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Guest Cottage Design Update – What Is The Status Of It All?

There is a lot happening over at the Guest Cottage that I haven’t shared (or at least not all in one place), and it might be the stuff that only the remodelers will really care about (or those of you who just like to learn about the remodeling process). I feel like the design of the kitchen and what we are calling the “speakeasy” is at stage “5” – where we have ideas, but are still playing with them, so nothing is finalized. The bathroom is almost fully flushed out (lol), and then all of the electrical, foundation, framing, plumbing, and HVAC have moved along. It’s kinda the boring stuff, but many of you might be interested in how we are doing it, so here’s the latest:

Foundation Repair – Done

cottage design

A few months ago, our contractors, “Foundations First NW,” finished the scope of work that was just meant to repair and make the foundation safe, but not totally redo it. There is still a slope in the old prop room (better but def still noticeable), and some other areas are wonky, but we knew all of that. We chose not to spend the $100k+ to make it awesome, and instead made it safe and better for a little over $20k. They built the new foundation in the bathroom and spent a few days adding supports underneath the house (using steel adjustable posts), replacing a huge beam, digging out a crawl space, etc. It’s done, and they did a great job.

Electrical

We have finished about 1/2 of the rough electrical, and the fantastic news is that they were able to put so many surface mount junction boxes without using conduit to cover up the wiring in the rooms where we wanted to preserve the original wood paneling (living room, prop room, and upstairs future office). Basically, we feared that we’d have to see some of the wiring since we didn’t want to open up the walls, but it’s all hidden! I’ll give out my electrician’s info after we are done with the work. So far we’ve been soooo happy with him and his team.

HVAC – Heat And AC

After having a Quilt mini-split AC/heat unit installed in our gym, we were blown away by how good the product is (and we are so excited that we can put our wood paneling over top of it so that it can really disappear into the design of this old house). So I pitched a partnership with them, and we have identified the rooms that need heat and AC (which is most of them, actually). Again, while it does require some light construction and electrical work, it’s not a massive ducting system that would require us to rip out walls and ceilings, etc. And we love that we can only heat or cool the rooms when we need to. The exact location is being figured out by GreenSavers (a local company that specializes in installing these amongst all other HVAC and insulation stuff). I’m psyched.

The Roof Is Being Repaired

Listen, it’s not in great shape, but we are hoping not to replace it and just patch it. The guys are out there literally right now giving us a quote (and I can tell they’d prefer we just redo it all). TBD on that front.

Framing Is Happening Right Now

We aren’t moving any walls or changing the layout, but a lot of the ceilings need repair before we can wire, add insulation, or put in skylights. Plus, we have to raise a door and a window in the bathroom, and get rid of two windows (they just don’t make sense and will cost a lot of money to repair or replace). Phase 1 is happening right now. Phase 2 will be after all the electrical, plumbing, and insulation are done, and they’ll panel over it all, then build out the water closet and shower room in the bathroom.

Exterior Repair

This house is old and could probably use a total face-lift, but then it would look like a new house, which is fine, but not really the intent (or just not necessary and would cost so much more). There was a lot of water damage from the rain just pouring off the roof of the covered walkway onto the corner of the house, and some of the posts on the walkway were totally rotted anyway. So we decided to just chop it off, taking off the rotted parts and making it so we can move the water away from the house when it rains (it still touches it a few inches, but not as badly). I’m 9% sad that we lost some of the covered walkway, but not enough to invest in what it would take to figure out the water abatement (the roof line hit the house, no room for a gutter, and everything was rotted). My crew also found siding that didn’t match perfectly, but it sure is close (which is good enough for me). So they are ripping off all boards that are super damaged and replacing them with ready-made boards. I’m sure someone with an eagle eye will be able to spot the difference in the profile, but custom-milled siding is crazy expensive and just not where we wanted to splurge. Once it’s all painted white, I doubt anyone will notice.

Wall Cladding

I’m so excited to say that we found some reclaimed wood that matches our existing wood almost perfectly. It’s reclaimed fir with a rough face, and while I originally wanted it to be a rich, more refined wood, once we held up this more rustic piece, it felt way more appropriate to the house.

All The Fun Stuff

Meanwhile, we have been shopping for tile, ordering a lot of Samplize paint colors, and playing around with the kitchen layout. I want to get a bit closer in the design process before I show you what I’m thinking, so hang tight for now.

The overwhelm is starting to sink in a little, but I’m still having so much fun dreaming up each room. But to finally have some real construction movement over here just feels sooo good. Progress!

*Photos by Kaitlin Green

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Jill
1 day ago

What a fun project that seems challenging as well! Best of both worlds!

Rachel C
1 day ago

I love these updates! Helps show the bigger picture, that it’s not all fun design but a lot of work and strategy.

Abby
1 day ago

Can’t wait! 🙂

Merry
1 day ago

So fun to see what is going with tye guest cottage 🙂

Erin Dae
1 day ago

Love the behind the scenes, so-called boring stuff. Not boring to me!

Galena
1 day ago

A lot of change is happening and I’m glad you updated us before getting any further–it is fun seeing the intermediate steps! I hope you can salvage the roof, but if not, may I suggest getting a metal roof? They are much better for the environment, last for 50 years and you can more safely harvest rainwater from them than asphalt shingles.

Erin
1 day ago

I feel like wonkiness is part of the charm of an old home. If you put a marble in the hall of our 120-year-old house, it will roll the whole way down.

Esme
1 day ago

I really like these updates – just adding a comment in case you use the comments as data to gauge interest. Keep them coming and excited to follow along as always.

Alyce
1 day ago

I love these updates too. I didn’t appreciate how much work the house needed! I highly recommend replacing the roof and not just repairing it. We did a roof repair once and it was expensive to patch a small section. I want to say the repair cost was in the 1.5-2k range. The next year we had more leaks and realized we had to replace the whole roof and I wish we hadn’t been cheap the first time around. The roof replacement came some quickly after the repair that it felt like we just wasted a bunch of money on the repair.

Katie
1 day ago
Reply to  Alyce

I love the freedom and creativity this “extra”
house allows but want to second this! I know from experience/family in the industry that when a roof needs repair due to age/condition you are on borrowed time, almost always in the form of water leaks/damage. Repairing it is most likely a waste of money but more importantly, it’s risking the work and effort you are putting into to fixing up whatever is under that roof.

I’m also curious about the foundation work. Will the work they did now to secure it still leave you with a path forward to do the more extensive repairs later without ruining much of your renovation work? (I know one of your possible use cases for the house is aging parents/grandparents and I’m wondering if you would be able to even out those floors later if need be).

Molly
14 hours ago
Reply to  Alyce

You may also want to check with your homeowners insurance. For the most part, they have turned into a-holes (sorry if you’re an agent but it’s true!) about insuring old roofs. Would hate for you to spend money to repair only to be denied for coverage until the entire roof is replaced for new.

Lee
1 day ago

Love hearing about the details that are truly critical to the reno as a whole! Thanks for sharing – such a fun read! 🥳

kathryn
1 day ago

Following along closely- always here for inspo and honesty 🙂 I’m also here today lobbying for a two toilet solution! Urinals smell so b-a-d- learn from my mistake, Emily— resist!

Sahaja
1 day ago

Just adding that we are loving the progress posts too! Wanted to drop a comment so you keep it coming. Love seeing it on a real timeline

AK
1 day ago

It’s so nice to see the walkway again! It was included in the very first EHD post I read, maybe just before moving in??? If it’s half as charming in person, wow?! And now it’ll have an actual destination!

Kim
19 hours ago

So exciting!!! Thank you for the update! And I’m glad you’re only 9% sad about the walkway 😉

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