First we wrote about triathlon; then we wrote about the construction of our forever home on Matt's family property along the Little Arkansas River. Now, we're writing about whatever adventure or achievement comes our way. Thanks for reading our stories!
We are so excited to announce that on August 5, we moved into the north house (which from this point forward will be known as our home)!! We were able to close on the house that day, which was a lovely way to celebrate Katie's 38th birthday! Here's a picture of us at closing with the certificate of occupancy:
Prior to that, on July 30, we had an amazing crew of family and friends helping us move the majority of our belongings into our new home. Special thanks to Duke, Jeanne, Brody, Ryland, Angie, Angie's nephew Matthew, Kristie, Andy, Jayson, Steve, Joan, and Ryan!
When we arrived to the house on July 30, the painters were still there (we weren't expecting that), so we moved everything into the center of rooms, like this:
This was a little frustrating for us, since we had such great help that could have moved the big furniture and washer/dryer into position, but we rolled with it.
On Aug. 5, Angie and Gary helped us for 4 hours getting most of the remaining items from the south house to our home. They even brought a pie and sang "Happy Birthday" to Katie.
Katie's dad Marshall arrived the next day and helped get a few more items from the south house. He also brought pie. Four of them!! Awesomeness.
On Aug. 11, we successfully closed on the sale of the south house, so we are now very happy to be owners of just one home.
On Aug. 13, our friend Ryan came over and helped Matt get the internet connected, the TV antenna installed, and (most importantly!) the TV mounted on the wall. It was a big day:
And now for the moment some of you have been requesting ... photos of our mostly finished house, with most of our stuff unpacked and put away ...
Check out the new mailbox! And the fact that we can park both vehicles in the garage!!
Our front door ...
Entryway ...
The stairs leading to the basement will be carpeted when we carpet the basement floor ...
Laundry room, which leads to the big-ass garage
Dining and kitchen area
French doors to the deck, where we've had several breakfasts and dinners lately. Love the cool weather we've been having here!
Main floor living room
Hallway to the main floor bedrooms
Master bedroom ... with a view of the sunrise
Master bathroom, toilet room, and shower ...
Holy closet space, Batman!!
The septic system was installed the week we moved in. It's big enough to accommodate a family of 10, so they tore the crap out of the yard. The final grade is happening this week, so the dirt piles will be cleaned up. Eventually, we'll throw down some grass seed.
Office
Extra bedroom on main floor
Main floor hall bathroom
Temporary seating for the TV. Matt's in love.
Basement bathroom
The kitties will eventually move to the mechanical room when the basement floor is finished. This is one of the basement bedrooms:
And here's the other basement bedroom:
The bedrooms and bathroom are set apart by a little hallway, which we really like.
Matt's sister Linda joined us for lunch this past Sunday and brought this sign, made from wood from the front porch of the original Cramer house. We can't wait to find the perfect spot for it!
Thanks for joining us on this journey. We will probably still post updates when we finish up necessary tasks (filling in the basement foundation of the old house, landscaping, flooring, etc.), but we may just e-mail our family members when we do that--unless anyone specifically requests to remain on our update list. We love you all, and we can't wait to have you visit us!!
Let’s start with the good
news first. The exterior of the house is
painted. In fact, some of the construction
delays have actually been a blessing because last Saturday, when Katie’s
brother Andy came to visit, he mentioned that the original color we chose for
the exterior body (polo/navy blue – very striking with white trim!) was going
to absorb a lot of heat—which is not such a good thing because we have almost
no shade trees near the house. We
contacted our builder and learned that the painter had not ordered the exterior
colors yet, so we switched things up and went with Sherwin-Williams Summit Gray
instead.
We noticed that the
painter also painted the exterior of the French doors gray (instead of white to
match the trim), and Katie isn’t so sure about that look. There’s probably still time to go back to
white. What do you think? Leave them gray? Paint them white?
In more good news, the
kitchen counter top and sink was installed this week: it is quartz in Zodiac
Stratus White.
The master bathroom
counter top and sinks were also installed (Corian in Rain Cloud with under-mount
rectangle sinks—sorry, forgot to take pics).
We were going to do the kitchen in Corian too, thinking it would be
cheaper, but the quartz was actually cheaper to install (perhaps it was on sale
at Top Master). By the way, Top Master was super easy to work with and
extremely dependable. One of our best
experiences in the home build process so far.
Highly recommended. We feel the
same way about Metro
Appliances.
The floor installation was
also completed, and we are happy with the end result:
We went out to the house
yesterday to clean up of all the trash and debris in the yard. The hard work in the hot sun helped us work
off a bit of frustration at the continued lack of construction progress (more
on that later). While Katie used a
wheelbarrow to haul trash and wood, Matt borrowed our neighbor’s skid steer to haul
wood down to our ever-growing burn pile near the river. We are going to have one helluva bonfire this
fall. Get ready!!
Now you see it:
Now you don’t:
It was over a hundred
degrees yesterday, and we wisely decided to work in the hottest part of the
day. Naturally. But we wore sunscreen, bug spray, and hats,
and we drank LOTS of water. Nothing like
some hard physical labor to wear down some anger and frustration. Our neighbor Scott actually stopped by to
help, filling up the skid steer with fuel and lifting and moving lots of heavy
things – stone, wood, etc. If we had
brought our swimsuits, we could have taken a dip in Megan and Scott’s beautiful
pool. They always make us feel welcome.
One last bit of good news
before we turn to the bad and the ugly.
With Andy’s help, Matt installed a new dishwasher in our South
House. The old one conked out a few
weeks ago, so we bought a new one prior to tomorrow’s home inspection. Looks pretty good, and it works great!
We’ve also been packing
and hauling stuff to the new house – storing in the basement and the shed out
back.
The fact that the septic
system still hadn’t been installed as of last weekend was a blessing because we
were able to drive over the backyard to pick up the trailer. Once the system is installed, we cannot drive
the truck over the lines. The trailer is
now parked were we can access it easily when we need it next weekend. Silver linings, right? Plus, Katie's dad came to visit this weekend, and it's always a hoot to spend time with him. Yay!
So, now for the bad
news. We’re going to call this section “Things Your Builder Says to Reassure
You … And What He Really Means”
When you remind your
builder that closing is only ten days away, and he writes back, “I know, we will be fine.”
·What he really
means: “I just got back from surfing in the ocean,
and I have no concept of time and haven’t since we began this build 9 months
ago. Haven’t you figured that out by
now? We will miss this new closing date
by at least 10-14 days, maybe more.”
When you tell your builder
that your current house is now under contract, so the construction delays have
to stop, and he e-mails: “No worries, we will have everything
done even if i have to work all weekend.”
·What he really
means: “I will work for a maximum of four hours the
first weekend and zero hours the second weekend before your now thrice-delayed
closing date, even though the day before inspection there are so many things
still not finished on the house, I’ve lost track of them all (e.g., septic
system, plumbing, electrical, AC/HVAC, final grade, touch-ups, hardware, etc.).”
When your builder asks you
for yet another extension on your construction loan and delay in your permanent
financing and adds “we’ll make sure the
house is presentable for inspection; the city inspector won’t even check to see
if the septic system is there.”
·What he really
means: “There is no way in hell we’re going to make this
closing date, so you might as well contact your bank for permanent financing and
see what it’s going to take to either pay for a rate extension, or let it
expire and lock in a new rate. While you’re
at it, contact your construction loan bank and find out how to extend that for
the second time.”
Before you even start
building and you’re walking through the different options with your builder and
you ask approximately how long it takes to build a house, start to finish, and
he says, “Oh, we can build a house in
three months. You should allow for six
months, but we can build it in three.”
·What he really
means: “I am talking out of my ass right now. We can build a house in no less than 9
months, probably more like 10, and you should definitely plan to get multiple extensions
on your 8-month construction loan.”
The building contract actually states that “the residence will be substantially completed no later than 180 days after construction commences” (p. 4) with “substantial completion” defined as “ready for occupancy but lacks completion of minor details” (p. 5). One hundred eighty days is 6 months. Six months, people! Technically, we passed the 6-month mark on April 29! The construction loan officially ran out on June 29. It's now July 24. Of course, all kinds of delays are permissible in this contract, including “difficulty scheduling qualified subcontractors” (p. 5). It doesn’t specify difficulty due to the builder’s lack of planning and time management, but we assume that our builder could probably make this case. There is absolutely no protection for the buyer in this contract.
So, folks, our closing
date is no longer this Wednesday, July 27.
As of yesterday, there were no lights installed, no electrical, no AC,
no plumbing, no septic system, no hardware, no appliances installed, no toilets
installed, no shower door installed, no railings installed on the back stairs
off the garage, and the front door is still sitting in the garage unstained. All of our appliances, toilets, light
fixtures, shower door, bathroom hardware, etc. are at the house and have been
for weeks (we delivered everything ourselves, except the appliances).
In fact, had we known that
they weren’t ready for the fridge, we could have asked Metro Appliances to
delay that delivery. Instead, the fridge
is sitting, uninstalled in the middle of the kitchen. The same is true for the countertops. Top Master cuts the holes for the faucets on
site—and our builder has known this for weeks!—but apparently the fixtures
weren’t there on Thursday, so no holes were cut. Bravo, builder, bravo!
Are we annoyed? Yes.
Frustrated? That too. Wondering where we will live if our South
House sells before the North House is ready?
Definitely.
At this point, we are
planning to move our big items (bed, dressers, washer/dryer, shelves, couch,
etc.) to the North House this Saturday, July 30. That’s our last (free) weekend before we
close on the sale of the South House.
If we still don’t have
A/C, toilets, plumbing/septic out there, we will be camping out on the carpeted
floor in the south house for a few days, praying that they just finish already
on the north house. And if they are
still not done on August 10, we’re moving in with our builder.