Friday

25 April 2014

Lesson learned, education that I hope we'll never again have to act upon: when you buy a foreclosure, whoever owned it before you may not have been as careful about the maintenance of the house as you would like. You might see the surface things--like the kitchen floor that looks like it hasn't been cleaned in 5 years, but hey, you can clean that--but there are a lot of hidden things that don't pop up on inspection and you don't find out about until after you've moved in and are making payments.

Things like...the previous owner was an apparent DIY sort of person where electrical wiring is concerned. And you may have to have an electrician come out more than once to stop the sound of zzzzt happening when you flip a light switch (or to fix and entire room, as happened about a month after we moved in...)

And after a while, when you realize that in spite of repeatedly getting on your hands and knees to scrub the floor, in spite of steaming the tiles, and then using an acid wash, that floor is never coming clean, you begin to despise that damned floor. You already hated the freaking counters because they're basically bathroom tile to which every wayward cat hair sticks, but now you hate the floor, and by association, the entire kitchen.

So you muse about getting it remodeled, but never do anything about it because that seems like paying a lot of money for a lot of inconvenience. The kitchen is serviceable. Leave it.

But then cabinets start to crack, and counters start to fracture. And you start really looking at things, and realize structurally, things are not as sound as they should be.

They're also kind of ugly. With all the lights on, you can really see how faded the finish is on the cabinets; nothing looks really dirty, per se, but it all looks very old and very tired, and when you think about it you realize the house is 20 years old and this is all original and contractor grade materials, and it was never cared for properly.

Replacing the kitchen becomes not a want but pretty much a necessity, lest the cracks become fissures and swallow the first kitty to walk across them.

So...yeah. It's about time to replace the cabinets and counters and floor in the kitchen.

On one hand, I really really really don't want to do this because it will be a pain in the asterisk and I'm not in favor of pain, but on the other...we could have a kitchen I won't be embarrassed about.

We've found the company to do it, I think. Measurements have been taken, we have a really good idea of the colors we want, and Monday we're going to their showroom to see what they have to offer. We're not committed yet, no official contracts have been signed, but...

It would be a shame if the kitchen ate a kitty.


4 comments:

debzy said...

Wow, good luck! As someone who has just reached the end of a whole house renovation all I can say is enjoy the ride. It's kinda fun in a masochistic sorta way :)

Just Ducky said...

Good luck, also in the long run you will get to enjoy it. Someday it will help with resale, with a less tired kitch-ehn.

Mum says she redid the main bathroom after she moved in here. Old, tired, weird lilac colored tub and toilet. Now white and bright!

Mighty Kitty said...

Since we just had to go through this same problem, I have some hard earned suggestions for you. We have one more reno to go yet but here it goes and hope it helps.
1. Make sure you get at least two or three estimates before going with any agreement. Price is a huge factor and some won't send workers to homes with pets.
2. Floors can be a real bitch to deal with. Check out Home Depot and Lowes for deals or find a reputable handyman to lay the floors with the material of your choice that you purchase! You purchasing your materials and then getting a reputable handyman to install it is usually big savings.
3. If you join Angie's List, it can save you lots of grief cause it gives ratings of companies by people who have experienced the company and you get realtime people-tested grades on the work, the cost, and the time to complete.
Hope this helps and saves you some time and money! We did things the hard way and it was really stressful and costly! Keep me posted! ♥

Vicat said...

Oh cod, I'm facing dealing with all this over summer, hopefully won't spill into autumn. House will be paid off in 2 months so we have to do the cosmetic & basic redos so the house will sell quicker and I can get the hell-o kitty out of Nebraska and back to an ocean!
~V