The Inland Echo

Inland Northwest News, Features and Photos

Saturday
Mar 13th
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Front Page
Get published here! Read the masthead to find out how.

The beautiful chaos of home renovation

User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

Home improvement and renovation can often be described in the early stages as pure chaos with only a small spot light at the end of the tunnel. I see this all the time and some how I find a weird sense of comfort in it.

I guess I’m comfortable in the middle of all the apparent chaos because I can see through it. The chaos means that we are well past the planning and well into the real work at hand: renovations. The chaos stems from the mass of destruction and overall mess that goes along with the renovation process.

On the surface very little looks to be in any type of order. Walls partly removed but not all the way because they’re being held in place by only a wire or two. Flooring ripped up and piled off to one corner and the never to be underestimated clouds of dust with house parts leaning on walls where they don’t belong and bathroom fixtures stacked up in hallways.

The chaos means to me that things are happening. If the walls and flooring are torn up then we are on our way to replacing them. If you want a new kitchen then somehow the old one has to be removed. This means that the cabinets gotta come down and the counters ripped off. Kitchens and baths are comfort rooms in the house and seeing them dispatched to the floor can look to the untrained eye as outright chaos.

Before. Photo by Gerry FrederickIt’s hard for most to see past all the dust and rubble and vision a new shiny kitchen in a week or two. The chaos only grows when the homeowner wants a wall removed to create the new modern open kitchen. This adds greatly to the mess and apparent disorganization as you can imagine. Sure the window may still be there, but everything else is somewhere between the dining room floor and the front yard.

Rarely can you even see the floor under all the debris so imagining the new floor can be impossible. On television they never show any real home improvement demolition. They always show someone hitting a wall with a very big hammer or ripping a cabinet or two off the wall. Well I can tell you that it never happens that way in real life. If you whack a wall with a sledge hammer you will send debris all over the house.

There will be enough trouble managing the clean up without adding to the work by damaging a wall across the room that isn’t in the improvement plan. Kitchen cabinets are generally removed by un-screwing them and hauling them away. Flooring like carpet is cut into small, more manageable size chunks and removed that way. It still looks like chaos simply because it gets all piled up somewhere before it is removed.

After. Photo by Gerry FrederickIt can be real easy to add to the chaos when things remain in apparent disarray for more than a few days because you are waiting for something like plumbing repairs or wiring. You can’t finish off the sink base cabinet without getting the plumbing just right. When everything is removed it’s a good time to make any repairs to kitchen or bathroom plumbing. If the sink is to be relocated then this only adds to the image of chaos.

My favorite image of real disorder has to be drywall and 2X4 fragments hanging off the ceiling by only few wires because we are waiting for the electrician to disconnect them. Some how this is an image homeowners just have a tough time with. I see what’s going on. I know why light switches are hanging in the middle of the room with no attachment to any walls. 

I can even picture the new wall soon to be constructed but when the homeowner gets to the top of the stairs they always hang for a moment or two and just look afraid to say the wrong thing. At the same time I’m standing there thinking, “What did you think it would look like? You wanted an open kitchen.” It always takes a moment to pass but slowly it passes. Chaos to them, comfort to me.

Trackback(0)
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
smile
wink
laugh
grin
angry
sad
shocked
cool
tongue
kiss
cry
smaller | bigger

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy
 

Join us on Facebook!

Paranormal News from Flickering Torches

Support The Inland Echo! Buy through our links.
(Same low prices, but we get credit.)

PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY
Michael Breckenridge is available for weddings, senior pictures and more. He's done them all! Photography should be booked well in advance of your event - 2009 shoot dates are booking now!
Send email to: "query ~at~ inlandecho.com"
(replace ~at~ with the @ symbol)

Click here for Michael's photo gallery.
Don't delay, contact Michael today!
Want to reap the benefits of stem cell research but are concerned about the ethics issues of embryonic stem cells? Patented breakthrough dietary supplement has been proven in a peer-reviewed double-blind clinical trial to raise the body's own adult stem cell count without the use of drugs or surgery. Don't stress about embryonic stem cells - use your own - for natural benefits. Click here for complete details and a video by the medical research scientist who discovered it.

Advertise Here!

Do you like what you read in The Inland Echo?
Reach readers like you with your own ad!
Click here to find out how!
All Product (square)

Get our RSS Feed

feed image

NASA Image Of The Day

NASA Image Of The Day
Bursting at the Seams
Dramatic plumes, both large and small, spray water ice out from many locations along the famed 'tiger stripes' near the south pole of Saturn's moon Enceladus. The tiger stripes are fissures that spray icy particles, water vapor and organic compounds. This mosaic was created from two high-resolution images that were captured by the narrow-angle camera when NASA's Cassini spacecraft flew past Enceladus and through the jets on Nov. 21, 2009. Imaging the jets over time will allow Cassini scientists to study the consistency of their activity. Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute...
12 Mar 2010
800x6001024x768Large

Dilbert

<<  March 2010  >>
 Sun  Mon  Tue  Wed  Thu  Fri  Sat 
   1  2  3  4  5  6
  7  8  910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Help Make A Difference! Donate Today.

The Inland Echo is taking donations on behalf of Lakeview Cemetery in Sprague for a field trimmer ($600 cost) to knock down the heavy overgrowth. Lakeview does not receive public funds, so volunteer donations are the only way to support the work to renovate this forgotten, historic final resting place of dozens of people, including many veterans. Please help us accomplish this important work. Thank you!