Thursday, November 6, 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Fixing a house in a city where the idea of a fixer-upper is a foreign concept. Navigating laws that seem to ignore the possibility of owners doing their own repair work. Illustrating interesting homes for sale in the city. We'd planned on buying a major fixer-upper, and then the house of our dreams appeared. There will still be projects, yes, but they'll be more of the "detail" type and less of the "how are we going to make dinner without a functioning kitchen" type.
3 comments:
Are they steam or hot water? If they're steam and you can easily disconnect them and roll them (with a handtruck) outside, it's really not too hard to sandblast them. You don't have to get every last scrap of paint off (unless you want them natural and are not planning to re-paint,) you just want to remove everything that's chipping/peeling, etc, so you get a smooth surface for repainting.
At least that's my amateur DIY-er perspective. :-)
They're hot water.
They all have covers, so I'm not that concerned about aesthetics - it's just that with the heating a huge space like that, I want to squeeze every last bit of efficiency possible out of the system.
It is a very informative and useful post thanks it is good material to read this post increases my knowledge. Regrouting Tiles
Post a Comment