Tag Archives: demolition

Avoiding Feeling Trapped

Oh, wow! This past weekend was exhausting.  After spending two days ripping up all the flooring downstairs I felt like my body was ready for a bikini contest.  I’m pretty sure I found muscles I didn’t even know I had… like upper back muscles and ab muscles on the side of my torso.

Michael Luke was in charge of ripping up the parquet and ceramic tile flooring with the stripper we rented for the weekend.  It totally cracked me up that we had a stripper in our house for the weekend!

 

My job was taking out load after load after load of flooring to the dumpster. This involved shoveling it into the wheelbarrow and then slinging large chunks of flooring in the dumpster a little at time.  I’m pretty sure I’ve never done so much physical labor in one day before.  Which probably explains why I feel like I should have a six pack of abs and sculpted arms by now.

 


Thankfully, we aren’t doing all this work on our own.  Over the past couple of weeks there have been construction guys knocking down and opening up walls left and right.  It’s amazing how in such a short time the house has transformed.

Whistle Haven was built in 1979. Apparently way back when you had guests over and the only room your friends might get to visit was your dining room because you had the ability to close the room off and leave them feeling trapped.

Originally there was a wall separating the entry from the dining.  Guests could then enter through the door into the dining room and there was another door that could close the kitchen off.

The bright side about a floorplan layout like this is that you didn’t have to spend hours cleaning the house for company to come over. Just straighten up the dining room and your ready to have friends and family over.
It wasn’t quite the look and feel I wanted Whistle Haven to have though so we opened up the walls on both sides of the room with over 10′ of encased openings!

I knew immediately the first day that I walked in and saw all this open space that Whistle Haven was going to be everything I envisioned in my head.

The dining room feels huge now… because it is. We have plans for a table that will seat 8-10 people!  In the coming weeks new flooring will be installed, walls finished and repainted, and new light fixtures added.  It’s going to be so much fun to look back and see how much our home has transformed over just a couple of months.

Later I’ll share what we’ve done to the rest of the house because this is just the beginning of gutting almost the entire downstairs of Whistle Haven.  In the meantime I want to hear what your favorite lighting for the dining room is.  Crystal chandelier? Faux candles on wooden beams? Sleek modern fixtures? Or long horizontal fixtures floating above the table?

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Meet Whistle Haven

Meet Whistle Haven!

Whistle Haven joined our family earlier this week and has already captivated our hearts and dreams.  This charming Cape Cod style home was originally built in 1979 and sits nestled on a spacious piece of land right next to the train tracks. Now that you are probably questioning if you are reading the MLS description or an actual blog post lets dig into the what, when, and why of it all.

Whistle Haven is a foreclosure that had been on and off the market for around six months before we found her back in November.  Everything inside of her still boasts 1979 and could scare the average home buyer away but from the beginning we saw past her outdated finishes and into the bones of a beautiful house that was just waiting to become a home for our family.

Michael Luke and I have always dreamed of finding an older home and fixing it up.  We are prepared to tackle this house like Chip and Joanna Gaines… minus the filming crew and shiplap, with plans to gut and transform the entire first floor of the house.

Since Whistle Haven is a foreclosure she was priced a good bit under what we were open to spending on a house so that leaves us plenty of room in the budget to customize our dream house.  Which means I’m having to give some serious thought into what’s the best kitchen layout for our family, what flooring and cabinets do I want to live with (for a while), and how much demolition do I need to do myself before I finally get those six pack of abs.  Floor removal  is a for real workout!

Michael Luke and I had no real intentions of buying a house until we returned from China to bring Judah home.  That had been our plan all along ever since we first moved to the Memphis area almost two years ago.  Why?  When we moved to Memphis we had already begun the adoption process so we had to update our homestudy and this ended up setting us back about three months… or more.  The U.S. government has approved us to bring Judah home to his bedroom in this apartment.  To bring him home anywhere else requires a complete homestudy update and resubmitting everything to immigration.  Which is a big setback!

Whistle Haven is perfect though because it will take us around two to three months to get all the renovations completed.  During this time our apartment will remain our main dwelling space.  We also plan to travel to China during this time as well. Once we return we will spend a little while at the apartment and then FINALLY make the big move to our new house as a party of five!  I cannot wait.

In the meantime Michael Luke and I will be tackling some of the demo and installation ourselves in addition to bringing in professional contractors, plumbers, and electricians to help us get this job done. The past few days while we’ve been working on things I’ve had the best time dreaming of what it will be like with all five of us living there.  Wondering what secrets the girls will share with each other in their bedroom. Imagining Judah toddling around the house or our family gathering in the kitchen for family dinners while I cook. And picturing Emma chasing after countless squirrels. It’s going to be fun.

Ever since we were newly weds… nearly ten years ago, we would drive around and look at houses. My favorite ones were always the older ones with character.  Everyone’s dream or ideal house is different.. For some it’s a new home. For others a city apartment with a view.  For me its always been an older home with character and a yard for a garden and room to play in. Whistle Haven posses all that.  So why name our house Whistle Haven? A house is so much more than just a building and because of that it has always been my desire to have one with a name. I don’t feel like a house needs to look like Downton Abbey or the White House to earn a name.  Every home should be entitled to its own name.

My prayer for our house is for it to be a haven for our family but also our friends and guests that visit our home.  This life is crazy busy but we all need a place for rest. To refuel. To recharge. We all need a haven.  The “whistle” part of the name was easy. This house sits right beside one of the main tracks into Memphis so train whistles are no stranger to this house.  The girls are beyond excited to have a view of the train tracks from their bedroom window and I’m reminded of the joy of watching trains when i was little.  Not many people request hotel rooms next to the track… but we always did growing up because my sister and I loved watching the trains so much.

So tell me, what’s the name for your home? Or if you haven’t named it yet what would be the most fitting name for your home?

 

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