We were hoping to move in last week, but this is France, and things often don’t go according to schedule. There is a lot happening at the house. One day last week, there were 11 people working there. A few big things, however, have been delayed. We thought the power company, EDF, was ignoring our request, submitted months ago, to update and move our main power box. It seems everybody is using
Meanwhile, the house we are renting has been committed to a new tenant, so we have agreed to vacate by November 1. No pressure.
On the ground floor, the travertine is all in and it looks great.
Upstairs, the bathroom floor tile has a very faint stripe in the background, which the installer hadn’t noticed. Fortunately, I was able to point that out before the grouting was done. This is why I am at the house every day.
It looks much better now. The wall tile is finished, and the first of our wall-mounted toilets
The tomettes have been acid-washed and now just need to be sealed. The painting is almost done in there.
The stairs to the attic are in pretty bad shape so will have to be replaced. The stair man said they would install the new stairs “probably” this week, which really means next week, or in two months.
In the new bedroom addition, the ceilings are 12 ft so the plasterer needed some vertical help.
And now that room is painted and ready for light fixtures.
Our Ikea closet modules have been assembled. This is a huge closet by French standards, and it is much appreciated by us happy Americans.
We decided not to have any upper cabinets,
And we’ll leave the pretty stone walls unencumbered on this side. (And yes, those outlets are too high, but that seems to be the way it’s
The original house had four fireplaces. Over the years, all but one, in the upstairs bedroom, had been covered by plasterboard. It’s a pretty fireplace and will remain as a feature, but will not be used. (Who wants to carry firewood up the stairs in winter? Not us.) The rest of the fireplaces were uncovered and considered for use, but two of them weren’t worth keeping: the kitchen fireplace has now been completely removed, and the one in the upstairs lounge has been recovered with plasterboard. The best of them all was the living room fireplace. It has gone through quite a transformation.
We’ve managed to endure 17 months of full-time renovations without too many ouches. The work is almost done, although no area is completely finished. The end is in sight and we are so ready to begin life in this grand house.