Before and After: the Bathroom

It’s been a tough few weeks. Just as things were beginning to come together with the house and I had tons of material to write about, we moved. Then, as soon as we were getting settled, the election happened. We don’t know how bad this is going to end up being in the long run, but I do know for sure that Laura and I are panicked, and so are a good deal of our friends and community. Regardless, we are moving forward in a guarded way. We are taking care of ourselves and our community, trying to be strong & courageous for whatever comes next. We are grateful for each other and everything we have. So.. onto the house and the first in several Before and Afters.

bathroom-a-mess-ready-to-post
Whatcha doin’ in there, honey?

The bathroom was completed 4 days before we moved in. Laura thought that was a little too close for comfort. I wasn’t worried. We do have a 1/2 bath downstairs. And a utility tub (although I can’t say I was excited at the prospect of bathing in the “Utili-tub”, it seemed doable in a pinch).

We (mostly Laura) managed the bathroom reno very closely every step of the way. She was on site when the Master Plumber came to install the fixtures, and he ended up needing her assistance to connect the faucet to the pipes behind the vanity.

The end result of the bathroom rebuild is pretty darn amazing. The bathroom reminds me of when we stayed at The Nines in Portland a couple years ago. It’s super swanky! A few features include: rainfall showerhead, glass shower walls (no more shower curtain!), infinity drain, new toilet (splurge!), crystal chandelier, and one of those above-vanity lights that has built in heating tubes that keep the mirror from fogging up. Showering is a whole new experience of luxury and satisfaction from all the hard work and planning. The last piece of the puzzle is getting the fan vented when we have the roof replaced in December.

Before:

bathroom-before-to-post-1

bathroom-before-to-post-2

shower-before-2

shower-before

After:

vanity-after-ready-to-post-3

shower-after

terlit-after

sink-after-2-ready-to-post-1

Fancy Bathroom Chandelier

We are getting close to completing the bathroom. All the pieces are now in place, but we’re waiting on the plumber to come  out and finish the shower hardware, vanity sink hook up, and toilet. We could probably figure out those last two items on our own. But we’re not messing around when it comes to plumbing. It’s too important to do wrong and we don’t really have time to learn how to do it well.

Excuses aside, we have been DIYing plenty in the bathroom. We finished the wall cleaning and multiple coats of primer and paint, and Laura picked out and installed a fancy pants chandelier. 


It came with white cotton gloves to use for handling the crystal baubles(?) I don’t even know what you call those things. 

As a counterpoint to how elegant the chandelier is, there was a cloud of profanity as Laura installed it, which apparently wasn’t easy.

The ranch will be generally rustic with some reclaimed wood, imperfect floors, a brick fireplace, but the bathroom will be a little bit fancy (because why not?).

New Shower Starts to Take Shape

shower-wall-in-progres

After demolishing the soffit above the shower, we had the hole in the ceiling (as well as several other miscellaneous holes that were created when we removed the old vanity & medicine cabinet) repaired and drywalled. The drywall was something we hired out. I’m sure we could figure out drywall (and we may still get the opportunity), but we needed a professional to swoop in and finish the job quickly.

Our original design was a wet-room style shower where there is no lip or edge from the bathroom floor to the shower itself. The design included an infinity drain and custom glass shower walls. However, when we researched the complexities of the floor installation in a seamless wet room, we realized it was almost impossible without rebuilding the entire floor. In order to drain properly, a slope would have to be created through installing an elevation gain on the other side of the bathroom floor.

The point of this renovation is not to make the house 100% perfect at the expense of our sanity and budget. Since we are on a schedule and don’t want to spend all our money on the bathroom floor, we went with a standard shower pan installation with a ~4 inch lip you have to step over to get into the shower. I GUESS I can manage to pick up my feet and step over the edge (dramatic sigh).

For the floor, Laura found some lovely matte gray hex tiles from Home Depot for about $9/sq foot. For the shower walls, we found some 3″ x 8″ marble wall tiles locally for about $24/sq foot. But Laura is an internet shopping genius. She found a distributor in Texas who had the exact marble tiles we wanted for $7/sq. foot. And that deal was not too good to be true – it was legit. Less than 2 weeks later, we had a pallet of marble subway tiles in our driveway. None of them were broken. They were all in great shape and carefully packed.
marble-pallet

We had a recomendation for shower/tile work, but they were at least 6 weeks out, ugh. We found some tile guys on Thumbtack, and they ended doing an amazing job and being great to work with. They implemented our design and improved on it by suggesting some custom shelving made out of two tiles sandwiched together and embedded in the wall (you can see below). The integrity of the shower is probably one of the most important elements of your house, so you don’t want any half-ass or learn-while-you go scenario. We were excited to have professionals handle this part.

shower-wall-2.jpg

Next steps: Now that the tile is in, we can have the custom shower doors measured & created, and the plumber back to finish up the hardware. Then we can make plans to actually move in and shower as often as we want!

A Spa-Like Bathroom Renovation in Progress

tile1

Wait, what – you’re still working on the bathroom? you must be thinking? And you’re right! Between more demo than we thought we would have to do, and the plumber, drywall & tile guys’ schedules, the bathroom is still a work in progress. The good news is that it’s getting closer and is going to have very solid construction and one helluva nice shower pan:

shower-pan

tile2
We got small hexagonal tiles for the floor and shower. We loved the hex tiles we had in our old house, and then read somewhere that they are better for slip-resistance since they have more grouted surface. However, we did select a darker grout than we had before, because white grout is for basic bitches.shower-wall

Bathroom Progress

before-drywall

after-drywall.jpgThe bathroom is slowly coming along. It’s starting to look less like a pile of rubble, and more like something on its way to a delightful, spa-like environment. The former plastic shower insert that we removed a couple weeks ago had some framing and additional walls to bring down the ceiling to the height of the shower insert. I don’t know why anyone would ever design it that way. It essentially cut off all the light to the shower and made the bathroom seem much smaller and more closed in. My guess is that the plastic shower insert was a relatively quick & easy solution to create a functional shower. And when you only have one shower in your house, you can’t afford much downtime.

Our drywall guy sounded like he could take down the additional framing, but as it turns out, he had a very brief window of time to work on our bathroom, and needed us to demo that section before he could start work. Ugh. Well, not a huge deal, especially since we are resourceful and have the added benefit of having some beefy friends.

The upper framing was put together with a shit ton of nails. It looks like the person who put it together was a DIYer (no shame in that!), but they used an overabundance of long nails to really secure the crap out of the shower framing. I understand why they didn’t use screws. They are more expensive and take longer. And they weren’t building it with demolition in mind. You can see the treacherous pokey nails (and smiling menfolk) below:

bathroom-bros

Regardless, Laura papped away at the section for awhile and dismantled a good deal of it using tools & physics. Then, our brawny friends came over and added some brute strength to the process. After over 2 hours of hammering, pulling,  cursing, & bleeding, the top section was out.

The drywall guy was able to seal up the ripped up area by the vanity, seal up the peephole to the hallway, and recreate a ceiling above the shower. Looking better already!above-shower

Adventures in Bathroom Renovation

toilet-wall
The bathroom has good bones. It has a big window, excellent light, a huge area for the vanity/sink, and good layout. The hardware & shower in there were in dire need of replacement, however. We knew when we bought the house that we had to eventually renovate the bathroom, and what better time than before moving in? I can’t imagine trying to renovate a bathroom while living in the house. There is a half bath downstairs which we have been using while renovating, but no shower. Plus, a couple of spiders live there and we don’t want to rile them up.

We think they redid the vanity in the 1960s (1968 to be exact), and the shower area looks like it was installed in the last ten years. It was an odd, slightly cramped plastic shower liner and pan. They built onto the ceiling to bring it down so the prefab plastic liner would all fit perfectly, creating a tomb-like shower experience. Ok, maybe that’s a bit dramatic. But I’m short, and it looked tiny to me. So, we pulled it all out. In addition, the shower drained slowly. That is usually a quick fix, but we had a plumber out to look at it and he noticed that there were 1.5 inch pipes leading out of the shower drain, and standard is 2 inches. So even if the drain was perfectly clean, the water would move through a narrow pipe more slowly. So that has been replaced.

So the thing is… we are pretty handy, but we don’t have any actual training on how to do all this stuff – especially plumbing. Laura helped her family build a house growing up. She got to see how it was put together. She assisted with wiring, tile, construction, etc. She’s also an excellent problem-solver and an natural engineer. I’m house-obsessed and a pretty good designer. Between that, trips to the hardware store, and Youtube videos, we have been able to figure out how to do a lot of home renovation ourselves, and learn what to outsource.

The bathroom is at the convergence of what we are willing and able to do, and what we need to hire out. We are doing all these renovations without a general contractor. This is for a couple of reasons. The first is: Good luck getting a General contractor in Portland right now! The flurry of real estate sales and credit flowing has many of the good workers backed up for weeks or months. The other reason we’re handling it ourselves is that we’re not making major changes. No big construction or moving walls. We are simply removing the finishes and fixtures and replacing them. Mostly stuff we have done before. And the last reason: saving money, of course.

This means that we are learning as we go about who does what in what order. I thought it would be obvious: the plumber updates the pipes first, then you lay tile, then drywall and paint. We’re learning it’s a little tricker than that. The plumber fixes the 2 inch pipe, says they don’t do the pan, so you call the tile/pan guy, who is two weeks out. You also find out the infinity drain you ordered on Amazon last week doesn’t work, for whatever reason, so you go buy a new one. Then, you get a bid for tile, while your drywall guy is ready to work today, but not next week. And the plumber needs to come back after the tile is in, but when will that be? You get the idea…

Here’s the checklist and status:

Demo: removal of existing vanity, shower pan. Check!

Prime & paint the walls (We have to wait for the drywall guy to make repairs first)

Shower plumbing: Replace the piping behind the shower, since there was something weird installed where everything was sideways and there was a giant hole in the drywall with a plastic cover (the shower peep hole, I’ve been calling it). Check!

Sink plumbing: the bathroom sink was piped with the incoming water coming out of the floor and the drain going into the wall. I’m told this is not standard (and makes no sense), so we had that fixed (you can’t see much, but here is the very expensive, very beautiful new plumbing on the left:

behind-sink-plumbing

Shower pan: When we called the plumber, they implied that they could install a new shower pan. But then they came out and said no, they do all the backend stuff but they don’t do showerpans anymore. 😐 So we called a tile guy (not an easy feet in a backed up market right now) who we found on Thumbtack and are getting this queued up

Tiling: we were going to do this originally, but it sounds like the tile/floorpan guy will include it in a quote and heck, I bet they are faster
than we are, and time is money

tiles

Shower glass: We are doing floor to ceiling glass shower doors, and there are installers that do just that one thing, and we’re on their list. They can’t measure or start work until the tile has been installed

Drywall: We have a drywall guy (I’ve read in many places that drywall is one of those things that for the skills and tools involved, it’s better to hire someone)

Sink: We have to drag in and install the vanity. We’ve got that part, as long as we get a little help from our brawny friends, since it weighs 230 lbs.

In summary, the bathroom has been a learning experience and is far from complete. The challenge has been sorting out how much we can do, what we need to get professional help for, and the other wild card: The order in which things are done. If we ever redo another bathroom (which we will, downstairs), we will get to apply the lessons. The bathroom is the most important thing right now, because we can move in with the kitchen still under construction, but the bathroom has to be 100% done first. My wife insists on being able to shower in her own home (go figure). It’s going to be a fantastic bathroom, much improved and nicer than any bathroom we’ve ever had before. But we’re not quite there yet.