The $500 Kitchen Makeover

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When Patty and I moved into our house a little more than two years ago, the one thing we knew had to go was the kitchen floor. It was ugly, pockmarked, discolored and soiled by a thousand or so varieties of dirt and grime.

The problem is, we’re sort of cheap. And indecisive. Consequently, we spent the next two years debating what kind of flooring we wanted, how much we were willing to spend, and finally, whether we should pay a contractor to do the job right or take a chance on our own abilities as do-it-yourselfers.

From the beginning, Patty thought we should just do the floor ourselves. I resisted the idea, noting that our previous home improvement projects had yielded mediocre results. We went back and forth on the issue until one day Patty stumbled across this blog post, which describes how to redo your kitchen floor in black-and-white checkerboard for under $100 using vinyl, adhesive-backed tiles.

I know black-and-white checkerboard isn’t very popular anymore, but for some reason Patty and I seemed to gravitate toward it. We looked at a lot of modern, more conventional tile and sheet vinyl options, but everything looked boring. In any case, we thought we could make the black-and-white checkerboard work in our kitchen. I read the blog post, studied the photos, and then read it again. I clicked through to the how-to video on YouTube and checked out the website of the company that sells the tiles, Mazer Wholesale, Inc. It all seemed pretty self-explanatory.

The more I thought about it, the more it seemed like we really could do this ourselves. The tipping point came when Patty pointed out that if we could pull off a project like this for such a small price, we would still have enough money left over to pay a contractor to come in and fix it if the end result was so bad that we couldn’t live with it.

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I could go into detail about the actual process of laying the tiles, but it really is pretty simple and there are plenty of resources available online to help explain it. The edge pieces can be tricky, but after the first few you’ll get the hang of how to measure them. I will simply say that before doing this project, I had never done flooring in my life. If I can do it, anyone can.

We found our kitchen had a some qualities that meshed well with the checkerboard pattern — namely the yellow walls and the wood grain countertop, both of which help warm and soften the room. We decided to repaint the cabinets to match our appliances; that, of course, necessitated repainting all the molding and the door to the basement as well. (We found out that painting cabinets is a vastly more difficult task than laying down self-adhesive tiles over linoleum.)

When we got to the end, we still found that something was missing. We decided the room needed more color — something to punch it up a bit. We found some cheap red accent rugs at Target, and then went on Amazon and ordered some red-and-white checkerboard valances for the windows. We also bought a new dining set that we both liked from Ikea, and threw in a few plants and some framed prints on the walls for good measure.

Here’s what it all cost us:

  • Tiles (including shipping) ~$125
  • Painting supplies from Home Depot ~$150
  • Rugs, valances, cellular shades and wall decorations ~$125
  • Table and chairs from Ikea ~$100

There you have it. New kitchen, $500. Finally, here are a couple of blog posts from Apartment Therapy that I found helpful:

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Slowly Making Progress

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About a month ago, I set out to build my own WordPress theme from scratch. What you’re looking at today isn’t it.

Instead, I chose to revamp my current WordPress.com site while I finish building my new one. What’s the holdup, you ask? Well, for the past couple of months I’ve been learning HTML and CSS, and it turns out that my coding skills have very quickly exceeded my graphic design skills. In other words, I can make a website, I just can’t make it look good. Yet.

The new legislative session begins this week, which means my job is going to get very busy for the next few months. Since I’ll have less free time to devote to building the new site, in the meantime I thought I’d make some incremental improvements to this one. I added some new pages, including a showcase page that serves as my new landing page (I’m trying to de-emphasize my blog, since I rarely use it anymore), and I picked a cleaner, less obnoxious theme that I think actually looks quite good for a stock WordPress theme.

So, I will continue to pore over lines of CSS code like the ones pictured above, but in the meantime feel free to let me know what you think of my new WordPress.com site.

See you around.

About This Blog, Which I Rarely Use…

As you might have noticed, I’ve been posting on this blog at the rate of about once or twice per year. When I started it, I never intended to be much of a “blogger” per se; I simply wanted my own piece of real estate somewhere out there on the web. I figured that sooner or later someone was going to type my name into Google, and when they did, it might be a good idea to steer them toward something that belonged to me personally, rather than just a Facebook page or LinkedIn account.

In spite of its lack of fresh content, this blog manages to attract roughly 15 visitors per day. (A three-year-old post about the Megabus consistently gets the most traffic.) I wish I could tell you I had plans to start posting more often, but I have neither the time nor the inclination to do so. Partly this is due to the nature of my career: I work in a nonpartisan office in a highly political environment, which means I need to choose my words and my subject matter carefully when presenting myself to the public, so as not to seem in any way biased.

So if this blog seems rather dull and lifeless, it’s not entirely by accident.

Given all these considerations, I’ve realized that a blog probably isn’t the best format for what I’m trying to achieve by having my own website. Therefore, I plan on switching to more of a static web page format in the near future. I’m currently in the process of learning web design, and so my goal is to code a new website for myself from scratch. I’ll probably keep this blog alive and link to it using its wordpress.com domain name. But you can look for a new and improved (let’s hope) nickbusse.com in the near future.

Skydive Twin Cities

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Skydiving is something I’ve always wanted to do but never actively pursued, hoping instead that if I waited long enough, an occasion would somehow present itself. Leave it to a daily deal website to fulfill my wish.

In December, Groupon offered a deal for $80 off the price of a tandem jump through Skydive Twin Cities (which, oddly enough, is headquartered across the border in Baldwin, WI). I was lucky enough to have a couple of friends who wanted to go too, so it was on.

It wasn’t until May that we finally got around to making reservations. The certificates were nearly expired, and with thunderstorms forecast on the day of our jump, it looked like we might not get to go. But the weather ended up being perfect: slightly warm, little to no wind, and an overcast sky, which meant we could go up above the clouds and plunge back through them on the way down — a fantastic experience.

The airfield was easy to find, and a mere 40-minute drive from St. Paul. It’s basically a grass airstrip, of the type I haven’t flown off of since my days as a Civil Air Patrol cadet. The staff was very professional, and had a healthy sense of humor about the dangers of their sport. (The instructor’s persistent references to “if the parachute opens” and “if you survive” are apparently a tension-breaker for reluctant newbs.)

All in all, though, I found I wasn’t nearly as nervous as I thought I’d be. There’s an air of unreality about the whole thing that drowns out any real sense of fear. And the fact you’re essentially strapped to a person who clearly knows what they’re doing helps a lot. It’s nice, because they do all the work; you can just enjoy the ride.

And what a ride. Skydiving is one experience in life that truly does not disappoint. To exit an airplane at 10,000+ feet is to commit to something with a level of totality that few other things in life demand. It is awesome, in the truest sense of the word. You can’t understand it until you do it; and after you do it, you’ll want more. My friends and I had the same reaction after we were back on the ground: “Want to go again?” We probably will.

So this is what it’s like…

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The last 48 hours have been fairly instructive for me as a blogger. Since WordPress linked to my post about DIY home renovation angst on their “Freshly Pressed” featured blogs page, I’ve received more web traffic in two days than I’ll probably ever get on this blog again. The number of comments I got on that post — 46 so far — is about half the total number I’d ever received before WordPress so generously started funneling pageviews into this, my lowly purchase on the blogosphere.

It’s cool to get a taste of what life would be like if I were a real blogger — someone who posted regularly on topics interesting enough to draw thousands of pageviews per day. As it is, I update this blog about four times a year, and my visitors are usually limited to friends, family and a handful of people I know through social media. I generally try to keep things pretty innocuous here, which doesn’t always make for interesting reading. But I’ve learned the hard way that drawing too much attention to oneself can be perilous, especially when one works in a career field that can be politically sensitive.

To those who have visited in the last couple of days — even just to spam my comment thread — I thank you for stopping by. I was trying to think of a way to parlay this temporary flood of attention into something useful, but so far I’ve got nothing. I’m sure I’ll think of something right after WordPress takes down the link.

To DIY, or Not to DIY?

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My wife and I have been homeowners for a little more than 10 months now, and one of the issues we’re constantly faced with is whether it makes better sense to hire a contractor to do home renovations or to save the money and do the work ourselves. It’s a problem complicated by the ever-growing abundance of DIY blogs and how-to websites that make seemingly any project look manageable, if not downright easy.

We’re fortunate in that we bought a house that doesn’t really need a lot of work. From the beginning, most of the projects on our to-do list were optional: add a second bathroom, replace the basement windows with glass block, redo the rusty old linoleum floor in the kitchen. But that only increases the pressure on us to do things ourselves. After all, if something isn’t essential, why not take your time, save the money and do it on your own?

It turns out there is a pretty compelling counter-argument. So far, we’ve taken on two “big” projects by ourselves: replacing the broken, non-functioning door to the storage space above our garage, and removing our drafty old basement windows (five in all) and installing custom-built glass block panels. Both projects yielded home upgrades that are fully functional, money-saving and — for the most part — good-looking. The trouble comes when you look closer at the workmanship: while not bad from a distance, it’s clearly lacking in the details. From the outside, our new door looks fine; from the inside, it looks like somebody handed a nail gun and a pack of wood shims to a 3-year-old.  And our glass block windows, while pretty, aren’t 100 percent level. The mortar is also uneven in spots (something that we can perhaps correct later.)

The question is, how much do these details really matter? We saved more than $500 by putting in the new basement windows ourselves. Are the imperfections we left worth that much?

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Old window: rotting, drafty and insecure.

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New window: rock-solid and energy-efficient; just not 100 percent level.

I’ve developed a rule of thumb: with proper tools and plenty of research, I can complete a project up to about 70–80 percent of the quality I’d expect from a contractor (in about three to four times the amount of time). When contemplating a home upgrade, the question then becomes: “Would I be satisfied with doing this in a way that’s 70–80 percent as good as I want it to be, in order to save X amount of dollars?”

Of course, there’s no guarantee a contractor would do any better. When we first moved in, we made the mistake of hiring a local “handyman” to install our dishwasher. He hooked it up okay, but he left behind some major problems with the drainpipe underneath the sink, and his electrician buddy installed an electrical switch for the garbage disposal directly beneath where the pipe was leaking. Oops.

After that experience, I bought a membership to Angie’s List, which lets you read and write reviews of contractors’ work. The $7.50-a-month price tag for a membership is a bit grating, but it’s worth it. You get discounts from a lot of contractors for being a member; more importantly, you get to see beforehand, from customer reviews, whether a contractor actually knows what they’re doing. Between a busted air conditioner, a smashed fender on my car, a new garage door and some major plumbing work, my membership to this site has already paid for itself a dozen times over.

Given that my odds of hiring a competent contractor are drastically higher now that I have access to that site, it’s tempting to avoid DIY projects altogether. Of course, I haven’t spoken yet of the sense of accomplishment you get from doing things yourself — but that’s mainly because I don’t get it. I’m a perfectionist; when I build something, all I tend to see are the flaws. My wife is much more satisfied with the outcome of our home renovations than I am. It’s also probably true, as she pointed out, that as we continue doing things ourselves, we’ll get better over time. Still, I can’t say I’m eager to try our hand at replacing the kitchen floor or installing that second bathroom alone. There are some things I don’t want to risk screwing up — especially, in the case of the bathroom, when plumbing and electricity are involved. Besides, contractors gotta eat too…

The Parking Nightmare that is St. Paul

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Above is a picture of a parking spot in downtown St. Paul. Specifically, it’s the one on the northeast corner of St. Peter and 5th. Feel free to park your car here and enjoy some of the many businesses and attractions downtown. Just make sure you follow these simple rules:

You can park in this spot for up to an hour between 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., as long as you pay the meter; if you park here after 4:30 p.m., it’s free. But, wait: don’t park here at all Monday through Friday between the hours of 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. (regardless of whether you paid the meter). Also, don’t leave your car here between the hours of 2:00 a.m. and 7:00 a.m. unless it’s a Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday or Sunday, in which case it’s allowed. Parking meters are strictly enforced, by the way,  and failure to obey any one of these rules will result in a $33 fine.

Got all that? Good. Enjoy your time in St. Paul.

Okay, I know the world has bigger problems, but seriously, this is ridiculous. Look, I only got a “C” in my freshman Intro to Logic course in college, so I’m probably just not cut out to tackle St. Paul’s labyrinthine parking restrictions, and I should just resign myself to getting ticketed every few months when I stumble upon some weird parking spot with insane rules. On the other hand, I don’t think a doctorate in philosophy should be a prerequisite to be able to figure out where you can safely park your car — especially in a city that’s half-deserted most of the time.

Thankfully, St. Paul’s business community agrees with me. The local district council is even doing a survey to let people voice their concerns. Please, do me and the rest of the city a favor and tell them all of your parking horror stories. It appears somebody may actually be on the verge of doing something about this situation. In the meantime, I’m going to go fight my second parking ticket in a year…

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Make sure you look behind those trees!