Archive for the '0_before' Category


Getting acquainted with copper

When I started all this I swore to myself I would stay away from plumbing. I’m comfortable around electrons and wires. But water and pipes?! Well, it turned out that my first rebuilding task in the house would be plumbing.


laundry area (before)
The laundry area as it was when we bought the house.
It’s located in the hallway that leads to the bathroom.

The laundry area in the house is in the hallway between the dining and the bathroom. We really wanted it to be in the garage, but there’s no drain there and the list of work is long enough as it is. So we decided to simply clean up the existing laundry area for now:

  • put up some new greenboard
  • tile the floor
  • stack up the appliances (instead of leaving them side-by-side)
  • put up new shelves
  • close the area with folding doors

Since I was about to put up new greenboard in this area, I figured out I might as well clean-up the plumbing by installing a tidy valve box.

Only thing: the valves were directly soldered to the pipes. Hiring a plumber for such a small job? How much would it cost me?

Oh well. The Depot had a sale on a soldering kit. Not even half the price of what I would have to pay a plumber to visit me. I might as well get my feet wet!

So here I was, with my propane torch and a book teaching sweat soldering 101. Luckily I wasn’t under time pressure… it took me literally hours and 2 attempts to get that stuff right! Be kind - don’t laugh at me.

Tip: Empty your pipes as well as possible. Any remaining water will make your task very difficult. In my case, the pipes were vertical and full of water. Shutting down the main valve and leaving the taps in the house open was not enough. Modern constructions usually have a purge valve, located very low - of course, this house doesn’t have one. Second best is to locate the lowest tap in the system, often an outside bib, and leave it open. If that is still not enough (remember that everything is pretty much level in an Eichler, a one-story house resting on a concrete slab…) you will need to be creative. One thing that worked for me: blow some air through another pipe from the same system (cold or hot) and force the trapped water out… believe me, that works, even from one room to another. Copper is not really tasty, but it isn’t that bad neither!

One year later - was a propane torch the right tool to buy?

Not really. I wish I hadn’t been cheap on that one. The MAPP gas torch was only about $10 more expensive than the Propane one. And the time and frustration you might spare yourself with a MAPP torch are well worth the extra cost. MAPP allows you to heat the copper much faster. This is very convenient when you deal with pipes that you cannot empty properly. In one instance I had to repair a leaky manifold still full of water by brazing small leaves of copper to it - this was literally impossible with the Propane torch.

So go for it.

Firepower SMP-31 MAPP & Propane Self-Lighting Hand Torch

First Impressions (bathroom 2)

shower room The second bathroom is adjacent to the master bedroom. It has a peculiar design - the vanity is in the same space as a walk-in closet, separated from the toilet and the shower by a door.

It’s in the same poor shape as the other bathroom. Biohazard danger indicator goes up yet-one-more level - the toilet is smeared with sealing wax and the lovely moulded MDF trims have a suspicious spongy look.

But hey, we wanted new bathrooms anyway…

First Impressions (bathroom 1)

Let’s have a look at the first bathroom now. Watch your step. Biohazard.

ouch The photo doesn’t quite reflect the state of that room. The aluminum window frame is punctured by corrosion. Plumbing is leaking and the cabinet is all mouldy. Yikes.

There’s no way we can move in with such a bathroom! Re-doing this bathroom is now the number one priority.

First impressions (kitchen)

Let’s go inside. Everything had been carefully prepared for the sale with a gorgeous cream paint all over the house, and the infamous brown carpet. All this tastefully complimented by victorian brass light fixtures, six-panel doors and assorted door handles. Oh. My.


is that a kitchen where is the thermador

But where did my Thermador go?!

First impressions (outside)

As promised, here are the first photos, taken during the open house.

Lovely plants: Yuca and ivy View from the garden

How do you like that gigantic Yuca and bed of ivy? Or those nice AC units sticking out through the walls?
Looking back at these pictures I truly wonder what went through our heads when we signed up for this house…