Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Cabin Remodel

We did it!  While I might mourn the loss a full bowling alley in my bedroom, we have remodeled our cabin to have three bedrooms and a perfectly darling, useful landing.  Wanna see it?  (Because I’m dying to show you!)

This is the “before” picture. The tape was a general outline of what we wanted to do.

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Here’s the basic outline of the area (not to scale).  The orange is the two closets, the red the stairs, and the small blue area is the original landing space.  It’s not to scale, but the drawing is not completely disproportionate.  It made moving furniture (and drywall) upstairs difficult.

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“We” (Papa Jim did most of the work, especially the really heavy stuff) cut the big room in half, then built a small hallway so that each room would have it’s own entrance.  We tore out the closets, leaving only a small one in the second room.  This leaves the landing wide open and inviting. For a while, it will probably be a little playroom, housing the train/Lego table.  Eventually, I’m thinking a comfy reading chair, a bookshelf, lamp and small table to place a cup of tea.

The full wall separating the stairway from the new landing was cut to a half wall, allowing more openness and better lighting.

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So this is how it really looks!

Our room, half the size but no less usable.

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The new room (known officially as Jim’s Room—we are calling this “payment”).  Sorry for the poor light.  Hopefully this week, we’ll get a mattress and a frame.

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This is the tiny closet we left.  It fits the vacuum and a few hangers.  What else does a cabin closet need?

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And what may be my favorite part, the landing.

This is not quite a “before” picture, as you can tell Jim and Dwayne had to tear out the ceiling and the wall has already been partially built.  The wooden door on the right was the original door to the kids room and it didn’t open or shut very well.  Like the closet at the end, it didn’t make the cut.

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This is how it looks now. New door, new light, no closets, new flooring.  I chose and installed the vinyl planks and I love it! 

Here’s also a peek at that half wall.

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Here are the doors to master bedroom and Jim’s room.  (Darling mirror, huh?  $6 at Value Village!)

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I want to show you the new attic entrance. It used to be right above the stairs, which no one who had to go up there liked very much.  When Dwayne and Jim redid the ceiling, they moved the access and then Jim framed it well with bunk bed supports we had leftover when we got the kids’ beds for the cabin.

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And now we are back to the stairs. 

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I have yet to finish the half wall (forgot the oscillating saw last time I was there), but this is what it will look like.  Jim measured and cut and I sanded and stained.  It looks good!

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Just a few more side notes.  We had two large closets that were great storage—if you needed it. But we have two sheds on the premise, and since it really is just a getaway cabin (and a place to practice projects), we don’t need to store much outside of bedding and slippers.  It felt so good to get back lots of square footage by demolishing these two monstrosities.  However, it left a carpet dilemma.  But putting in new flooring gave us a chance to us up the extra transition pieces we had left over from our April remodel of our kitchen.  And it looks so much better!

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“We” did all the work ourselves, except I hired a local guy to come in during a week when no one was there to tape, mud, and texture the drywall—a tedious task that not only takes several days, but is also something I’m not particularly good at. 

We never noticed how funny some of the wood was until we had to work with it or around it. If you look at the trim in the bedrooms, you’ll see that the original trim is a different width on almost every wall.  That was great, because it didn’t matter so much when we used different trim to finish the new walls. 

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I fell in love with Rustolium’s Oiled Rubbed Bronze that I learned about from a blog my sister-in-law blogged about.  Beautiful stuff.  I got the light fixture I wanted (that fit the budget) and spray painted it with this to match the door knobs I had chosen.  I also did the hinges to match.  It’s the small things, and these fantastic doors look even better with this not-quite-black contrast.12-20 99% done 8

Nothing gets me going like a good project, and as soon as I get the half-wall trim on, and finish painting the new floor and ceiling trim, we will stamp this one

Done!

And it might be the most useful project we’ve ever done.