Sunday, October 16, 2011

Good Old Floor!

The carpet in the front parlor and living room was pulled up as planned.  There were some really bad planks that had to be replaced.  Every plank was checked and shored up.  The floor is now solid.  This was the floor the house was built to have in 1840.  Back then, floors were painted and plain.

This is the same section I showed with carpeting a few days ago.  The color we chose was "Antique Brown" and we are very happy with it.  The boards in front of the fireplace tell us that the mantel here was for a working fireplace and not just put up for show to cover something up.  That would make sense since it lines up with the chimney that serves the boilers.  This would be a great place for a gas insert and it can be easily vented and the gas lines would be very accessible via the cellar.

Here's the big picture of the floor and room.  We have put down an area rug but I snapped this picture before that.  The room is simple, which is how we like it.  Now that the floor is back I can't see it ever being covered up again.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Thermostats

Upstairs

Downstairs

The Dayton House heats with two boilers on two separate meters.  There is currently just one hot water tank.  The boilers just had their yearly service.  We do this every fall in preparation for the winter.  This year, we replaced both thermostats.  The upstairs one has more programming features than we will actually use but it's there because the one we first put in when we painted the room was rectangular and we needed to match the template in order to not have a patch of unpainted wall.

Radiant heat is steady and dependable.  It is dust free and thus great for people with allergies.  It is wonderful to have warm towels and a place to set damp gloves, scarves, etc. after being out in the snow.  The house has very thick walls that help hold in the heat.  The cost to run two boilers is a lot less than one might expect for a big old house.  With newer mechanics that are serviced regularly, we do pretty well.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Big Bedrooms

City bedrooms tend to be small, but this house has large ones.  We have always used the front room as a bedroom although the former owners purposed it as their living room.  Here is the section where the bed is.  There is plenty of room to fit a King and you can move around it without a problem.  The closet is in the corner.  The fireplace is closed up.  The mantel is a good example of the simple style of abundant woodwork in the house.

This alcove is part of the bedroom.  The arch is lovely.  For a while, we had a bed in there but it can get cold in the winter!  If you look under the window, you'll notice that the wood moulding goes all of the way down to the floor. The window casings are original and the same style throughout most of the house.  The front windows used to be six over six but someone knocked out the original fretwork so now they just hold a single pane. However, they are still original to the house and made of old-growth wood.  With three windows and a West facing exposure, they let in nice light during the day but not so much that it's overly  bright in the morning.  This is a fine bedroom.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

The Barn Loft

The "garage" at the Dayton House is actually a barn. This is the loft.  That's a lot of extra space for storage -- and it would make a nice office or outside space. 

This is the view from the hay loft.  The door opens and you can see the side yard from a unique perspective.  I don't know how many city houses still have their barn intact, but this one is.  The square footage for the footprint is 432 feet, but you get the same amount of area upstairs too.  It also has a drain so when you clean the floor, you can hose it down and the water will drain.

A barn is a unique and useful part of this old house.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

What's Next

The rug in the front of the house has to come up.  The original pine plank floor is under it.  A couple of planks need to be replaced.  The rug was put in for a tenant who complained that a lot of cold air was coming up through the basement.  For energy conservation, the barrier was needed.  But it's seen better days and has to go.

Now-a-days there is this bubble type of insulation which we are going to put up under the floor, between the joists.  The floor will get painted again.  These old floors were always painted.  We never opened the other side of the door way that held the pocket doors, so we're going to try it just on the minute chance that both doors are in there.

The historic landmark application mentioned the floors that were under the rug are important, so that's why we are going to expose them.  We'll post pictures of the project and just hope it really can be done.  Sometimes you don't know if something is possible unless you try but unfortunately, not all things are possible.  But we aim to make this work.

Stay tuned....

Sunday, October 2, 2011

The Other Bathroom

Here's a small section of wall in the downstairs bathroom.  This one is right off the kitchen, so it serves not only as a bathroom, but has a little extra storage.  There isn't a single room in this house that doesn't offer some sort of storage or another.

This shelf area is a bit of a mystery too.  One guess is that it used to be a door.  The wall on the other side is in the dining room and the moulding along the floor looks as if was pieced in exactly where this shelf sits on the other side.  This bathroom is the area at the back of the house that juts out on the North side of the building.  In back of it, is our back stairway/laundry area.  There's tons of storage there.  The next item on the list for this bathroom is to put an exhaust fan in.  The area on the other side used to hold two hot water heaters, so there are already holes for venting in the brick wall.  It means we are set to vent a fan out there without having to do anything major.

There are three things this house has plenty of.... storage, mystery and projects to do!

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Old Style Bathrooms

We have never opted for much updating for the bathrooms in this house.  Old style bathrooms aren't to all people's taste, but they go well with this house and we just couldn't see how built-ins and acrylic tubs/surrounds would work. Gary had put in a tall vanity with an old sink which he had salvaged.  We loved that thing.  For one, it was tall so if you  had a bad back, you didn't have to bend over to wash your face. 

Alas, the plumbing under it wore out after a while and the drain was not a standard size and we could not find the right size fittings no matter what we did.  We replaced it with a simple vanity but didn't go with anything fancy  because this house is not fancy.

Here is the old tub.  Even for a claw foot, this one is bigger and deeper than most.  There's another downstairs but it is smaller.  This one is a real good soaker.  Tall men have lived in this house, so the shower is set up high.

A big stall with a tile surround would be nice -- but it just doesn't seem right.  Maybe some day another owner will want to do that.  The bathroom is very big as it is, but there is a closet that is two feet deep and runs the length of most of the room -- so there is ample space to knock that down and put in a deep stall.  There would probably still be room for a tub... but I'm not sure it would be big enough to keep this one.

There is only so much modernization you can do that will look right in a house this style and I admit we could have been more "decorative" with what we've done.  However, there may be a fine  line between old style and historic kitsch.  We've opted to stick more to "old style" by keeping it simple.