She's moving out, he's moving in!

Category: Renovations Page 1 of 2

Bathroom reno update – week one

One week into the bathroom reno and we’ve seen some really reassuring progress! And seem to have lucked into a really great builder (George) to boot.

He and his team have achieved heaps a week in (and they only work weekdays).

Here are some progress snaps!

Day 1

We come home to a stripped bathroom

Luckily no water damage to the interior walls – good old Oregon (or Douglas Fir) timber has held up well for 90 odd years – just a little dusty

The old pink tub – Malleys – they don’t make ’em like that any more:

You can see on top the original ceiling sheet – plaster and horsehair – a common early 20th century technique

A bathtub digression

‘Malleys’ wasn’t a brand I was familar with but Papa Amos mentioned it was ‘well-known.’  So a little online digging tells me that Malleys invented the Esky!

The auto box looks fine, picnic kettle looks scary

The original Esky Auto Box was released by Malleys in 1952 but the company’s history goes back to 1884. Started by Francis Malley a sheet metal worker from Gosford, his twin sons took over the business following WWI.

Malleys made absolutely everything including bathtubs.

If it was metal Malleys probably made it

They had a factory at Auburn which (burnt down in the 1950s and was later rebuilt) and is probably the origin of our old tub.

Fire Guts Factory At Auburn – FIREMEN play a hose on a fire which destroyed a block at Malleys Ltd.

They also knew how to rock a float if their participation in the 1938 Australian sesquicentenary* ‘Parramatta celebrations’ is anything to go on:

It’s like something from the future! or more accurately the Art Deco era

(*since European arrival).

Despite fielding a workforce over 2,200 following WWII and a lucrative deal to supply Whirlpool it was all over for the Malley family by the late 1970s. Which explains why I’ve never heard of them.

The business was taken over by Simpson  in July 1979 and was de-listed in 1983, but they had a great run for 99 years.

If you ever find a Malleys Sunrise milk can on the side of the road hang on to it – it could be worth something as they are collectors’ items these days:

Malleys 1930s milk can advertisement

Back to the reno!

Day 3

THE BOSS assesses the new tub – ‘it’s no Malleys, but it’ll do’

The rest of our fixtures and fittings have been delivered (and carefully checked by George)

New toilet is ‘roughed in’ – that lino tile has gotta go though

Plumbing for bath and shower is in; plus the recessed shower shelf

George also left the loo outside the bathroom…temporarily of course…

Day 4

Plumbing in place, and spot for the mostly recessed shaving cabinet

Amazing progress at end of Day 4 – villaboard is up, plumbing in place, ceiling and electricals sorted, toilet, sewer and floor was plumbed in, no tiles and a new cement floor – oh and the tub is in!

We couldn’t keep the cats off the wet cement for the new flooring – so we have some little time capsule paw prints for the ages.

Day 5 – 6

Day 5 was really to let that cement dry which took us into Day 6 – bath build complete, shaving cabinet recessed in, lights and the first coat of waterproofing!

Interestingly the waterproofing doesn’t smell at all which is a plus.

At this rate we might even be done in under 14 days!

Sources FOR THE BATHTUB DIGRESSION:

Pittwater Online
Trove

Our temporary bathroom for the reno duration

It ain’t glamourous, but our large external laundry (with the original 1920s outdoor dunny) will be our temporary shower and main loo while the reno progresses.

Wet room might be a better name for Wookie’s quick and ingenious set up?

Wookie’s ingenuity and about $25 bucks at Bunnings means we avoid the cost and hassle of arranging a temporary portable shower which was going to add at least $440 to the renovation costs.

It’ll do.

We can always shower at relatives houses if we really need to!

Bathroom reno

Well after nearly two years at our Outer Inner West nest it’s the day before our bathroom reno commences!

Our mood board for the new bathroom is – inexpensive but tasteful – we are on a budget! Not unlike Patsy’s mood board for the next issue – ‘But Alex, Alex…with lovely shoes’.

We are trying to emulate something along these lines – ‘The Classic New Bathroom‘:

Classic new bathroom

The budget for that one above was apparently an eye-watering $40,000 – $50,000 bucks. Just for the bathroom! Also a 5 week turnaround…

Our budget is a way more modest $16,000 and timeline is 2 weeks – 3 weeks (max).

Given it’s our only bathroom and it’s starting to get nippy in Sydney a quick project turnaround was important to us.

The quote includes all trades, labour and fixtures, fittings and accessories.

We’re hoping there’s nothing nasty and expensive lurking beneath the current bathroom…

Out with the old pink bathroom

Now a reminder of what our current bathroom looks like in all it’s 1967 grimy glory:

The bathroom before we moved in

It doesn’t look so bad in that photo…just a lot of that Neapolitan pink like the kitchen.

Now for some cameos:

As you can see from the photos this isn’t a candidate for a quick tart up with some paint and new fixtures – we don’t even have tiles! It’s all laminate on masonite that does not like water and is falling apart.

Early on during our time in the house I made the decision we’d only clean the bathroom areas we’d be touching – there was just no way to get rid of 50 years of grime in most places and knowing we’d be tearing it all out back to the studs there seemed little point.

Ewwwwwwwwwwwww

So hopefully these images illustrate the poor layout and gut job we’re confronted with. We’ll be relocating the shower-bath to run along the window and tucking the the loo into the corner by the door. This means you won’t clap eyes on the toilet as soon as you walk in.

We have high hopes but feel some trepidation about whether this one will come in on time and on budget – there is some mystery around what lies beneath all that masonite and vinyl flooring.

The skip arrived this morning in readiness for D-for-demolition Day which is tomorrow!

The Boss and Top Cat inspect our latest project’s beginnings

Stay tuned to see if we pull it off in a fortnight…

The whole kitchen ‘n’ Kaboodle – visual diary of a cheap kitchen makeover

the-whole-kitchen-n-kaboodle

Over the last few months we’ve gradually turned our kitchen from what our friend Tony described as ‘dirty-Neapolitan ice cream pink’ (like after it melts a bit and after all the other flavours have been mixed in) to a fresh, shiny white and glossy grey.

It had to go...

Hmmm Neapolitan…

She Says: The power of paint!

We inherited a few gems with the house (like those original doors), and this old tin watering can…

Sad can

Sad can…

After screwing on the nozzle and seeing that it worked I thought it looked a little drab and sad.

Enter RUSTGUARD spray paint in Flame Red, or as I believe it’s properly known “Epoxy Enamel”.

8fb4d9a3-1638-467e-b9d8-706a4ab291401

In less than 10 minutes and for under 20 bucks the watering can had been given a whole new lease on life, nothing poxy about this newly enamelled can:

Ring-a-ding-ding! (Maybe it's the fumes talking, butI think I like spray paint...)

Ring-a-ding-ding!
(Maybe it’s the fumes talking, but I think I like spray paint…).

Not a bad little project for a Sunday arvo…and it’s not just ornamental I have even been using it to tend to the garden!

She says: We found a door, and another door!

Old houses are rad… there’s always new things to discover.

Whilst most of our home’s period features had been stripped out sometime in the late 1960s, we have luckily retained 4 plaster decorative ceilings and uncovered some really beautiful floorboards that had been protected by carpet for 90 years.

Sweet, we'll be having you polished.

Sweet, we’ll be having you polished.

Disappointingly as part of the ‘60s makeover the original three panel bungalow style doors typical to these weatherboard cottages were long gone and and replaced with something not unlike balsa wood…

Paper thin! And grey!

Paper thin! And grey!

Yep, they’re pretty crapola.

Anyway, one afternoon as Wookie went to get the mower from the garage he looked up to the rafter beams and found…

That's one big window

He Says: Windows to the world, with some bumps along the way

From our estimates, the last time this house had any sort of renovation work done (besides painting) would have had to be been the 60’s or 70’s. Do you know what was in fashion back then besides flares and denim? Aluminium windows. This house was full of them, and some of them quite large at that. There is nothing wrong with aluminium windows. Now, that is, but back then, they just weren’t made to last. Every single window showed major wear and tear.

He Says : The office is complete

Wallpaper. I don’t really know what else to say about wallpaper without it descending into a slather of profanities and curses. Especially when that wallpaper is probably 40 years old. To say it has to go is the easy part. But as the saying goes: “easier said than done”. It was all worth it because this would be the perfect room for an office.

He Says: Making the dining room a multipurpose space

Buying an older house that has been renovated in the past results in inheriting some weird additions. For us, its the dining room. What was once the back veranda of the house has been closed in, and turned into a dining room off the kitchen. That oddly suggests that the kitchen used to be external to the house, which I doubt. I think what is now our office used to be the kitchen but Amos disagrees. This house must have had a really weird layout originally. Anyway…

Dining Room – Before

Dining room before shot

The dining room is long and relatively thin. Our table, which can easily sit six, doesn’t get close to taking up all the space. And considering how little we use the room we decided to give it a secondary purpose, as our library using the back wall as a small reading nook. The original room was full of hooks, used for running cables, hanging pictures and holding that huge rope light you can see in the picture. The windows were old and cracked, and not really all that functional. But it was a good-sized room, probably too much for just a dining room unless you wanted to put in a giant 10+ seater table.

He Says: The simple pleasures of a good stove

Renting comes with blessings and curses. In one hand, you don’t need to worry about major appliances breaking, like air conditioners, stove / ovens, or the water heater. The flip side is that no matter how bad they are, as long as they work, which is a very subjective term, you have to make do with what you have.

Page 1 of 2

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén