Enough of COVID...what are you doing to the house?

Sweet Home is very easy

can can be used for actual plans....we did this for possible pre fab build.
and it's free.
You can put in your existing furniture as we did here and see it from all angles and even the time of day through the windows.
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The learning curve not that steep.
We used our existing furnishing real size. It will produce photorealistic much better than these with external and internal lighting
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it is fun
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My biggest issue right now in that area will be leveling it. Any recommendations?

My entire yard is up and down so will need to do some considerable leveling over the next season.
 
My biggest issue right now in that area will be leveling it. Any recommendations?

My entire yard is up and down so will need to do some considerable leveling over the next season.
Make sure you don't alter flow of water to your neighbours. I know you had ponding issues in the past. Did you permanently solve them?

Civil is not my thing but my rudimentary understanding has load placed on saturated ground pushing up an equivalent weight of water. The pool could exacerbate standing water issues.
 
Make sure you don't alter flow of water to your neighbours. I know you had ponding issues in the past. Did you permanently solve them?

Civil is not my thing but my rudimentary understanding has load placed on saturated ground pushing up an equivalent weight of water. The pool could exacerbate standing water issues.
The drainage I installed has been very helpful and we're not seeing any ponding.

Unfortunately where I placed the drainage is also where I didn't properly compact the soil and it's where my dips are.

But leveling I'm thinking just buying 5-6 yards of topsoil (whatever doesn't need the next size truck) and just spread it out over the yard throughout the year as things compact and continue to settle.
 
Garage organisation and floor done. Quite happy with how the floor turned out. Fair bit of room but not too much head height. There won't be many standing presses going on. Bought some compact resistance band set ups for the new "gym".
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Make sure you don't alter flow of water to your neighbours. I know you had ponding issues in the past. Did you permanently solve them?

Civil is not my thing but my rudimentary understanding has load placed on saturated ground pushing up an equivalent weight of water. The pool could exacerbate standing water issues.
You may have solved a ten year old mystery. Too complex for typing.
 
Garage organisation and floor done. Quite happy with how the floor turned out. Fair bit of room but not too much head height. There won't be many standing presses going on. Bought some compact resistance band set ups for the new "gym".
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Very nice! I always wanted a gym in my garage but it gets so cold I could barely hold the bar in there.
 
Very nice! I always wanted a gym in my garage but it gets so cold I could barely hold the bar in there.

There’s a small heater in there trying to take the chill off. I really hope this doesn’t mean that I have to insulate the thing next. All this from trying to make an oil change easier.

Now I need to add some wall anchors for the resistance bands. The industrial shelves are very solid but I probably need to put some kind of restraining device on them to stop potential toppling if I use the uprights on them. Problem is I think the wall behind them is concrete blocks.

Edit: found some tapcons and the industrial shelves have convenient holes already drilled on the uprights for shelf adjustment. I can use a climbing QuickDraw to attach caribeeners at different heights for the different exercises so I think this will work fine. The shelves that I got from Costco weren’t exactly designed for this but they are solid reasonably thick steel stock so shouldn’t be an issue.
 
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Make sure you don't alter flow of water to your neighbours. I know you had ponding issues in the past. Did you permanently solve them?

Civil is not my thing but my rudimentary understanding has load placed on saturated ground pushing up an equivalent weight of water. The pool could exacerbate standing water issues.
I feel more like typing so will discuss the mystery.

About a dozen years ago a competitor asked for my help in resolving an issue with a snow melting system he installed. Call him Kevin.

A homeowner with an existing system got Kevin's name somewhere and told him his driveway snow melting system stopped working. Keven gives him a price and gets the job to replace it. The pavers are lifted, the new cables installed and pavers replaced, all to industry standards. It snows and the new system doesn't work either.

The cables power up to the correct amperage at 240 volts but the snow doesn't melt, defying the laws of physics. No one including me or the manufacturer can find fault with the installation.

"Kevin" puts in boost transformers...nada. Kevin modifies the cables to increase power...nada

After about six years of piddling around the system starts working again without any new modifications.

A couple of years earlier, while on site scratching my head over the problem, I was admiring the McMansion next door. Then I went to streetview and back in time.

About the time the problem started the McMansion wasn't there. It was a dinky old house on a big lot in a prime location, McMansion wannabe.

I speculated the cause to be an underground spring that got diverted and water cooled the snow melting cables to the point they didn't couldn't do the job. I've only seen it once before at a freezer plant built on swampy ground. In the spring the frost barrier couldn't keep up, we figured for the same reason.

As GG suggests the McMansion could have been squeezing the water out of the new build and affecting the performance of any system. It's IMO more likely than the underground stream.

About Kevin.

When he got the original call he failed to consider that there were four cables in the driveway. Unless there was a catastrophic event, cables don't fail all at once.

I suspect that simple load or resistance test would have shown the original cables meeting spec. Instead the home owner paid five figures to replace the existing cables with new ones that didn't work. IMO the old cables were far superior to the new brand. Mercedes vs Lada.

Logic, do they teach it anymore?
 
This is in line with what I'd like to build...
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But I don't have the space for that at this house.

An in-ground pool is in the future...but not right now simply due to costs.
 
This is in line with what I'd like to build...
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But I don't have the space for that at this house.

An in-ground pool is in the future...but not right now simply due to costs.
I looked at putting in a pool at my place. It's more cost effective to sell your house and buy a house with a pool.

It was going to be north of 100K with having to upgrade the fencing and the concrete pad pour. The pool is the cheap part.
 
I looked at putting in a pool at my place. It's more cost effective to sell your house and buy a house with a pool.

It was going to be north of 100K with having to upgrade the fencing and the concrete pad pour. The pool is the cheap part.
100% agree that it may be cheaper to just switch houses. Until you see that it costs 100k just to sell your house!

We've looked at other options, and even with close to $800k in equity we have in our house...with current rates, we'd have to look at the same price house as ours (1.2-1.3) or lower to have a similar payment, which doesn't work.

Or we move further out from our current area. Which we're not willing to do at this time.

Above ground pool it is for the time being. Kids are still small so they can have fun for a year or two...or 3.

I considered a rigid side above ground pool...but buying used is not good as apparently once they're taken apart, they very rarely come back together again properly.
 
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