Our Electrician Got Fired

Last week we fired our electrician. More precisely our contractor fired his electrical sub-contractor with our permission. The old electrician was a huge mess…

For starters after 6 months he still wasn’t done enough with his work to close up the walls. He dragged his feet at every turn. There was one excuse after another – but at the end of the day things just weren’t getting done.

Second, he put incompetent people on the job who couldn’t read plans. Boxes for hanging lights were put where recessed lights were supposed to go. Recessed lights would show up where there clearly was supposed to be a track lights. One day we were standing in the back yard with our architect when one of his guys drilled a hole through the back wall in the wrong location. He had drilled a hole in the right place the day before but had “forgotten” about that hole. The day we were there he looked at an exterior elevation plan, saw there was a motion sensor to the right of a light, so he drilled a hole to the right of the light – but from the interior. Of course, exterior right, should be interior left – but that fact escaped him. Not only were they incompetent but they were slow. The same guy who drilled a hole in the wrong place, generally spent more time out on the sidewalk talking on his phone than he did inside the building doing work (which may have been a good thing given the quality of his work).

Third, the electrician came back to us with a change order that was 27% of his original bid – and he gave it to us at the worst possible time (right when ConEd was about to get the electrical meters in). It wasn’t like much of anything had changed. His excuse was that he hadn’t bothered to actually price the fixtures for our job which were specified in the plans he was given. He just assumed we were doing a “Home Depot renovation”. That one really galled me – it meant that a good electrician, who bothered to do a proper bid, lost the job. And then, as if 27% wasn’t enough, apparently right before he got fired he told our contractor he needed yet another change order – that after working on the job for over 6 months there was something else he “just discovered” that warranted more money – something that was probably clearly spelled out in the plans he was given when he bid the job.

Fourth, other jobs he had with our contractor were going badly. One on Long Island took forever to get inspected and then he got the job passed by chatting up the inspector outside the house for a half hour. By the time they were done with their chat the inspector rushed through the inspection and only checked one thing. In other words, who knows how well the work was done – I wouldn’t put much faith in the inspection. On a restaurant job in the City he again took forever to get the inspection and then didn’t bother to show up. He was supposed to check things over a few days before to make sure he was ready for the inspection, but instead he showed up at 8:30pm the night before, found problems, but because supply houses were closed he couldn’t get what he needed to fix the problems – so he just blew off the inspection. Now the landlord is saying he’s going to sue because things aren’t signed off – it’s been that long…

Fifth, he was impossibly slow getting materials on the job site and then in some cases ordered the wrong things. The transformers for our track lights were a much cheaper brand. Most importantly, we’d been asking him for exterior lights for a month and he kept saying “next week”. For god’s sake – exterior lights are a security issue – how could he drag his feet on something like that?

[UPDATE] Sixth, his work was done so poorly it was actually dangerous. The new electrician discovered that he didn’t ground the electrical system. That’s something the guys from ConEd should have caught – it’s a major safety problem – one of those things you don’t forget unless you’re just really really incompetent.

And lastly, he was costing us money in other ways. For example, the plumber is charging us $700 for moving sprinkler heads that are too close to recessed lights. Had the electrician gotten his work done in a timely manner, the recessed rough-ins would have been there and the plumber would have located the sprinkler heads further away. (If you put a recessed light next to a sprinkler head the heat from the light will set off the sprinkler). But beyond that – we need to close up the walls and electrical is the #1 reason why we can’t right now. Slowing down the job = costing us money.

The good news is that our contractor found an alternate electrician who’s great. He and his guys ask the right questions. It’ll cost us more, but given how how the other electrician would have come back with more and more change orders and cost us money indirectly, it’s probably not that much more in the end. And given that we don’t get the final payment from the bank (and can’t rent the garden apartment) until we have our C of O – the old electrician’s delays could have cost us a lot of money…

The new electrician should be done by the end of the week, which means we can start insulation and closing up walls early next week. Finally!

The Walls Are Closing In!

Keeping up with the renovation has been a full time job lately so my blogging has suffered a bit as a result. There are just so many decisions to make as the contractor is back working full steam ahead now that the house is secure. We’re down to making decisions about finished materials, etc.

Drywall

One welcome development is that drywall started going up a week or so ago. Insulation will be going in soon and the sound insulation in the interior walls will be unfaced and so it needed drywall on one side of the wall to hold it in place. Here’s a few shots of our walls “closing in”…

Dan in stairwell with drywall going up

The character of the stairwell changed a lot once it got four defined walls. I wouldn’t say it’s worse – it’s now it’s own defined space… I should mention that when it’s all done it will be all white – except the exposed brick wall, the old joists we’re reusing between the hallway and the stairs, and the wood floors / stair treads. The steel will be painted white, the walls will be an off-white, and the plexiglass panels on the sides of the stairs will also be white. So it’s got a ways go go – but it’s starting to take shape.

drywall up in den

The picture above is the den. It will have a clerestory window at the top of that wall to let a little light in. The room above it will get flooded with light but with the den there will be much less light since the light has to bounce around the stairwell to reach the den.

Doors

The other reason why the house is feeling more complete and defined is because many of the interior doors have been installed…

doorsWhat you see above is a pocket door (to the left) and a bathroom door (to the right). There’s a delay on the doors in the stairwell ’cause they need to have a 45 min fire rating which requires special fire-treated wood for the frames. (Metal frames wouldn’t work with the aesthetic we’re shooting for).

In case you’re wondering, we debated it and decided to go with painted doors instead of wood doors. They should be less expensive – though priming and painting is nearly as expensive the upgrade for the wood laminate. One thing we are doing is using solid core doors throughout the house – usually 1 3/4″ thick. Only on closets do we go down to 1 3/8″. So the doors will feel nice and solid.

The Reveals

We’re not going to have window and door mouldings in the house. Instead we’ll have thin reveals around windows and doors, and above the baseboard (which will be flush with the drywall). It’s less material, but more work… And the Z-Beads you need for the reveals are apparently rather expensive.

drywall revealsIn the picture above you can see two reveals – one just below the window, and one just above the baseboard. The baseboard looks like more drywall, but it’s not – it’s primed wood. Since we’ll paint the baseboard the same color as the walls (though a bit glossier) the effect will be that we don’t have a baseboard even though we do have one. The reveals will also be painted – they won’t remain the metallic color.

You can also see that they’ve been working on the plumbing for the rads. The copper pipe sticking up through the floor is radiator piping. The boiler got delivered today, so hopefully we’ll have heat soon.

European Fixtures

The radiators remind me… What’s a little funny is the amount of European fixtures we’re installing… The rads are from Switzerland (Runtal), the sinks in our bathrooms are from Italy (Lacava), our plumbing fixtures are from Germany (Grohe + Bosh dishwasher), our windows are Austrian (Gaulhofer), the stairwell lights are Italian (Luce Plan)… And it’s not just the high-end stuff. Our Ikea cabinets are Swedish. And when I bought Electrolux appliances I thought I was going with an American company, but then a friend pointed out that Electrolux is also Swedish. However, if we had a bigger budget we would have gotten Wolf & Sub-Zero – which are American. Even the firewood we’ve been getting (from multiple sources) comes from Europe – that one makes no sense to me at all…

There are some American things going in – plumbing fixtures for the rental are American Standard, our tub and kitchen sinks are Kohler, the boiler (Slant/Fin) and water heaters (AO Smith) will be American, much of the lighting will be American (Juno, Lutron), etc. But the overwhelming trend is European. The question is why don’t more American companies have products that appeal to people like us? It’s not like we’re trying to buy European – it’s just seems to work out that way.

UPDATE

A day or so after I wrote the blog post another wall closed in – the one around the fireplace. It looks very different now – more like a real fireplace…

fireplace surround with DurockThe objective it to cover that with limestone.

Our Cornice Is Now Restored

While it’s been a rough week with the two robberies and having to sleep at the house in the freezing cold to prevent more robberies, one thing did get completed this week and it looks great – the cornice.

Restored cornice on Harlem brownstone

As you can see, we went with black. Also, the portion of the top floor to the right has been painted – that’s the final version – it looks good, and the color Dan picked goes well with the window color. But we need to get the Bird-X spikes up there quickly before it’s covered in bird droppings.

It wasn’t easy for the guys to fix the cornice. Everything they touched just seemed to disintegrate when the touched it. Here’s what it looked like before…

Crumbling cornice on Harlem TownhouseIn the end it doesn’t look new – there are imperfections in it. But we like the imperfections – it looks like an original cornice that’s in decent shape, which is exactly how it should look…

There’s warm weather this coming week, so hopefully the façade will get done in the next few days. The stoop is getting a scratch and resurface rather than a painting. I think the goal is to get the scratch coat on this week.

UPDATE:

Dan pointed out to me that the cornice isn’t actually black – it’s a dark bronze color that’s so dark it’s almost black. Here you can see it in comparison to the true black cornice two doors down.

cornicesI sorta like the almost black, but not quite, quality of it. You can see the difference a bit better in person – but even then it can fool you, like it did me the first time I saw it.

Our First Night At The House

This week didn’t go so well – our place was robbed twice in under a week and we’re now having to spend cold, dirty nights there to stop the robberies…

Tuesday morning the contractor discovered thieves had stripped all the copper plumbing out of the cellar. His guys hadn’t been down there since Friday, so it could have happened any time between end of day on Friday and Tuesday morning (or given how much was taken it’s more likely it happened several times over that time). He locked up the building better, but then Thursday morning his guys discovered thieves climbed up the scaffolding and got in one of the windows that are still open (because the scaffolding needs to be braced to things inside the building so it doesn’t fall down). This time the thieves got a little bit on each of the top three floors plus a toolbag.

None of this would have happened if ConEd would just get us electrical service. It’s now 8 full months since we first requested service. EIGHT MONTHS. If we had electricity we’d have a security system up and running and absurdly loud alarms would go off and the police would be called immediately upon break-in. But no electricity, no alarm system. No alarm system -> robberies.

And of course we’re staying there in freezing weather with no heat, in part because ConEd hasn’t put in the gas meters. In all fairness the plumber hasn’t plumbed the rads, but if ConEd were faster I think the plumber would be faster too. We like the plumber a lot. The one time I corrected him on something I was wrong and he was right.

So yesterday I went into crisis mode and dropped pretty much everything to get ready to sleep in the house. I got a tarp so we’d have a semi-clean surface to sleep on, and I got 4 battery operated lanterns which we put strategically around the house to make it look occupied. Someone suggested a radio – so that’s something we should add. And today the contractor went and installed battery operated motion sensor alarms. That will help us sleep a little better – we won’t have to wonder what every little sound is outside.

The really sweet thing is that the guy we’ve been paying to clean up around the building was quite disturbed about the robberies. He’s an older Belizean gentlemen and he and his friends “control” most of the block (in a good way). Because he’s the “super” of our building, they see our building as “theirs” and I suspect they see the robberies a challenge to their authority on the block. Yesterday afternoon they put up signs on our construction fence saying a third robbery would not happen and anyone who tried it would have to deal with their “street justice”. From early in the evening up until about 11pm there were people sitting in cars and hanging out watching the building. It’s sorta cool seeing the neighbors care enough to do something substantive to stop the robberies…

We did call the police Thursday morning and the detectives said a building at 122 & Lenox was robbed as well.

Unfortunately job site robbery is the norm in Harlem. I’m actually surprised it didn’t happen sooner, and the 2nd robbery was almost expected as well – once the thieves identify a building, they’ll keep coming back and back if they can. The detective did say that it’s an opportunity crime. I was worried if we stayed in the building we might encounter thieves with guns, but the detective was pretty adamant that that’s not typical. Still, it’s a bit more than an opportunity crime – they appear to have come with snips to cut the pipes.

ConEd first said they’d have electrical service in the building today. Then they said Tuesday. We’ll see. I’m hoping if we have electrical service on Tuesday that we can have a functioning alarm system by the end of next week. Staying in the house is no fun – it’s really cold at night, and it’s dirty. And every time something wakes you up you worry it’s a thief and have to get up to check it out. The shorter we have to do this, the better.

Some Serious Sprinkler Hardware

I went by the house today and there were some serious sprinkler control valves in our cellar…

sprinkler valves in cellarHere’s another shot of it…

sprinkler controls in Harlem townhouseThat’s some seriously big valves for a two family home, but it will help me sleep a little better at night.

They also installed a siamese connection and a “clapper” in the “front yard”…

siamese connection and clapper for sprinkler systemI used to just think that siamese connections were for dry sprinkler systems. Our sprinkler system is a wet system (has water in the lines all the time). So the siamese connection is there in case there’s a problem with water pressure or some other water supply failure.

The clapper goes off if sprinklers go off in our house. That way if we’re not home people on the street will know and (hopefully) call 911.