...and bring me right back down.
It has been an interesting past few weeks. We've been searching for funding, and just haven't gotten anywhere.
Another interesting wrinkle came a little over a week ago. We got a bill from the water company for $3,200. Why? Well, they were billing us for digging up the street, filling it back in, and paving it. I thought I had been told, repeatedly, that if the line was fixed, and they didn't have to dig it up again to turn on the water, we wouldn't be charged. Either I was told incorrectly, or I misunderstood. No, I never got it in writing, and no, I never wrote down who told me. It was all verbal, and I don't think I was ever on the phone when I was told, so I didn't have anything to write it down. Right now, we're waiting to hear back from them as to how much they'll let us pay per month.
This past Monday we met with Fairbanks Neighborhood Housing Services (FNHS), the organization that helped us buy our house in the first place. They have some funding available for renovation loans, and we talked with them about that. The loan officer was very helpful, and very encouraging. It was almost a "sure thing" that we would be able to get a VERY low interest loan for $45,000 and finish the house. We were pretty excited, but still a bit cautious. We talked to him today, and were told that Alaska Housing Finance Corporation (the source of FNHS's money) is very reluctant to (translation: just about never will) loan money for work on a house in which black mold has been discovered, even when all the mold has been removed (in our case, the house is gutted). Even with an air test to prove the mold is no longer in the house, he was not optimistic. We'll do an air test and see what it gets us, but for now, that door is closed.
So, we're right back to where we started. We need $45,000 to finish the house (ideally $50,000, but $45,000 will do). And yes, I have a spreadsheet with all the numbers to back it up.
If you happen to know the source of a very low interest 30 year loan, please let us know.
God is in control! We know we'll get through this. We're just a bit discouraged right now. I'm just glad that the kids are young enough to not have any idea what's going on. Elizabeth knows that I go "work on the house," but she doesn't understand why I'm working on it, or why we're not living there. She and Jonathan-David are just happy being kids.
I finally went through and pulled out some of the pictures of our house's mold damage. You can view them in all their putrescence on their own little web album.
It's been a while since the last update, and we've gotten a bit done.
Over the past three weekends (we tooks the 15th off for our anniversary) we've accomplished the following:
- Taken out the remaining cabinets and the buffet in the kitchen, and all the sheetrock is off the walls.
- The upstairs bathroom is completely bare: all floors and sheetrock are out.
- The entire laundry room has been stripped, including the ceiling. All the cabinets, sheetrock and 95% of the floors have been removed. I'm still trying to get up the bottom layer of linoleum off the the concrete.
- Removed some 2x4's from the downstair's closets to make the closet doors larger.
- Taken all the soft furniture out of the garage and thrown it in the dumpster, due to the fact that cleaning the cloth and cushions of the mold, mildew, and allergens would not have been possible.
- Still working on trying to get up the linoleum in the hallway and office.
So, we think we'll almost done with the gutting part, but aren't sure. I'd like to pull off the rest of the sheetrock. I'd also like to rewire the house due to the old wiring, but also due to the crazy circuit layout (for instance, I'd like to take the dish washer and garbage disposal off the furnace circuit. Yes, that's the way it was wired. Yes, that's a code violation). We'll also have to replace the piping because when the house froze up, the pipes either burst, or the solder joints popped. We'll probably have to pull off all the downstairs ceilings (or at least most of them) since we have no idea where the pipes go for the outside faucets. And even though we've removed the ceililng in the laundry room (under the kitchen) we still have no idea where the pipes for the kitchen are.
The other issue is financing. We went to talk to a lender the other day, and well, they can't lend us money for the project because they want to appraise the house before they lend. Which we can't do since the house is pulled apart. Well, they said, just "seal it up," (meaning put up sheet rock, paint that and the floors), and we can get it appraised. There are two problems with that: 1) we need money to "seal it up," and 2) we'd have to tear it out again because there are things we want to do in the walls, like new electrical wire. There is also some insulation we'd like to replace due to water damage, in addition to probably replacing all of the interior vapor barrier.
So, right now we're really depending on God for the finances. Yes, we were before, but after the meeting with the lenders, it really drives home the point that it's Him that's going to finish out this project.
So, keep praying. We'll keeping working, and praying, and we'll get this thing done.
This past Saturday, June 2, Izzy and Beth Vonnahme helped me tear out more of the house.
The first thing Izzy and I did when we got there was move a 4.5 foot cast-iron tub out of the downstairs bathroom and up a flight of stairs. That will wear you out in a hurry. Shortly after that, Beth arrived and removed the counter, cabinets, and toilet out of the upstairs bathroom while Izzy and I finished removing the floor from the downstairs bathroom.
We then proceeded to the kitchen. Since these cabinets were built and installed on-site, there was going to be no elegant way to remove them, so we had fun with a sledgehammer. The counter itself, as well as the sink was saved, though because the Formica counter was simply set on the cabinets, not secured to it! And guess what! There was mold behind the cabinets that were on the floor! Surprised?
So, the "gutting to-do countdown" is as follows:
1. Rest of the kitchen (the buffet, closet, and cabinet over buffet)
2. Laundry room
3. Upstairs bathroom floor and walls
4. Laundry room (floor, cabinets, and probably walls)
We'll be working on the 9th, but taking the 16th off for our Anniversary (June 14).
Last week (May 26), Izzy and I spent most of our day tearing out the downstairs bathroom. A couple of fun stories before I mention the point of this post.
1) When I went to remove the cabinet above the toilet, one of the screws would not back out. So, as with many things, the cabinet was removed by brute force. I noticed the aforementioned screw was rusted about 1/4" from the end. When we removed the wall, we found out why: that particular screw had gone through the sheet rock and into the sewer pipe behind the wall. It didn't matter that much, since a sewer pipe isn't pressurized, but it might have leaked moisture into the wall cavity behind the wall (which happened to the area under the stairs).
2) When we pulled out the bathroom counter/cabinets we found a classic case of "Doin' what it takes to get by." The area behind the doors on the counter (center section) was painted, but the areas behind the drawers (which you would never see) was not. Nor was the area between the counter and the wall (side of the counter). So, we had (even more) fully exposed paper-on-sheetrock. And yes, much more mold.
Needless to say, the "inside" (stud side) of all the bathroom walls, as well as the walls opposite those walls, were covered with "3D" mold. Fun.
But as to the title of this post: when Izzy and I pulled up the floor, we had to stop half way because the 4.5 foot cast-iron tub sat on the other sheet of plywood (2x6 elevated floor under which pipes were run). The tub drain would not yield to any tool I had, even one I had bought to remove the upstairs tub. What did it take? Going to Lowe's and buying a tool like this. That drain came right out. Amazing how easy things are when you have the right tool.
It's time for another update from the wonderful world of the Kugler remodel.
We got a lot done yesterday, but of course still have quite a bit more to do in the way of tearing out. Our dumpster is probably about 2/3 full now.
All the wood paneling that was in the living room, upstairs hallway, family room, guest bedroom, and office is off the walls and out in the dumpster. It's what we found under the wood paneling that was the most interesting (or revolting, depending on one's perspective).
In one word: mold. More in some places than others. Under the windows in the living room there are panels of sheetrock with quite a bit of mold on it, and will have to come out. The wall between the family and guest bedroom downstairs had enough mold on it (on both sides) that the entire wall (save the studs) has already been torn out.
The worst mold infestiation, by far, has been the office. In general, the reason the mold has been so bad was simple physics and biology: 1) the previous owners vented their dryer into the house for 13 years, 2) wood paneling on sheet rock creates a very tight airspace; once the moisture in there, there is no airflow to remove the moisture or dry it out, and 3) mold likes paper, period. In the office, this problem was exacerbated for two reasons. First, the wood paneling was installed over wallpaper which covered the sheet rock. Second, the office shares a wall with the downstairs bathroom. It appears that one end of the wall in the bathroom was broken through from the office side (apparently for tub installation) and never repaired, so there was no effective vapor barrier between the bathroom and the office wall. Combined with the wall paper, what we had was, effectively, about as ideal a mold incubator as you could get. The wall paper in that corner of the room was so molded that it looked and felt like parchment paper. Pretty gross.
In other news, the kitchen floor is out, and it looks like a minimal amount of repair will be needed on the subfloor (pending inspection by qualified personnel, of course).
We will be doing more work on May 5th, and would welcome any help. There is plenty to do. Carpet tack strips to tear up; padding on the stairs; more moldy (or otherwise needs-to-be-replaced) sheetrock to tear out; tear out fake "bricks" in the kitchen; probably tear out the tub in the downstairs bathoom; removing linoleum in the laundry room, bathroom, and downstairs hallway and office. And just general cleanup. Bring tools, and a respirator if you have one. We'll provide particle masks if you don't.
Oh, and if anyone can recommend a good, honest, plumber, forward his or her name our way. We need one of those due to a few compromised pipes.
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