Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Stage 3.2 The Bases Go In!

I didn't think the day would come that the base cabinets would go in.  Cassandra and I had finished all of the upper cabinets with the help of her Dad to heave up the last set.  Thanks Dad!

Friday night the uppers are in...
   On the bases it is time to begin...
      The in-laws are here, oh what do I do...
         I have to entertain no cabinets boo hoo...
            So off to the city with family in tow...
               I have to take a break, but it isn't something I know...
                  The cabinets will wait a day or two...
                      I guess I can wait, couldn't you?
                          So today or tomorrow I know it'll get done...
                             No matter when I know I'll have fun!


So with a day of rest I was able to begin healing up all of the bruises and bumps from all of the days of flooring and cabinets.  It looked as though a herd of junior soccer players had had their way with my shins!  On Friday evening Cassandra and her Dad helped get all of the base cabinets into the house.  The corner cabinets had to be pulled out of the boxes on the porch and carefully maneuvered into the doorway as they were too big to fit through the door in the box.  We got the bases all in place and it instantly started to look like a kitchen.  I jumped right in and placed the bases for the butler's pantry and secured them to the wall.  It was nice to have that done.

On Saturday we got up and went downtown and ran a bunch of errands with the girls and the grandparents.  It was a good day even though the rain was on and off all day.  Saturday evening I got started shimming and adjusting the base cabinets and getting them level. Getting them level is so important as the counter top company will not measure for cabinets until the cabinets are secure, squared and leveled.  I got them all leveled and secured and verified that they were square.  I then began cutting out the bracing on the cabinet base that would hold the stove top so it would fit in the enclosure.  Finally!  done with the cabinets!  Installed, leveled, secured, square...all is good!
I contacted the counter company, Kitchens by Rutenschroer who scheduled a technician to come out and measure.  The guy showed up and made some drawings and took measurements from every angle.  He then pulled out a laser contraption and proceeded to set up little targets for the laser to reflect off of.  These were set along the edges of the base cabinets and walls.  He then turned on the laser and with a hand held used a stylus to take shots of the laser hitting each of the targets.  This sent precise measurements to the computer that will be used to layout and cut the stone.  It was really interesting to watch him do his work.  When he finished he said they should be calling us to schedule our trip to the stone yard to pick out our specific counter top stone.  This will be exciting and the topic of our next update.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Stage 3.1 The Upper Cabinets

The upper cabinets, not to be confused with the upper room where they broke bread, were anything but a spiritual experience.  What a pain!  I am always learning, but this whole experience has taken it to a level that I never dreamed of or wanted!  Enough already. 

I began this process, with a coaching session from Jonathan, who has a vast amount of knowledge in all things home construction.  He said things like "find the highest point along your floors where the cabinets will go in", and "strike lines"...huh?!? After a lot of stupid questions like "uh, how do I find the highest point on the floor?" I am sure Jonathan had no hope of me being successful, but with the greatest of patience he informed me that it was as simple as using my level to find the highest point.  Duh!  I knew that!  I guess it was simple to see that I had become intimidated by the thought of damaging these expensive cabinets.  I knew what I was doing, but my confidence was in shambles.  You would think it would be high after the floors went in so well.  I think it is because everyone will be focused on the cabinets.  The floor is cool, but it is only window dressing compared to the cabinets.

I devised a plan!  I would first start with the oven wall as it had two freestanding cabinets that would be the base for all of the other cabinets.  There was a cabinet that housed a very heavy oven and microwave, than a new cabinet that was a tall pantry.  But before I could implement my master plan, I would need to get the cabinets into the house.  I wish each of you could have been there to see the comedy that transpired.  It was like some Charlie Chaplin skit from the silent movie days!  I got the brainy idea to strap the tall cabinet to a hand truck that my neighbor Dave let me borrow (thanks Dave!).  The box was so big that I had to string two smaller straps together to get them to fit around and attach to the hand truck.  The box was over 9 foot tall, so reaching the top of it to gain leverage was almost impossible.  I finally jumped high enough (hey baby, 2 in vertical leap) to grab the box and get it tilted back toward me. Ugh! This thing weighed a ton!  I maneuvered the box out of the garage and onto the side walk.  For any of you that have been to the house, you will know that he sidewalk and drive way are steep!  You need lamas to go get the mail!  I was to the first set of steps when gravity decided to take over and the box, hand truck and all took a dump on Cassandra's rose bushes (the red ones, not the yellow...sorry Honey).  In the impending struggle to get the beast off of the roses, the straps came off...I took some thorns for the team...and I just hoped that the people that were passing in their cars weren't laughing too much.  I finally wrestled the box into the house, and went back for more.  Thankfully the rest were a breeze!

I spent the next day off and on installing that first set of cabinets.  The plans called for 3 inch spacers between the oven cabinet, the upper cabinets, and the pantry cabinet.  I didn't want to install them because it would change the footprint of the original cabinets and get too close to the hallway wall.  So like the intelligent person that I am (mainly a stubborn man child) I eliminated them from the plan and off I went.  I installed the one spacer that was staying in the plan the upper cabinet, and then to the pantry cabinet.  I got Cassandra to help me lift off the floor as one unit to install.  Well, I think lift might be a little off.  We grunted, and cried, and with sheer will we heaved those cabinets into the air and not so gently slid them into place.  I love it when an well oiled plan comes together.  It was only after we slid them into place that I realized that the cabinets came out further than the wall to the built in pantry, so I had to take off the 3 in spacer and reinstall it.  What?!?  No, that was absolutely a part of the plan all along!   I verified the level and plum of the cabinets and attached them to the studs in the wall.  I was able to attach them to the studs because I had paid attention during my coaching session and had struck a line along each of the studs.  It was a simple as measuring from the edge of the cabinet to the line and then transferring that measurement to the inside to pre drill and attach the screws.


Over the next day I installed the oven cabinet.  I thought it would be a good idea to install the oven before attaching it to the wall as I could get easier access to the wiring.  I stood there and looked at the oven when I realized that the hole in the cabinet seemed smaller.  Uh Oh.  I grabbed my trusty tape measure and confirmed my suspicions by measuring the old oven cabinet that now resides in the laundry room. I would need to cut the cabinet! I measured and marked the lines for the hole in the new cabinet, and re-measured at least 5 times before putting masking tape along the lines to prevent any scratches.  I then had Cassandra come down and confirm my measurements.  It wasn't that I didn't trust myself, I just wanted someone else culpable in the destruction if it all went bad!  I am such a giving and good husband!  I pulled out the saber saw and cut out the hole.  It was now time to install the beast of an oven.  I put it on my furniture dolly and rolled it over by the hole.  There was no way we were going to be able to lift this bad boy with any precision.  It was then that I hatched a scheme.  We would use the floor jack to hoist it into position.  I do live in Kentucky, so this of course seems like a reasonable strategy.  Plan made...action taken!  We lifted the stove on the jack and Cassandra pumped the jack while I guided it into place.  It was about 3 inches too low so I used brute force to get the oven into the cabinet.  One huge challenge down!  I secured the cabinet to the wall and viola!  We could at least bake again!
The only part left to do on that wall was to install the two base cabinets and one small upper that spanned the space between the oven cabinet and the pantry cabinet.  It went in very easily...a little too easily!  I secured the base cabinets and was getting ready to secure the upper when I realized that there wasn't enough clearance for the doors to open. Now I understand why they wanted me to stick in those spacers I had previously deleted from the plan.  I had to take down the upper; remove the base cabinets; and then take out the screws holding the oven cabinet.  I attached the spacers to the upper and base cabinets, only instead of laying them with the 3 inch width exposed, I laid them on their side so the space was only 1/2 inch.  This would ensure the cabinets didn't expand beyond the corner.  Problem averted!  I got it all put back together with only a couple of small hiccups.  The last thing to do was to install and wire the under cabinet lighting.  Very simple wiring system, but very challenging to work in that small area.  I would pre wire the rest of the lighting before I put the cabinets up. 




Over the next two evenings Cassandra and I put up the other kitchen upper cabinets.  Now all that remains are the bases, and the butler's pantry cabinets (upper and lower) to be complete.  Cassandra's parents are in town so that will have to be a part of the next update.

Monday, September 19, 2011

Stage 3.0 So Now the Work Begins!

As of today, September 19, 2011 it has been 3 1/2 months that we have been without a kitchen.  What an experience!  I haven't blogged in a while, because not much has been going on. Things have been quiet since the big problems with the flooring and cabinet guy.  We did go pick out and purchase some Centurion Stone for the back splash behind the range hood.  We patiently waited for our flooring and cabinets to arrive.  Right after we submitted our online order for the flooring at Lumber Liquidators, I received an email informing me that the flooring was back ordered and wasn't scheduled to be shipped until no earlier that the 3rd of September.  KraftMaid had also called to confirm that they would be delivering the cabinets to the house on the 14th. 

I kept getting this sinking feeling that the cabinets would get here before the flooring.  This was going to be a major problem as I would need to keep the cabinets in the garage, and put everything that normally lives in the garage along the side of the house.  This was a great concern because my baby (2009 Harley Davidson, Rocker C) would have to be kept outside. What a travesty!  Oh yes, the lawn mower and snow blower would also need to spend some time in the rain, but the Rocker?  Say it isn't so!  With this thought in mind I kept checking the Lumber Liquidator site for the status of my order willing the status to change from Back Order to Shipped!  I checked in the morning...I checked at noon...I checked in the evening...no change!  

I was scheduled to leave for Chicago on the morning of the 5th, and Cassandra and I would be in Boston over the weekend for a wedding.  It would be just my luck for the flooring to show up while I was out of town, leaving Cassandra to deal with a major problem again.  Of course, on the 3rd I received an email informing me that my flooring had shipped. OK, so now I need to plan on the flooring getting there sometime during the week.  What to do....what to do?  I have it!  I will call my buddy Casey!  I am always amazed at the true level of friendship that my friends display toward me!  They are absolutely the best!  Casey didn't even blink, he said no problem even though he thought he would have to drive way up into Cincinnati to pick up the flooring. He was pleasantly surprised to learn there is now a Lumber Liquidators in Florence, KY.  On Sunday night the 4th, I received another email saying the flooring had arrived at the local store and was ready for pickup.   Cassandra was working all week and couldn't get to the store before Thursday.  She was also flying out to Boston that day, so this was a lot for her to coordinate.  Casey met her up at the store early and helped get the flooring home.  It took two loads on his trailer to get the flooring home...In the rain!  They had to carry the extremely heavy boxes into the house and stack them in two locations due to the extreme weight of the boxes.  Thank you Casey!  You are the man!  Cassandra then got on her flight, but had to have help getting her bag into the overhead compartment on the aircraft as her arms were completely shot!



We got back into town on September 11th (great day to fly! we felt very safe).  I would be working from home for the next couple of weeks so a great time to get started working on the floors.  The first couple of days during the week, Cassandra and I spent finishing removing some of the flooring that the water abatement company had left behind.  We both worked full days so we only had a short time in the evenings to focus on getting things ready.  It was a lot of work to hammer in all of the old staples left over from the old flooring.  I also knew that there was no way to put in new flooring without a precision saw.  I had a cheap saw that I had purchased 10 years before.  It was good enough to build a deck, but would not make precision angle cuts.  As with any big home improvement project, one must buy a new tool!  This was my chance!  I purchased a great Dewalt 12" compound miter with a work stand.  An absolutely essential tool for a successful installation of flooring.  I would also make a run to Harbor Freight Tools to pick up a flooring nail/staple gun.  It was actually cheaper to purchase to the tool than it would have been to rent the gun for the multiple days that it would take to get the flooring installed. Oh shucks! Another tool for me!

The cabinets arrived right on schedule Wednesday morning.  I thought it was funny that one of the delivery crew made a comment that while they were driving in he was thinking about how nice and flat all of the driveways were.  Then when they came around the corner he saw our drive and could only ope that it wasn't the house that they had to deliver to. Oops! They were very quick getting all of the cabinets out and into the garage in less than 20 minutes.  



 
It was Thursday before I could start laying out the flooring.  The first thing I would like to say is...WOW, this was a ton of work!  Cassandra and I worked Thursday evening, Friday evening, and all day and late into the night on Saturday to install the floors in the kitchen, breakfast area, family room and entry area.  I could barely walk when we finished.  Up and down...up and down...I felt like someone had taken a hammer to my hips.  I looked like someone had taken a hammer to my shins!  Oh wait, that was me.  I missed a couple of big swings right into the leg. Ouch!  I was so proud of Cassandra!  She jumped in and did her part. She would lay out the boards so that our patterns and board lengths were random.  She would also jump in and take her turn driving the staples into the tongue of the boards.  She was a real trouper!  Peyton and Paige also helped carry flooring boards and picked the best looking pieces for the best areas of the floor.  I gave that new miter saw a real workout, as well as my small table saw where I needed to rip down pieces to fit along the walls and in the closets.  

We were able to recycle a few of the cabinets that weren't damaged.  Most went into the basement for possible future use as storage, but we were able to move three uppers and the oven cabinet into the laundry room to become storage for cleaning supplies.  I will be adding shelves to the cabinet where the oven was once I get everything else completed.  We are going to paint the cabinets white so they don't distract from the Kaffe color cabinets going into the kitchen.  It is good to reuse!

The second major point I would like to make is how important it is to start out straight.  I have installed flooring before so I knew this was extremely important to ensure that you have an excellent result.  I took my time and made sure that I had a very straight line to start my first course from. It was also beneficial that the paper had lines to help keep you straight. I measured and re-measured each piece of the first two courses to ensure that the floor was absolutely straight.  Once the first course was confirmed to be absolutely straight it was just an exercise in setting an individual piece straight and then repeating that about 1,000 times!  I was so happy when we arrived at the opposite wall and where the flooring me the tile to find out that after all of that flooring we were less than 1/8" off end to end.  That was a blessing and a relief!
 

We only ran into a couple of issues during the entire installation of that flooring.  The flooring nailer jammed once (my fault), which required me to break it down and get the pieces of staple that jammed out.  The second issue was one piece of flooring that wasn't aligned perfectly, and had a tiny gap. That gap was going to cause a problem with the subsequent courses of flooring.  Unfortunately, I had put the next course on and didn't notice until I was trying to place the next overlapping course.  I was able to fix it by trimming off the tongue and a portion of the offending flooring.  When I fit the next piece you couldn't even tell that we had done anything.  Whew!  I thank my wife for keeping me calm!  I was not a happy camper that I had made such an error.  She just kept telling me we were giving the floor character.  What a jem!
Sunday I only put the last couple of pieces of flooring in that section that required me to rip down some pieces, so we held off on Saturday night because we were tired and prone to error.  We cleaned up the sawdust and waste pieces from the cuts.  It was amazing how little waste we had.  We did a great job of utilizing the flooring.  We now have only the hall, bathroom, dining and living areas to do flooring on.  We will finish that after we put in the kitchen cabinets.  The next area of focus is to get the cabinets installed so we can have the counter people out to measure for the granite.  Cabinets will be the focus of our next blog.  I can't wait!  Oh wait! Yes I can...I am really nervous about installing them.  I don't want to mess them up...time to phone a friend...Oh Jonathan!

Friday, August 19, 2011

Stage 2.1 Can you Believe the Nerve!

I have to just give a quick update on the challenges that transpired today!  I had promised my wife I would call the original cabinet company that we thought was being a bit shady and let them know we weren't going to be using them...that is where it all started to go wrong! 

Well first let me take you back a bit to the time before today in a land where crazy people run cabinet companies.  This company, which is in Alexandria Kentucky, shall remain nameless as they don't even deserve their name to be referenced on the web.  As I had blogged before, they were the ones who had brought to our attention the damage to the base of the cabinets and the damage done by the water abatement company to the top of the cabinets.  For that we are grateful.  We were fully planning on using that company, but as you may recall this jerk wouldn't provide the detailed information that the insurance company wanted and then threatened to accuse us of fraudulently trying to cheat the insurance company.  This would all be kind of funny if it weren't actually happening to me!

OK, now back to this story.  As the dutiful husband that I am, I picked up the phone to call the hardwood flooring company today and let them know I wouldn't be using their services for the cabinets.  The phone rang and it went to voicemail.  I left a very cordial phone message thanking them for their help, but informing them that we had decided to go a different direction, and then hung up the phone.  

A few minutes later the jerk calls the house. I was on another confernece line so I couldn't answer, but he calls right back again.  I guess he wanted to get through!  The meeting had ended by this time so I picked up the receiver.  The voice on the other phone began to berate me and told me that I had better come up with some money or he was going to call State Farm and turn us in for attempting to defraud the insurance company.  I argued back that we weren't trying to do any such thing and that we had told the insurance company already about the crap they were trying to pull.  He repeated his threat to which I told him to go ahead and informed him that I too would be calling the insurance company and the Sheriff's office as well, and hung up.

I called my agent immediately!  Have I told you how awesome she is?  She suggested I leave a message for the claims agent handling the case, and also suggested I submit a complaint to the Better Business Bureau.  I took her advise and did both. At the same time I called the Boone County Sheriff's department and spoke with Detective Watson, who told me that if they continued to call to let them know that they have crossed the line into criminal harrassment.  She provided me her direct line in case I needed to pursue it any further.  I called my wife and gave her the update and told her to not take any calls from the cabinet guys.

In a few minutes my wife sent me a text letting me know that they were, in fact, calling her repeatably. That was it!  I picked up the phone and dialed the company number again. This time the guy answered the phone, asked who I was, and when I told him he told me "You better come up with $500 or I will call you every day until the end of time", and then hung up on me! The funny part is what happened next!

Maybe 20 seconds later the phone rings, not from the office of the company, but from a cell phone. The voice on the other end was all too familiar, but something had changed.  This jerk now claimed to know nothing about what was going on.  He then proceeded to completely display his complete and aboslute knowledge of everything (which was funny because he was the one calling every time!  He must think we are absolutely stupid)!  He told me that "we are just upset that we did all this work and you are going a different direction", and then said "we did all of that work for you, and we don't think that $500 is too much to ask".  What??? If you have no knowledge, how did you know about what was said?  What a looser!  He further went on to argue the fact that he didn't feel that he needed to tell us that there was a design consultation fee of $500 and that we should have known that all along (What? some kind of implied contract?!?!?).  Of course, I went off on that!  I told him in no uncertain terms had we agreed, discussed or otherwise contracted with him for any fees!  I told him no one charges fees for the planning part (just go to any big box store).  He challenged me to find anyone who doesn't charge a design consult fee!  He absolutely must think we are the most ignorant and simple minded people he has ever come across!  Of course most companies don't charge a fee!  They make their $$ on the sale, not on the planning; besides they hadn't done any designing! They came out and measured. There was no documented plan...no design...nothing but an estimate.

The coversation looked as if it was coming to an end when he then claimed to have called the insurance company, which I said was great.  I informed him of my conversation with Detective Watson and that I wanted no more contact from him or anyone else associated with his company.  Whew! That's over!

But wait! He then pulled another Dr Hyde on me, as if his scharade was working and I believed that he was someone else other than who he was.  He said he wasn't aware of anything that had transpired and that he wanted to get to the bottom of it. Then....wait for it....wait for it...he had the nerve to ask me if we would give him the job anyway and that he would ensure that we worked only with him directly!  What a lunatic!  I told him there was no scenario in which I let him anywhere near my house.  I reiterated my demand that he no longer have contact with me or my family and hung up the phone.

The only thing I am sure of at this point is that this is not over!  I am sure I will be dealing with this jerk for some time.

And the drama goes on...BC

Stage 2 - The Design Plan & The Bank

Now that we had decided this was a DIY project, we got busy picking out our cabinets and finalizing our flooring. We decided that we would, in fact, do all of the flooring on the first floor now.  It would take us over the funds given us by the insurance company, but in the long run it would be the right decision for resale value.  We had already decided on the Tobacco Road hand scraped flooring from Lumber Liquidators so I went online and placed the order only to find out it was back ordered.  It would be at least three weeks before the floors were shipped. 

As part of this decision to do it ourselves, we decided to loose one of the upper cabinets no one can reach anyway. We would replace the current cabinet with built in range hood for a stainless steel range hood that would set off the cabinetry and add visual interest to the kitchen.  I found it on one of the big box store websites, but ordered it online for a discount because I was unable to find the ventless conversion kit on the site; and no one from customer support would answer the phone.  After 30 minutes on hold, I hung up and purchased the exact same one with conversion kit from another online site for less money. Who says customer service doesn't matter?

Focus now turned to selecting cabinets and of course counter tops.  We visited a local showroom and found a KraftMaid cabinet that we liked.  It was a raised panel door that was more in the craftsman style and a dark finish called Kaffe that would offset the teak flooring and make it all pop!  We decided that we should get a second estimate, so I got an appointment with the designer at Home Depot.  Our designer Randy was absolutely a pleasure to work with. He guided us through the process and actually listened to what we wanted.  We selected the same cabinet door style and color and then proceeded to layout the kitchen with a bump out here, and a pantry there until we had created a great floor plan.  Randy printed out the cabinet inventory, which included the total cost of the cabinetry and my heart sunk!  It was almost the same amount as the total cost for floors and cabinets installed by the creep that tried to extort us!  As I sat there in sheer frustration, Randy informed us that the price did not yet include the special incentives that were currently going on.  He typed here, and clicked there until a price showed up that was much more tolerable.

We then focused on counter tops. We definitely wanted a granite product.  The counter tops were priced by the graded scale of the stone with A being the least expensive, B being the next higher, and so on.  We saw a stone we liked in a B scale and in a D scale.  Randy quickly did some math on the back of the papers he had printed and indicated would could get the D scale slab for around $4K. 
It was now time to go off and figure out what we were going to do.  We had to find a way to trim some of the cost off of the cabinets to get as close to our budget as possible. I went through the parts list, line by line.  We decided that we could loose the glass doors on the butler's pantry (this was previously a desk that was never used between the kitchen and family room).  We also could loose the fake door panels that would be attached to the back of the peninsula.  Just taking out these couple of items would save a couple thousand dollars.  This was great because it had cost us nearly twenty-five hundred dollars to go with all plywood construction on the cabinets.  This quality wouldn't be seen, but it sure would pay off in durability.

We had until the following Wednesday to take advantage of all of the pricing discounts so I made an appointment with Randy to finalize our plan.  We sat down with Randy and removed the items I identified.  We then found that we were less than $100 below what we needed to spend to get to the next level of discount, which was a $500 difference in discount.  My wife, found a slide out set of shelves for one of the base cabinets, and viola $500 in additional savings! When Randy printed out the updated parts list, included the counter tops and applied all of the discounts, we were at a total price that was only $1,000 less than what the insurance had finally given us for the entire project.  It was disheartening to realize that we were not going to get cabinets, counters, and flooring for what the insurance had given us, but we also realized that we were investing in better quality products that in the long run would pay off.  

We took the plunge and ordered the cabinets. Randy indicated that it would take 5 weeks for the cabinets to be manufactured and that KraftMaid would contact us with a delivery date.  We would need to schedule the granite company to come measure once the cabinets were set, and then we would get to go out and select the slab for our counters. 









So here we are 2 and 1/2 months into it waiting on flooring and cabinets, and already into this for several thousand dollars over what the insurance has provided us.  Yes, it is an upgrade, and yes, it still hurts!

Oh yea, I forgot to mention the Bank.  The insurance company issued us a check for the amount the adjuster had given plus the cost to replace the Formica.  The check was made out to both the bank and me.  I signed the check and off to the bank I went to deposit the check (keep in mind this was before I spent nearly all of the amount on cabinets).  I got to the teller window and was informed that I would have to talk to the bank manager.  It seems that since the bank had a vested interest in my home (they hold the mortgage), and the fact that the check was for an amount greater than $10,000 they had a policy that they would hold the check hostage, I mean hold it in escrow and pay only upon the satisfaction of specific criteria

  • I had to sign an agreement to the terms (like you have a choice...either agree or they won't sign the check)
  • I had to supply the estimate from the licensed contractor (no contractor, now what?) 
  • I had to provide the contractors W-9 number (again no contractor)
  • I had to have progress inspections done by the bank, oh and I had to pay for it out of the insurance money or pay it directly

Once I satisfied all of these criteria they would issue a progress check (middle and end of job) not to me, but to the licensed contractor.  Wow this is what it is like to be totally messed over!  I was dumbfounded, and very upset.  Why didn't my insurance company prepare me for this?  How was I supposed to know the bank would do this.  I had already ordered my floors and needed to get the cabinets ordered immediately or face loosing thousands in discounts.  I called the loss claim office of the bank, which manages the program and waited for them to answer.  No answer...it just rang...and rang...and rang.  I hung up the phone and dialed back.  This time a very pleasant woman answered the phone and asked how she could help me.  I wish I could remember her name, but she was so very nice and helpful, and I would like to thank her.  I presented my case to her and let her know that I wasn't using a general contractor because the difference between what the insurance was paying and what it was going to cost us was too significant.  I further told her that I would be installing both the flooring and cabinets myself with the help of a gentleman from my church who is a contractor.  She assured me that this would be no problem at all and that I just would need to get the inspection at the end for them to issue the balance of the funds directly to me.  No problem! So off to Home Depot we went.

So now that we had cabinets and flooring ordered focus could turn to the backsplash.  What would we do? Would we keep it painted or go with a tumbled tile? What would look good behind the new chimney we would install?  After a trip back to Home Depot and some web research, we decided on a stacked stone backdrop to the chimney and some tumbled tile.  We purchased the tile at the store, and I found what appeared to be a stacked stone mosaic on the website.  I ordered it, but when it arrived it was anything but stacked stone.  It was a faux stacked stone 12 X 12 tile that looked awful, so back to the store it went.  We have since decided to go with a Centurion faux dry stacked stone that will look awesome with the counters and cabinets.  It will take some work as the walls have to be prepped with backer board, metal lath, and a scratch coat, but it will be so worth it.  We have also decided to use this same stone to surround the fireplace wall to tie the two together visually as if they were there from the time the home was built.

The Concept


I think we have a plan...and now we wait!  More to come...BC

Stage 1 - Abatement & Estimation Hell

With the advise of our insurance agent in hand, I quickly called the water abatement company to come deal with the water that was obviously still under the floor.  Let me diverge for just a second here.  Our agent is the best!  She has continued to stay connected and has been an outstanding liaison between us and the corporate office.  Way to go Sandy!  Now back to the story. 

The water abatement company arrived to survey the damage and immediately began ripping out the floors.  The technician informed me that I was to pay my deductible directly to them, which I did, and the demo began.  They pulled up the majority of the flooring and under lament in the room, exposing the sub flooring and leaving a sea of staples sticking up just high enough that you are unable to walk in the room without shoes.  They put down around a half dozen huge fans in both the kitchen and basement to dry out the floors.  They also put a large suction pad in the laundry to pull the water through the tile grout.  Then they left us with the loud drone of fans.  A couple of days later they returned, and informed us that they now needed to remove the base cabinets as the floor wasn't drying adequately and they needed to raise the temperature in the laundry room to 120 degrees to help dry out the sub floor under the tiles.  If they couldn't get it dry then the new tile I had installed only a few weeks prior would need to be removed.  So out came the counter top and cabinets and drying continued.  A full week and a half later the abatement company gave the floors a clean bill of health. As I surveyed the damage, I took note that the abatement company had failed to remove all of the screws while pulling the counter top, completely destroying the tops of some of the base cabinets.  Geez, this just keeps getting better.
 
Now that the floors were dry it was time to get estimates for the insurance on getting it all back together and replacing the floor.  We contacted the general contractor that the insurance company recommended to come over and give an estimate, and my wife contacted the flooring company to see about getting the floors replaced.  We knew that we would have trouble getting the same flooring so our assumption going in was that all the flooring would be replaced.  This shouldn't be a problem as the abatement company had pulled all but about 100 square feet up anyway.  The representative from the general contractor shows up, and begins walking through the kitchen and taking notes while talking out loud about what all will need to be done.  I assumed he was doing that for my benefit, but now that I look back, I think it was his way of using his fingers to count.  He starts talking about placing back the original cabinet bases.  Of course my earlier discovery of the damage from the abatement company; the staining of the sub floor, which suspiciously looked like the early formation of mold; and the fact that on close inspection of some of the base cabinets it was clear the base of the cabinets were ruined by the water, led me to start asking questions.  I asked about the need to replace or at least find a way to repair the base cabinets and if the sub floor needed to be replace.  His response was that if that was needed the abatement company would have identified it as such.  It was obvious this guy was both an idiot and totally devoid of the ability to see for himself.  How he ever became a general contractor I will never know.  In fact, I had to point out to him that he hadn't considered that he would need to reinstall the stove top, to which, he said there would likely be a lot of things he would discover as they did the work.  I took that as code for "we are going to screw over the insurance company with overruns, wink wink".  There was no way this guy was touching anything in my house!  I asked him about the water running into the register and he indicated he would make sure a furnace specialist did an inspection, which did happen with a clean bill of health. This was great except for the fact that less than a week later the fan in the furnace went out in explosive fashion.  Thank goodness we have a good friend that is a heating and air specialist who was able to drop by, order the part and fix it.  Clearly this general contractor was a fraud!  At this point we had no idea if our base cabinets would be repaired, reset or replaced.

My wife was faring no better. She had contacted the flooring company that the insurance recommended, and had a consultation at the house.  The good thing was that the show room for the flooring store was near my wife's work in Blue Ash.  The bad part was they were not focused on our best interest.  Yes they has plenty of flooring options that were beautiful, but what they wanted to do was to sell us something very expensive that we didn't want under the guise of that would be what the insurance money would cover.  It was obvious to both of us that this sales person was only interested in maximizing their profit.  We did find a flooring that we found acceptable under the pretense that we had little choice, but it was not a selection we would make under normal circumstances.  I insisted that we look at Lumber Liquidators for flooring as I believed we could get a better floor at a much cheaper cost.  There was one near the flooring store so I suggested we go over there right away.  We told the lady at the flooring store that we weren't interested and thanked her for her time.  It is funny how suddenly the factory was running a special at 50% off and that they were going to throw in some additional discounts to get us the flooring in our house with "no money out of your pocket".  We were too through with them.  What a sleazy practice!  

Off to Lumber Liquidators!  It was amazing how quickly both my wife and I agreed on the flooring choice.  We saw it almost instantly. A 5" hand scraped teak called Tobacco Road.  It was perfect, and better yet, it was cheaper by almost half of what the flooring store had tried to force on us.  Cheaper and better flooring for our dollar.  Now we were cooking! I didn't want to have to order it from the store on the North side of Cincinnati and haul it home, but I had been unable to find the Lumber Liquidators that had opened in our neighborhood. I decided to call the local store and get directions.  I believe it was the next day that we finally found the local store and visited.  The salesman was very nice and funny.  He gave us some samples of the flooring to take home and he arranged for a local company to come measure and give us an estimate for installation.  We had decided that we would find out what it would be to install the same flooring throughout the entire main floor.  The carpeting in the dining room and living rooms was shot and if we were ever considering hardwood, now was the time.  
I think this is a good place to throw a different twist into the discussion.  During all of this, my poor wife is left to deal with the majority of the issue as I am on site at a client in Chattanooga Tennessee and unable to assist in the coordination of all of these activities.  I have to tell you, my wife is a saint!  She is the most awesome life partner God could have ever chosen for me. I am in awe of her!  Thanks Honey!


Now back to the drama!  The flooring install company arrived at the house to measure for the Lumber Liquidators flooring install. The gentleman was quite nice and took one look at the cabinets and let my wife know that the cabinet bases were shot, and that the entire set of cabinets had to be replaced. He also informed her that he had a cabinet and flooring company and would be willing to give us an estimate on replacing the entire cabinetry as well as the flooring.  He said he could give us new cabinets of better construction (full plywood construction) for less money as they had a manufacturer that built only three types of cabinets.  The key was that you had to choose what they produced, no customizations were available.  For us that was worth a shot to get better cabinets, so we agreed to check it out.  We drove out to the cabinet shop to look at the styles that they had. We found some cabinets that we probably would not have picked ourselves, but were beautiful and would work very nicely with the flooring we chose.  We also looked at granite counter tops to replace the Formica that was originally in the house.  The salesman assured us that he could put in granite for the cost to simply replace the Formica.  A couple of days later, my wife received the estimate. 

My wife informed our claim agent that we had an issue with the cabinets, and that we had gotten and estimate.  The agent indicated that they would need to send out an adjuster to confirm that in fact the cabinets needed to be replaced.  An appointment was set, and the adjuster arrived and confirmed that, in fact, the cabinets did need to be replaced; however, the adjuster did not agree that the counter tops needed to be replaced, but could be reset onto the new base cabinets.  We of course, disagreed and were not about to force fit an old counter top onto brand new cabinets.  I contacted both the claim agent and my insurance agent to push the issue. The claim agent agreed that they would replace the counter top, but that the prices the cabinet company offered in their estimate were way too high.  They were over $6,000 apart between the cabinet maker and the insurance adjuster.  My wife went back and forth with the cabinet man who insisted that we could push the insurance for more, and was unwilling to budge on his price. The last straw was when he threatened my wife. He said he would contact the insurance company and tell them that we had tried to have him inflate the prices to sneak in granite.  He was incensed that we would not fight for his price...after all he had gotten us new cabinets. He also said he could have easily just called the insurance company and had them issue him a check directly and then we would see.  Wow, what a crook!  Obviously he wasn't getting our business.

Now, what to do?  We don't have a flooring installer. We don't have a general contractor. We don't have cabinets. Do we start over?  We now needed to chart our next course.  We decided that we were going to take matters into our own hands. We would be our own general contractor, and flooring installer, and cabinet installer. I would do all of the carpentry work myself.  This wasn't a big stretch as I had done flooring, and cabinets installations before. I hadn't wanted to do it as it is time consuming and with my travel schedule I had no idea how I was going to accommodate it, but now there wasn't a choice.  If this house was going to get repaired, we were going to have to do it ourselves. 

Keep in mind we are now at 1 and 1/2 months without a kitchen to cook in. The bathroom has become our dish washing location, and the grill our main resource for cooking.

The chaos that was the kitchen
The only room not affected


This is now the kitchen sink!