The house moves laterally tomorrow. If you wanted to come witness the spectacle, feel free to come over. I’ll have a cooler for your beverages and a little shade for reclining and watching.
The caveat will be you can’t really interrupt the crew and I’ll be running around and not too social. But it’s a once in a lifetime event, at least for me.
Festivities will begin around ten am but the real action probably won’t get moving until after noon, but not too much.
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Poop
Last week the excavator scraped away our sewer line. This was necessary and expected, but it is a major bummer nonetheless. Even MORE of a bummer was the morning that Morgan forgot about the whole “sewer is disconnected” thing and used the toilet when his coffee took effect. Immediately aware of his mistake, he retreated to the shop to bemoan his mistake and discuss his options with buphalo. Suddenly, the sound of a flush and of water (among other things) falling out of the house… Huck had flushed the toilet. Fortunately, it’s just dirt down there; unfortunately, they do have to work down there in that dirt. Not directly on it for a few days, but, still. It’s nice and dry here in Seattle this summer, so that helps.
We used our trailer potty last week, which is fine and all, but has a limited capacity and nobody to come and suck out the black water on a regular basis, which means driving it to somewhere to dump it. Given the realities of our situation, we decided to pay for a Honey Bucket for a couple of months– our very own! Fresh and minty! Cleaned weekly! We’ve really made it, now.
Morgan actually removed the toilet from the house. No more mistakes.
This week has been interesting. New, beefier floor joists are going in, which has meant that at various times there is no water coming in, no electricity, and no sewer. The sewer issue won’t be changing soon, but water and electricity are relatively flexible. Some of our outlets work– the fridge, for instance is being preserved– many don’t. I took a cold shower last night because the water heater didn’t get hooked back up. Invigorating!
Every day is an adventure. Thank goodness for the amazing summer we are having, it makes this all so much easier to be cheerful about.
A big push!
For whatever reason, Thursday was the day the slow process of piecemeal excavation became a huge rush of pile-driving accomplishment. We were hoping to start a four-day weekend that day, but frankly, making progress on the house is way more important to us right now.
Morgan and I got up at 5:30am to start prepping– well, he was prepping, and I just couldn’t sleep with the excitement of the day upon us. A lot had to get done before the geotechnical engineer showed up to monitor pin-pile installation.
Pin-piles will support our new foundation footings in the places where the geotech had previously determined the ground was a bit too soft. He was on-site to test the ground in precise locations, to determine how many piles and where they were needed, and to affirm that they were correctly installed.
It was a long but very satisfying day!
We are now back on Morgan’s schedule instead of an outside contractor’s. Today and tomorrow he is installing new floor joists with Buphalo and Flaster, and we will hopefully be able to move the house over (now about 4′ instead of 5′) later this week.
Slowly but surely
We have not had our excavation contractor’s full attention. He is juggling other jobs and coming through just enough to feel like things are moving, but not fast. It’s hard for me to tell how much longer this phase will last, but he was at our place bright and early this morning, so maybe that’s a good sign.
Digging it
We had our “pre-construction” inspection yesterday, the last hurdle in the permit process that we were nervous about. Technically, we haven’t “built” anything yet, but still, a lot of work has obviously happened here. Apparently, the inspector didn’t bat an eye. Morgan did spend the morning unhooking our pipes and water lines so that the fact that we are living in this raised-up house wasn’t demanding attention. No need to make things difficult :).
At this point all lights are green and we are ready to go. Our excavation contractor has been digging away our foundation and the old slab, re-grading and prepping the land.
One of my clients today said, “Now that you have your permit, the next big thing is to be done, right?” He has a point! But I think I will celebrate each small achievement along the way– when the excavation is done, we move the house over five feet to the south, and that will seem like something to celebrate, too!
In the meantime, the earth moves, and we are digging it.
Got ’em!
So close then BLAMM! It ain’t so.
We were told our permits were approved last night. I ran to the computer to pay the fees and at the last minute we realized it was the wrong permit. At least I didn’t pay for the wrong one. Turns out the lingering issue is with our drainage plan and the original side sewer easement mess. Way back when King County did the big Rainier Valley combined sewer and overflow they really messed up with recording the correct information as to the side sewers in our property. What was recorded is something different then what was actually installed. Not only did this exacerbate the legal battle between us and the neighbor but now it is impossible to submit plans that reflect the actual layout of the pipes in the ground. Now we have to submit plans that show this wrong information. Supposedly this can be corrected in the field. Seems like we’re shooting ourselves in the foot. I have visions of the inspector forcing us to hook up to the wrong side sewer or requiring another corrections cycle.
Limbo
We have been living in a suspended state for a week. Waiting… For permits… For our excavation contractor…
The house wobble is less disturbing now, though I find myself expecting other buildings to shimmy gently once I stop moving.
We are still carrying our kitchen sink water out in bins to dump on plants in the yard. It’s a little bit of rigmarole that just makes me feel grateful that water magically comes into my home, and most of the time, magically leaves it, too. Plumbing is great.
Morgan hooked up the washer and dryer out in the yard, under a pop-up tent by the shop. Another luxury I do not take for granted.
Morgan is ready to step away from the computer and get his hands dirty again. I’m ready for that to happen, too. I have a good feeling that things will start moving again soon, and so I will take a deep breath in this pause and try to enjoy the novelty of the weird view, the wobble and sway, and walking the plank to my front door.
Lifting the house in one minute, thirty seconds.
Lifting the house in one minute, thirty seconds.
Time-lapse coolness of the house going up.
Up in the Air
We weren’t sure it was going to happen today, but Morgan got up at 6am to start sawing the house off the foundation. Nothing more reassuring than having your house sawed off the foundation!
As it turns out they did show up, and up it went, 42″. I have a few shots here, but since I was at work all day, I missed the action. We will have a time-lapse video of it to post eventually.
We are mostly hooked back up– power and water are on, and the bathroom drains work. The kitchen drain is now blocked by one of the cribs that are supporting the house, so we will have to work with a bucket there. Creative solutions may appear, but for now it’s a bit messy.
We are still waiting for the permit. Technically, we have not built anything yet, so we are still ok. We really need that permit this week. Please, please, permit, please come this week! We’ve been reassured that things are lining up for us, but I will feel SO MUCH BETTER when we have that sucker in hand.
The house has a disconcerting wobble when someone walks through it now. I don’t really notice it when I’m walking, but if I’m being still and someone else walks through it is a little nauseating– not because it worries me, but because I have issues with motion sickness. I wish motion sickness was something I could “work on”, because this would be an excellent opportunity for that.
Stay tuned for time lapse coverage… Excavation begins in three days!














