have too much money.
It's spelled "Cardassian."
We just ripped out a 16x26 cedar deck with a 8x12 landing and 6x20 walkway. PITA. All the base structure is good so I'll reuse it someplace.
Along with that I have around 1200 of these Attachment 170733and 222 of these Attachment 170734 to rebuild and add a hot tub and solarium.
The more stable your gravel base for your setting bed the better...compact the hell out of it
I was thinking of renting a compactor. Is that overkill?
^^^Agreed
Do it right and you should be able to park vehicles on the pavers
Use the preformed edging as well to retain the perimeter pieces -- they look like shit when they tip out