Home > Video Channel > Exploring the New Kitchen and Master Bedroom

Exploring the New Kitchen and Master Bedroom

Bob checks out the kitchen and master bedroom with the designer.
Get Adobe Flash Player to see this content.

Chapters from this episode

Clip Transcript For:

Exploring the New Kitchen and Master Bedroom

  computer-generated transcript - may not be 100% accurate

" You know Christine, what is now our galley kitchen was originally a bedroom, another bedroom and a pantry. And you know, we all opened it all up, it's 8 feet wide by 26 feet long."

" That's right, which allows you to have an area for preparations as well as an area to eat in a sandwich."

" Worked really well."

" Alright----"

" What do you think of the architectural design?"

" I think it's terrific. We've got definitely an intense going on here with an in-lay in the floor. A nice 2 X 2 white square----"

" Uhm."

" You see, it repeated again on this terrific ceramic tile on the counter."

" They're all 2 X 2 foot square tile."

" That's right."

" The biggest tiles I've ever used."

" Again, it's used in the backslash here."

" Yeah."

" And also you'll find it in the windows----"

" Overhead, yeah."

" The windows overhead, which will allow light in the bedroom."

" So it's settled but that----that kind of thinking of design and the same format is repeated. That is nice. What about all those white on----white on white, endless white?"

" Again, this is a very good idea because it allows you to accessorize around the white."

" Uhm."

" inside it."

" And it has a mirror on the back of it, which reflects around the room."

" That's right. That's right."

" Yeah."

" And this----"

" What did you do over here?"

" This is sort of fun. Instead of your typical obtrusive radiator where you might opt to cover it with a metal----metal cover----"

" A box or whatever."

" Exactly. What I've done is, I've taken billiard balls, 2 balls and set 4 between the bars----"

" Right in here."

" Glue them in with Epoxy and later nice thick sheeted glass on top where you can just treat it as"

" And of course you guys can clear storey windows above."

" That's right for other collectibles, our storage if you wish----"

" Plants or whatever."

" Uhm."

" That's a beautiful bird cage."

" Uhm."

" What about these light fixtures you got here?"

" This is----this is a nice flush look to the wall, inexpensive, 150 dollars."

" Really."

" It sort of has a bit of an industrial look, which was why I thought of that when I saw the radiator."

" it carries over the radiator with all that kind of hi-tech look."

" That's right."

" Very nice."

 [-]


More Videos »Related Videos

Finished Interior for a Container-Built Home
Finished Interior for a Container-Built Home

The finishing touches are being added to the interior of the home in St Petersburg. The appliances are being delivered and installed. The home features an open plan with a modern design. The kitchen, dining, and living rooms are all one open space. This provides a free-flowing atmosphere where everyone can see each other. The space is made up of two containers and the space between the two containers has conventional framing, which creates a bigger space with a higher ceiling for the living area. Off the central hall are four bedrooms, including a master bedroom with its own dedicated bathroom. There are three additional bedrooms and a spacious bathroom at the end of the hall. Drywall was placed on the metal furring strips and then a wood frame was put in place for the windows. Construction adhesive was used to secure the wood baseboards. The interior walls are faced with DensArmor Plus fiberglass wallboard from Georgia Pacific. When building in a humid environment like Florida, it's very important to use material that is resistant to mildew and mold. DensArmor uses a fiberglass mat instead of an organic face. The fiberglass does not provide a surface for mold to grow. The ceiling has a knockdown texture painted with semigloss paint. The interior walls have a satin finish with an orange-peel texture.

Floorplans and Layout of the Container House
Floorplans and Layout of the Container House

Back on site, Bob joins Ray Price for a look at the ISBU's on their foundations. The total footprint of the house is 58 feet from front to back, or 1,800 square feet in total, with 2 ISBU's on each side. Between them, 7 3/4 inch-wide steel floor joists will run 16 inches on center and be welded on each end to the ISBU's, creating a total steel structure that will then get a plywood subfloor. Price shows Bob the floorplans for this Highland model. It has a front entry that leads to a living room, dining room, and kitchen combination that functions like a great room and family space. A central hallway leads to the back of the house and passes between two bedrooms on the right with a bath between them and two bedrooms on the left, including a master bedroom with its own bath, walk-in closet, and utility room. The single-car garage is built of cement block. The exterior will be finished in stucco like a traditional Florida home, and will match its identical, but smaller, prototype down the block.

Tour of an Affordable Home
Tour of an Affordable Home

Bob and developer John Druley walk through a home under construction by Qualker Homes in Falmouth, Massachusetts. This standard design is used for both the market-priced and affordable homes. The overall dimensions of the house are 26 feet by 36 feet. A center-door entry leads to 13-by-18-foot living room on one side and a 16-by-13-foot master bedroom on the other. The back of the house has a 13-by-18-foot kitchen with a back door and a window onto the backyard, a half-bath and laundry, and an entry to the master bedroom with full bath, tub-shower combination, double-bowl sink, and linen closet. The upstairs has two bedrooms with operable skylights and a full bath. This three-bedroom, two-and-one-half bath Cape will be lotteried as an affordable home to eligible families who make between $29,000 and $65,000 per year, and who qualify for a traditional mortgage. The home is stick-built with traditional 2X4 framing, oriented strand board (OSB) exterior sheathing, low-e glass, tilt-in vinyl windows, and gas heat. Bob and Druley point out that an affordable home must be affordable to operate and heat as well as being affordable to purchase.

Building Reinforced Concrete Storm-Ready Homes in Florida
Building Reinforced Concrete Storm-Ready Homes in Florida

Bob is joined on the site of the Punta Gorda, Florida, storm-ready home by Jim Crain of Precise Forms. Precise Forms partners with Mercedes Builders to create high-quality, reinforced concrete homes throughout Florida. Precise Forms began in 1967 by supplying cast-in-place forms for subterranean foundations and basements. In 2000 they began to set forms for full wall, cast-in-place houses for Mercedes Homes. Once the forms are set, Bob walks through the layout with Jesse Gonzalez of Mercedes Homes. Gonzalez points to window placements that are encapsulated behind the aluminum forms as they walk past view windows in the family area, past the three bedrooms, bath, laundry, and two-car garage of this four-bedroom home with master suite. Mark Newton of Solid Wall Systems joins Bob as the pour begins. He explains that they are using a 2,000 pound psi, small aggregate concrete mix for the entire pour. We watch as the concrete is pumped into the forms, which are braced at the top by two-by-fours that hold the tops of the forms square to prevent movement as the forms receive the static pressure of the concrete. Newton explains that they will vibrate around all door and window openings before allowing the concrete to set. This will help eliminate voids, honeycombing, or any blowout due to bad adhesion or conformity of the concrete.

Related Products & Services Showrooms

Cleaners for the toughest household cleaning challenges
Cleaners for the toughest household cleaning challenges

…becoming clogged with human waste. Bath and Kitchen is effective for most kitchen and bath surfaces, including: ceramic tile, shower doors, sinks, bathtubs, white grout and caulk, toilet bowls, fiberglass and kitchen countertops. It can…

More Content »More Content

Buying Ceramic Tile
Buying Ceramic Tile

Ceramic tile is a natural material, and some types of tile are made from recycled glass (including the products listed below). When buying…

Vinyl over ceramic tile

I want to put vinyl flooring over ceramic tile. Do I have to remove the ceramic tile first? The ceramic looks like it is from late sixties and might have been laid over the original kitchen flooring.

ceramic tile

…proper thinset mortar for your ceramic tile installation will add strength…
…organic mastics adhesives to install ceramic tile to floors. Use a gray thinset…
…latex additive. For installing ceramic tile over vinyl flooring or wooden substates…

ceramic tile subfloor

I have ripped out old ceramic tile from a half bath in my 100 year old house so that I can lay a new ceramic tile floor. Under the ceramic tile was a subfloor which I believe is made of cement…

Browse Topics

Click on a letter to browse content by topic alphabetically.



About  | FAQ  | Contact  | Sitemap  | Privacy Policy  | Terms of Use  | Help

© BobVila.com 2009