This is long over due but here’s the story of how our kitchen and laundry and well the whole downstairs renovation came about.
My parents were coming down for a long weekend and so my dad and I were going to renovate the laundry room by painting the existing tile floors, adding a dog shower and a countertop with a shelf above it. Prior to them coming my husband was doing the demo of the laundry room to give us a head start and while removing the tall pantry cabinet he found almost 2 inches of standing water. Now back up a little bit- I had stopped using a lower cabinet on the kitchen side because it had such a musty smell and the bottom shelf was sinking (should’ve been a sign) and brushed it off to it being because it was an older kitchen and maybe the previous owners had spilled something in there. No, it was because that water was also underneath all the cabinets along that wall and about 2 more feet into the kitchen under the tile.
We quickly called our insurance agent who hired a mold and water remediation company to start drying everything out. Once the company showed up, we found the water extended almost the entirety of our laundry room plus about 2 feet up the wall and had extended into the kitchen by about 5 feet and the whole length of the wall that was shared with the laundry room. Now I am so thankful for how quickly the mold and water remediation people worked and within days our flooring and cabinets were all removed, as well as all the tile that had water underneath it. It took about a week of running fans nonstop to dry it out. I pray you never have to go through that because the blowing of industrial fans nonstop will drive you nuts! We also discovered that the water had been a slow drip from where you connect your washing machine. The fittings were just old and corroded and had allowed water to slowly fall down the wall over time.
Once the water damage areas had been demoed the insurance adjuster came out to assess the damage and said they would be paying to replace the floors based on what we had and also hired a custom cabinet maker to give the insurance agency a quote for the total of 6 cabinets that needed to be replaced. Once they gave us their estimate we decided to just use the money to renovate the entire kitchen. It seemed like more of a waste to use it to get 4 new cabinets in the kitchen with the rest of the kitchen being 20 years old. I’m also super happy we went the route of renovating because removing the porcelain tile floors was no easy feat and I don’t know how those would have been removed without damaging the existing cabinetry. And since the flooring was getting replaced we decided to just continue with our plan to make everything hardwood downstairs. You quickly see how one project can snowball into another into another and so on.
This wasn’t our ideal situation for a renovation but what’s life without some unexpected twists and turns.
Look for our kitchen design post next!