Circular Bed

The Sheer Luxury!

It has been a while since I last posted and there have been lots of changes inside and outside the Espatch.

First, my website has had a major update and is now sporting a brand-spanking-new Effectus Skin on top of the latest Thesis and WordPress software.

“Ah the sheer luxury!”

Oh yes, oh yes, even my comment fields are now working…mind blowing I know!

Outside there has been lots of odd happenings of late.

It all seemed to start when an eerie dense fog descended around mid January.

Shortly after, major domestic appliances started to materialize in random locations around our back garden.

Then rather large mounds of debris started to pile up.

Hmm, that pile looks a lot like something I would make…except I didn’t.

Then I went out the back to do some laundry, and well something just felt a little ‘different’.

I hate washing clothes at the best of times, but traversing exposed beams whilst straddling exposed nails and carrying a significant basket of laundry…well, luck will not be on your side for long.

Our remodel had finally begun.

Not a big remodel I must add, just a significant one, one that would test our resolve, one that would define who we were.

“Having fun yet kids”?

Things got very dusty,

and very cold.

Answering the front door has become a comedic athletic event,

as is using the restroom.

In hindsight the blue tarp was actually relative luxury compared to what we currently have.

The plastic tarp got replaced with some loud rustling paper nonsense that constantly needs to be repaired and taped up.

I have to adopt a Gollum-esk gate to enter and exit the facility at night so as not to wake everyone. I have noticed that I adopt a very similar facial expression whilst performing this maneuver.

Catherine Tate

I am not bovvered though?

No, In fact I am really excited.

We are to gain another small bedroom and toilet with this remodel, replace and fix a crappy leaking roof, move our living room and create a new dining room space.

All this from just enclosing our existing tiny porch and redesigning the interior layout on the inside to be more functional!

Existing porch and partial roof removal in progress.

Before we started the remodel I had a dream that rain was pouring through our roof.

The removal of some very questionable insulation walls?

New foundation in place. This back wall will also be demolished.

Must remember about that drop off when I let the dog out at night.

New floor in place, this will become the new interior footprint.

Taking shape. Getting ready for windows and a new back door.

New roof in place.

Sadly the right half of this mountain laurel has to go to make room for a landing platform from the new back door. I have been pruning this tree into shape for years!

Oh well.

Out with the old hook saw!

Yes, well, er…lets not dwell on this.

New interior layout getting framed out. That is the irritating rustling paper restroom I was talking about earlier.

Windows!

“Use your legs!”

As a new deck will be constructed off the back door all the existing Elgin Butler bricks in the existing brick / concrete patio needed to be removed and re-purposed.

It felt good to get all that concrete out of the ground. This patio has caused drainage issues since we purchased the house in 2001.

And I have just the spot for all those bricks…

I still have a few more perimeter brick circles to go to finish this fire pit area.

No concrete here.

Backdoor and windows going in.

More on this project in my next post.

Stay Tuned For:

“Monster in the Closet”

 

“Deep Breath”

plan_3

Here is a new 360 plan I generated for a property in north Austin,

Front_a

and here are the renderings that I used to communicate the design intent to the client. I superimposed the new design onto the black and white images.

The homeowners wanted to significantly reduce the amount of lawn without alienating the rest of the predominately turfed neighborhood, an interesting challenge.

Rear_pavers

The back patio was an assortment of plants and different mediums that made the space feel cramped and claustrophobic. I wanted to open this space up and create an extension to the patio that would lead naturally into pathways on both sides of the property.

Right_side_property_line

The property lacked any real flow from the front to the back, my goal was to introduce pathways that would encompass and direct foot traffic on all sides of the house, but first a lot of tear-out had to happen. About 5 dumpsters worth to be precise.

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Lots of overgrown shrubbery had to be removed up against the house and as for the 2ft Asiatic jasmine filled ‘flan’ brick-circle around the oak?

Well, you all know my bias thoughts on this demonic ground cover.

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Oh yes, there was a lot more of this going on as the underworld critters living in the jasmine darted around our ankles. The flan actually ended up more like a pizza, it was cut and removed in six horrible slices. The bricks performed their usual trick of exponential expansion after being demolished with a sledge hammer.

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Here is the front yard stripped back to its bare-bones. The trunk-flare on the oak is now visible and the tree, being free from the clutches of the dark Trachelospermum, can once again breathe freely.

turf_removal

This had to be one of the longest hell-strips I have taken out. The turf here was mounded and the grade had to be taken down significantly for fresh aggregate to be reintroduced.

installation

Here is the back all cleared out, and here it is,

Darkest Hour

in its darkest hour,

irrigation

with a new sprinkler and drip irrigation system being installed (not by me).

i5TWH IMG_0628

The front also received a good pummeling.

boulders

Contours were defined, materials brought in, the installation was underway.

Here are some before and after shots of the completed design:

Installion

What was once an overgrown planting bed became a wide entryway into the garden from the driveway and front door.

two

The wrap-round strip of grass in front of the boulders naturalizes the scheme street-side into the neighborhood aesthetic.

five

The removal of this wall opened up the view and allowed room for this side pathway to run behind the leaning oak.

four

A paved side courtyard continues

three

around to expand the back patio. Ornamental grasses and rosemary have been planted to soften the corners and hardscaping over time.

six

This back area was 12ft deep in nandina – which is never a good thing. (another potential botanical rant could most certainly be inserted here).

EXORIST, I.V.

I cast you out, invasive nandina!

An exorcism was performed along with some sage smudging and cleansing (you have to do this with nandina or it will come back) making the whole back garden feel significantly larger.

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A new metal mailbox was installed which works perfectly with the color of the moss boulders and decomposed granite. Here is a link to Urban Mettle, the company that designs and makes these mailboxes…and a whole lot more:

http://www.etsy.com/shop/UrbanMettle

Now to wait a couple of years until the plants fill-in.

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Back in the Patch:

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This is my favorite time of the year, right before the first frosts start hitting hard.

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Hoja Santa is the first plant to complain when the first real freeze arrives,

leaf

but for now they are still standing tall even though it got very cold the last few nights.

leaf_detail DSC04049

Cooler temperatures trigger the desert trumpets into action,

blooms

and the Mexican bush sage keeps on going at the back,

back_garden

and front of the Patch.

front_garden

In preparation for Christmas…

decorations

plumosa fern is always first to break out the decorations.

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My Christmas present arrived at my door early, I had been looking forward to this moment for months…the wait was finally over.

box

Was I going to wait to open it?

Oh no…zip, zip…

zip.

It was a brand new set of…

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David Naill highland bagpipes complete with blackwood mounts and nickel slides…snort.

braveheart_197485

My neighbors and Kumo (who, with the first squawk shot under the bed) are going to be so happy!

Fatbastard

I will subject you to a wee tune next week if you would like.

Any requests?

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Except that one.

Inspirational Images of the Week:

Cacoon Hanging Chair

Boutique-Camping-Cacoon-1 a-cacoon-in-the-garden

http://www.hang-in-out.com/home/ca

 

Stay Tuned for:

“Up In Flames”

 

All material © 2013 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

 

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