With more free time on our hands than ever, and most of it spent in the comfort of our homes, people are seizing the opportunity to renovate their houses. But not everything that looks simple, yet splendid on those countless craft videos on YouTube, is so in reality. In fact, oftentimes it goes quite to the contrary.
From renovating and realizing you just removed a load-bearing wall and putting a nice decoration over the toilet only for it to drop all over, to felling cabinets as if there was some meteor shower, these are some of the most “thank god, it’s not me” home improvement efforts.
Have you had some renovation disasters similar to these? Hit us in the comment section below!
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DIY Fail
There are seemingly an infinite fountain of readily available resources to help do-it-yourselfers, such as books with step-by-step instructions and online how-to videos. In the past five years, the demand for such videos has boomed since most people have realized it’s easy to save some bucks handling cosmetic improvements alone. Those who tried and succeeded have gone on to more complex endeavors like installing tiles or replacing countertops.
And with so much free time on our hands, more and more people are willing to try out and undertake home projects that they feel comfortable with. The last part is crucial, since making a spontaneous decision when you haven’t a single clue on what you’re about to be doing is a red flag that you may be better off without doing it yourself.
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ngl, but the pattern is cool (to me, and maybe some others)
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To avoid renovation disasters that are unfortunately all too common, Bruce Irving, an independent renovation consultant and real estate agent from Cambridge, Massachusetts, suggests not rushing renovations if you just bought a new house. “Learn its flow, where the groceries land, where the laundry wants to go, how the sun hits it, where the choke points are, which way the rain slants, even get a sense of its soul,” he argues.
A Friend Sent Me This Picture Today
"Wife went to get the Christmas tree from the attic. Told her not to step on the drywall. She later admitted she didn't know what drywall was"
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The second crucial thing is being realistic about the renovation budget. “If you don’t have the funds,” cautions Irving, “cut the job back. If you happen to beat these projections, then your surprises are happy ones.” A good rule to follow is to always add 20 percent to what you think the project will cost, and make sure that it will very likely take much longer than you initially realize.
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Sometimes things are better entrusted to pros. “You are about to spend more than you ever thought possible. It might as well be for a correctly-designed thing,” Irving says. Hiring an interior designer or an architect from the start will prevent you from making bad decisions that will cost you too much to fix.
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Here’s another tip. No matter how much we’d like to think we know things best, there are things that we truly have no idea about, and it’s fine. Realizing that asking questions will make the process smoother and more efficient is another simple trick to make your renovation work. Pretending that you know stuff, like reading blueprints, is not an option, especially when it’s you who are paying the money.
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However, changing things around as you go with remodeling is also a no-go. Sticking to the plan, listening to the pros, and trusting your gut are things that should guide you through the process no matter what. Don’t let yourself get carried away by some way nicer paint for the kitchen walls, because there are always better things out there.
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Got Up In The Middle Of The Night To Get A Drink Of Water, And When I Opened The Fridge The Door Fell Off In My Hand
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Slipped In The Shower, Landed On The Toilet
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Contractors did the same thing on my moms house - they did actually cut a hole and then covered it with tar paper and placed the vent elsewhere!
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I get that a lot of these are at home folks that just made a silly mistake, but when professionals screw up that badly is kind of infuriating.
Those painters are incredibly stupid! You don't "forget" to cover the floor before painting. They just didn't care
They "repainted" our doors and trim before moving in. Spray painted the built in wall speaker because they were too lazy to take off the face plate. Also painted over a light switch. Again, don't hire the cheapest workers!
You mean your new timber floors? An apprentice I imagine without any training?
Oh NO!! Their poor paychecks just got slashed in such a bloody way.
I'm a painter, I have done that I kicked a gallon of paint over on carpet, if you have a shop vac handy and a bucket of water it can clean up pretty easily as long as it's not white carpet.
Load More Replies...How were they painting? Were they throwing it at the door from the other side of the room?
Airless sprayer. It's a very common technique amongst commercial painters.
Load More Replies...Been Waiting 6 Weeks For A Rather Expensive Toilet So We Can Fit It At A Client's House, It Has Finally Arrived
Cabinet Fell Off The Wall While I Was Out. Handmade Dishes I've Collected From Little Shops And Farmers Markets Over The Years, Now Shattered. I Guess It's Fine I Don't Have Dishes Anymore, Since The Cabinet Knocked Open The Fridge Door, Ruining All My Food
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Good Morning
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So today I learned there are a crap load of lousy contractors in this world....
And stupid homeowners. Who doesn't check if a wall is load bearing before they start bashinig?
Load More Replies...i remember cursing my cat after seeing her little paint covered paw prints all over the floors in my house--i was painting and she had stepped in the container i had the paint in---walking around trying to scrub the paint from floor--cursing her every second----i then turned around to see my own paint covered footprints all over the place---ooops--- ihad a written apology for her the day after
The house I rent at the moment is a nice house, but very cheaply made. I can already see the GLUE peeling off where the kitchen cabinets are attached. It's only a matter of time before something like this happens and it's terrifying. :|
You might actually be okay, but might want to take your dishes out and check for screws. If I remember correctly, it's not uncommon for installers to use a quick setting tacky glue on the wall to help stabilize the cabinets as they set the screws into the studs.
Load More Replies...Surprised to see so many examples of poor construction and wondering if contractors who did those installations can be held accountable in the US. They can in my country, but it usually means a long and extenuating court process.
Yes. They are accountable. In some *states* in the US, it's relatively easy. The hard part is getting their signatures on paper to prove they were ever in your house. (Looking at you L---'s).
Load More Replies...Years ago I had a fire alarm that went off in the middle of the night. Obviously I woke up and thought there was a fire, checked everywhere, sniffed everywhere but after two hours I couldn't find anything and went back to sleep. A few days later it happened again, same thing at night without any fire or anything. I changed the battery and thought that it must have been because of that. About a month later I came home from work to find my fire alarm activated - again without any fire. My land lord eventually replaced the fire alarm with a new one and it has been fine since then. That horror from waking up twice in the middle of the night like that was awful.
The coldest overnight temperatures tend to occur just before 5AM, the extra stress due to thermal cycling (expansion and contraction) can be what sends something over the edge.
Load More Replies...As a kid i did 2 crappy things while home working. Once i was trimming bushes with an electric chainsaw, suddenly it was not working anymore: i had cut the cord of the chainsaw, stuck in the branches. OK! And the one my father is always reminding me at family gatherings is when he was doing plumbing stuff while i was painting a room. I needed some water to rinse a brush, the water was off so i turned it on and heard: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH! He took his revenge by dropping a 150/200kg cast iron radiator on my thumb while he was lifting it so i could put the feet under it. I had a pride thumb(every color of the rainbow) for a while and then my nail fell off. And he indirectly electrocuted me when i was maybe 7 because he took off the light switch of the main room for days and i switched it by habit, touching bare wires. Carpeting was a bad trend, but glad this room was carpeted, i was just very shocked and deezy for a while (and my brain have 5G since 1993).
This post has given me an irrational fear that my kitchen units could give up the ghost at 3am and scare me half to death (especially as I live in a bungalow so kitchen is only 1 room away from my bedroom!
Most of these are just poor quality construction. Cheap and crap materials seem to be the norm in the U.S, apparently. I live in a country that's prone to earthquakes (real ones, not those 5-something richter most people freak out about), and during the last one in 2010 (8.8 richter), none of the furniture attached to the walls even moved, even though the house itself was shaking like a fckn blender. So, yeah, all those cabinet /ceiling /floor mishaps are probably due to the crap construction with drywal (wtf???) and the use of some types of glue instead of nails or screws.
The ceiling ones weren't crap construction though, most of the world agrees that a ceiling shouldn't actually support the weight of a human, that's why there are beams to walk on up there.
Load More Replies...So today I learned there are a crap load of lousy contractors in this world....
And stupid homeowners. Who doesn't check if a wall is load bearing before they start bashinig?
Load More Replies...i remember cursing my cat after seeing her little paint covered paw prints all over the floors in my house--i was painting and she had stepped in the container i had the paint in---walking around trying to scrub the paint from floor--cursing her every second----i then turned around to see my own paint covered footprints all over the place---ooops--- ihad a written apology for her the day after
The house I rent at the moment is a nice house, but very cheaply made. I can already see the GLUE peeling off where the kitchen cabinets are attached. It's only a matter of time before something like this happens and it's terrifying. :|
You might actually be okay, but might want to take your dishes out and check for screws. If I remember correctly, it's not uncommon for installers to use a quick setting tacky glue on the wall to help stabilize the cabinets as they set the screws into the studs.
Load More Replies...Surprised to see so many examples of poor construction and wondering if contractors who did those installations can be held accountable in the US. They can in my country, but it usually means a long and extenuating court process.
Yes. They are accountable. In some *states* in the US, it's relatively easy. The hard part is getting their signatures on paper to prove they were ever in your house. (Looking at you L---'s).
Load More Replies...Years ago I had a fire alarm that went off in the middle of the night. Obviously I woke up and thought there was a fire, checked everywhere, sniffed everywhere but after two hours I couldn't find anything and went back to sleep. A few days later it happened again, same thing at night without any fire or anything. I changed the battery and thought that it must have been because of that. About a month later I came home from work to find my fire alarm activated - again without any fire. My land lord eventually replaced the fire alarm with a new one and it has been fine since then. That horror from waking up twice in the middle of the night like that was awful.
The coldest overnight temperatures tend to occur just before 5AM, the extra stress due to thermal cycling (expansion and contraction) can be what sends something over the edge.
Load More Replies...As a kid i did 2 crappy things while home working. Once i was trimming bushes with an electric chainsaw, suddenly it was not working anymore: i had cut the cord of the chainsaw, stuck in the branches. OK! And the one my father is always reminding me at family gatherings is when he was doing plumbing stuff while i was painting a room. I needed some water to rinse a brush, the water was off so i turned it on and heard: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH! He took his revenge by dropping a 150/200kg cast iron radiator on my thumb while he was lifting it so i could put the feet under it. I had a pride thumb(every color of the rainbow) for a while and then my nail fell off. And he indirectly electrocuted me when i was maybe 7 because he took off the light switch of the main room for days and i switched it by habit, touching bare wires. Carpeting was a bad trend, but glad this room was carpeted, i was just very shocked and deezy for a while (and my brain have 5G since 1993).
This post has given me an irrational fear that my kitchen units could give up the ghost at 3am and scare me half to death (especially as I live in a bungalow so kitchen is only 1 room away from my bedroom!
Most of these are just poor quality construction. Cheap and crap materials seem to be the norm in the U.S, apparently. I live in a country that's prone to earthquakes (real ones, not those 5-something richter most people freak out about), and during the last one in 2010 (8.8 richter), none of the furniture attached to the walls even moved, even though the house itself was shaking like a fckn blender. So, yeah, all those cabinet /ceiling /floor mishaps are probably due to the crap construction with drywal (wtf???) and the use of some types of glue instead of nails or screws.
The ceiling ones weren't crap construction though, most of the world agrees that a ceiling shouldn't actually support the weight of a human, that's why there are beams to walk on up there.
Load More Replies...