A busy couple of days on the kitchen demo front. It took much longer than anticipated to remove all our stuff and furniture out of the kitchen. The kids room is serving as a make-shift version for the time being. When everything is out of the cabinets, you realise how much stuff you really have.
Anyway, my task for the last 2 days was to "de-wood" the kitchen. While it must have been fashionable in the 70's, the wood looks pretty darn awful these days. The major concern I had was, "What was hiding behind the wood?" It's often used to conceal some nastiness behind. One way to find out though .... HAMMER TIME!!!!
As it came down, I realised a few things:
1. It was on there pretty good. Lots of glue, nails and screws. Grrrr
2. The walls were pretty darn awful in a couple of places - plaster and dry lining here we come
3. The ceilings are in pretty good shape. A nice surprise as I had planned on tearing them down
On the mini-extension however they were not. Not a big surprise with the giant crack down the middle. I used my trusty X-tex to remove the last little bit of Artex paint and started tearing down the plaster. What a mess. But I got it down eventually and could access the ceiling void above. Good thing too as there is absolutely no insulation up there. Something to put on before I plasterboard it over. With the new rad, flooring and window, this is going to be the warmest room in the house.
Also to come out was the cupboard. Silly me, I thought this was going to be an easy task. I didn't realise that the cupboard has been in place for over 70 years. I know this from advanced carbon dating (and finding a flyer from 1941). It was practically build into the framework of the house! One shelf was solid wood 2" thick hammered into the brickwork. That alone could have supported about 3-4 of me. I guess they built things well back in the day.
Not that everything is basically down (de-wooded). Time to start cleaning up my mess. Stay tuned....