I'm not the kind of guy who can look at
some sort of correctable flaw in his house and leave it, well,
uncorrected. I love renovating my house. If I had unlimited funds and
time, I'd be tinkering on some project every day. Sadly, even when
doing the work yourself, refurbishing a house requires mucho dinero.
If you had a chart with two circles on it, one labeled “Freelance
Automotive Journalist” and the other “Money in the Bank,”
rarely would the circles come remotely close to touching one another;
forget about them ever intersecting.
Consequently, serious renovation
projects must be planned and budgeted. I typically begin buying
materials and required tools not already in my inventory weeks or
months ahead. Depending on the project, however, sometimes the space
required to store this stuff is well beyond the storage capacity of
the 1,100 or so square feet of my home. That was one issue with my
recent living room-ceiling renovation.
Every couple of years I get to patch all the cracks in the interior walls. |
Built on a fairly severe hill, my
60-year-old house apparently is in constant flux. Settling a little
each year. Although the brick foundation has so far been immune to
whatever is going on structurally, I am constantly repairing cracks
here and there in the interior walls (particularly spider webbing
from corners of door frames and windows), and planing down the tops
of upstairs doors that suddenly begin sticking.
I'm not a fan of popcorn ceilings.
Popcorn is that drywall finish containing little chunks of some sort
of acoustic material that is sprayed on the ceiling after the drywall
has been finished. It basically is used to mask half-assed drywall
finish work on the ceiling the same way an orange peel spray is used
to hide finishing imperfections on the walls.
Hate the damn popcorn. |
I had only lived in the house for a
year or two when cracks began appearing in the vaulted living room
ceiling. With my eye always on selling this house, I had to address
the cracks. As I saw it, I had two possible courses of action: Remove
the popcorn and refinish the ceiling, or install an all-new ceiling
over the old. In the end, I opted to install a new ceiling.
I gained my framing chops for building my shed from first building a pony wall in the great room. |
I tested my tongue-and-groove bead
board chops on the small ceiling in my upstairs hall. What I learned
from that experience is that installing bead board is pretty straight
forward, but a larger area requires at least two people. The length
of the hall ceiling was about 6.5 feet and I struggled a little
getting the boards in place, balancing a nail gun at the same time
and then nailing the boards. No way I could handle anything longer by
myself.
Three-quarters of an inch thick and
roughly 5.5-inches wide, the boards come in 16-ft lengths. I needed
enough of them to cover a 400-sq-ft area. There simply was nowhere in
my house I could stockpile that much lumber. What I needed was
just-in-time delivery. I have a fraternity brother in Dayton, Ohio
who is semi-retired. Ports has visited me in Greenville a couple of
times over the past two or three years. He offered to drive down and
lend a hand. We agreed upon a five-day window in October. A trip to
84 Lumber set me back around $1,100, but material delivery was
arranged for the day of Ports arrival. I spent the morning of the eve
of his arrival picking up some scaffolding rented for a week.
My shed was burgled during an extended
trip from home a few months ago, and most of my power tools,
including my air compressor and nail guns, disappeared. I had
replaced the chop saw, table saw, compressor and finish nail gun in
the weeks leading up to scheduled date for the ceiling job.
Early on I made the decision I wouldn't
endure the mess or take the time to remove the popcorn surface. I
decided instead to nail 1.5x.75-inch furring strips over the popcorn.
And then nail the tongue-and-groove to the furring. I worked off and
on doing that in my rare moments home for the month before Ports was
scheduled to arrive. I also took down the ceiling fan and the three
recessed can lights.
On the day of Ports' arrival, my
carport bristled with lumber and my dining area was crowded with
power tools. With all the confidence of someone who has no clue what
he is talking about, I had assured Ports we could knock out this job
in about 16 hours. I based my estimate on the three hours the
upstairs ceiling required. What a moron. By the end of day one, we
had maybe 15 to 20 percent of the ceiling completed. Absolutely
nothing in this house is square or plumb. By the end of day 2, we had
maybe 60 percent finished.
Between the walls not being quite
square and some of the boards not being exactly straight, meant we
couldn't just cut a 10-ft length of board and expect it to fit flush.
Some boards, when set flush on one end would have a quarter-inch gap
separating the tongue from the groove on the other end. It was
maddening.
Meanwhile, you have two guys over 65,
balancing on ladders and scaffolding trying to fit these boards
together and nail them in place. It was a miracle neither of us was
killed. The rented scaffolding should have been easy to assemble and
adjust. It sure looked that way on the video I watched before renting
it. Of course, the scaffolding in the video was brand new. What we
had was beat to heck. Pieces had to be pounded into place with a rubber
mallet. At one point when we were attempting to increase the height,
it simply exploded on us, with its parts falling in all directions.
Ports got one of his hands caught in it, badly pinching a finger. As
he danced around with one hand grasped in the other yelling he thought saw
God, I admonished him not to go into the light. Oddly, he didn't
appreciate my humor.
Toughest area to reach was over the stairs. |
We began the work on Wednesday morning.
By Saturday morning we only had the small section over the stairs
left to do. There are about seven steps that go up to the third level
and then five steps that go down to the bottom level from the main
floor. This small section was left for last because we were having
trouble figuring out how we would deal with the stairs in terms of
somehow reaching the ceiling. Originally, I planned on using the
scaffolding for the stairs going up. We would adjust one side to sit
on one of the steps while the other side rested on the great room
floor. On the stairs going down, I would put an extension ladder on
the top stair, leaning the ladder on the wrought-iron banister
running along the upstairs hallway.
In the end, we went to Home Depot and
purchased four concrete blocks, which we stacked in two piles of two
on the stairs going up on which Ports stood. I took the leaning
ladder on the stairs going down. It was a little exciting, but worked
fine.
We were done with the job by about 1:30
on Saturday afternoon and downtown celebrating with a few beers by
2:30.
I still have to paint the ceiling,
install the new lighting and ceiling fan. Ports will return this
spring to help me install the trim. But, the worst is over...I hope.