Our Garden Is Done
The restoration of our 1885 Victorian town house in San Francisco






We designed the ground floor of our house as a possible rental unit down the road so we installed a separate kitchen down there. This is an Ikea Adel Medium Brown Kitchen with stainless steel appliances from Bosch. We'll install a granite counter and mosaic tile backsplash. We had originally planned to install a Bosch side-by-side refrigerator but the right side door would not be able to open fully. We plan on ordering the LG 21755 counter depth refrigerator with bottom drawer freezer in stainless steel.
The carpenters have been busy the past week finishing up all of the interior trim (the baseboards) now that the hardwood floors are installed. In the background you can see the new arch that duplicated the pre-existing one that had to be destroyed during the foundation upgrade to the house. The plasterers still aren't finished and they have spent more than 12 hours trying to get it to look right. Each of the 3 floors of the house has the same detail so it's easy to see if they did it right.
We ended up replacing all of the windows on the ground floor with new custom sash over sash laminated glass windows. We didn't install double pane, insulated windows because the climate is so temperate in the Bay area and they don't offer the physical security that laminated glass provides. There used to be bars protecting the ground floor windows and I'm happy to say that they will not be replaced. The existing sashes will be recycled upstairs as much as possible so they won't go to waste. Many of the south and east facing windows on the house are worn out.
It's been a busy month which is why I haven't posted in a while. The marble subway tile looks great in the shower, tiled to the 10 foot ceiling. You can save a great deal of money if you plan in advance. I purchased the sink, toilet and Rohl hardware all online from Homeclick.com for almost 40% off. The shower has 3 shower heads: 2 shower arms on either side of the wall and a 12" rain shower head coming down from the ceiling. I really love this shower, particularly with the radiant floor heating! Now I have to decide whether to install a 3/8" shower door or 0.5" unit.
The carpenters have been busy trimming out the inside of the house. The redwood trim corners are original to the house, the poplar trim (paler wood) is new custom milled wood to match the rest of the house. The base trim will be installed after the engineered wood floors are put down in a week or so.
The marble subway tile has been completely installed. It took the tile guy more than 2 weeks. The walls tiled to the 10 foot ceiling frames out the shower. This shower will have a total of 3 shower heads including a 12 inch rain shower head attached to the ceiling. The next step is to order the frameless glass shower door.
The previous front steps were torn down about a week ago. They weren't very well made and certainly weren't original to the house. What you are looking at in the picture is the basic framing made out of pressure treated lumber, on top of which the finished lumber will be built. The porch which was dismantled during the house lifting is also in the process of being put back together (including the two columns that frame the entrance to the porch). As a side note, the front doors were stripped by the painters with Jasco and once they are patched and the new mortise lock is installed, will be painted dark blue.
For the past 2 months the house painters have been prepping the house for painting (the name of the painting company is Victorian Restoration). This mostly involved stripping the architectural detail with heat guns, sanding the flat areas and scraping the old dripped paint from the bottom edge of the siding. It's a pretty laborious job for 3-4 painters on a house that is about 40 feet tall (3 stories).
Last week they started priming and patching the house; this week they started by spraying on the first of two coats of paint, after which they used caulk in all of the joints. The picture below shows part of the front of the house (where the scafolding hasn't been erected yet) that hasn't been touched yet. What a difference!
It took the plasterers about a week to finish mudding the walls. I was really quite impressed at their level of skill -- very little sanding was necessary to smooth the walls. The only plasterwork left is to install the medallions on the ceiling and to finish the detail on the arch seen in the picture below.