September 21st, 2007
Laundry Room
This first picture is of the laundry room right after we started its addition. As you can see, it was half the size or less, which made it just big enough for a stacked washer and dryer and a freezer, or a side by side washer and dryer, had cracked and uneven concrete floors, a dangerous electrical panel and overall electrical situation, and a large single-paned funky window along the back wall (which isn’t visible in this picture, as the addition took over). Charmless. No. UGLY. And borderline useless.

Here’s what we did with it:

As you can see, we evened out the floor, put a new subfloor down, redid the entire electrical panel, as well as the wiring throughout the house, new windows, sheetrock, insulation, well, you get the idea…

This is our new slate tile floor. One thing you should know about slate–it’s not for perfectionists. It’s natural, which means the thickness of each tile differs (you can even it out to an extent with mortar, but still…), and you will have flaking. But it’s gorgeous, and you often find fossils in it!

Brian putting on trim.

New sink and cabinet. Brian built the cabinet. Oh, and the stainless countertop, too.

See this little door in the side? The cat’s litter box is in here. She rarely uses it (she’s an outdoor kind of girl) but in case of emergency…

Brian made this upper cabinet, too.

A nice big folding table on top of the washer and dryer.
New lighting.

As it looks now. We plan to buy a bench to put across from the door, which you can’t really see in this picture. (It’s on the right, right where the picture cuts off.) That way, we can come inside and sit while we take off our shoes.
Filed Under: Uncategorized, House Updates |

Here’s what we did with it:

As you can see, we evened out the floor, put a new subfloor down, redid the entire electrical panel, as well as the wiring throughout the house, new windows, sheetrock, insulation, well, you get the idea…

This is our new slate tile floor. One thing you should know about slate–it’s not for perfectionists. It’s natural, which means the thickness of each tile differs (you can even it out to an extent with mortar, but still…), and you will have flaking. But it’s gorgeous, and you often find fossils in it!

Brian putting on trim.

New sink and cabinet. Brian built the cabinet. Oh, and the stainless countertop, too.

See this little door in the side? The cat’s litter box is in here. She rarely uses it (she’s an outdoor kind of girl) but in case of emergency…

Brian made this upper cabinet, too.

A nice big folding table on top of the washer and dryer.
New lighting.

As it looks now. We plan to buy a bench to put across from the door, which you can’t really see in this picture. (It’s on the right, right where the picture cuts off.) That way, we can come inside and sit while we take off our shoes.
Filed Under: Uncategorized, House Updates |

May 14th, 2008 at 8:46 am Wow. I am so jealous. I would love a laundry room. And your idea about making the bottom of one of the cabinets into a receptacle for the litter box was ingenious. I must remember that one.