Real Estate FYI / Building Our House VII

Building Our House VII

Building Our House VII

25 December 2007 Real Estate FYI 28

As the year comes to an end, we thought it might be a good time for another report on the building of our house in Merida. No, it's not finished yet. Since we started, our architect, Mercedes, has had time to get pregnant and have her baby (Bienvenido al mundo, Rodrigo!), but the house remains unfinished. It isn't scheduled to be finished until the end of February, so this is not yet a cause for alarm.

As we prepared to write this article, we read our last article (Building our House VI). Looking at the photos, even our reaction was "Well, not that much has changed in two months!". And it's true. The broad strokes of building concrete walls, shelving, tejebans, pools and floors has been done for awhile. The last floor finish to be done will be the stone patio between the office and the kitchen, and the stone is set for delivery the day after Christmas. But in general, we are now down to the detail work... what our architects call "the endless end", which we imagine would be fin sin fin in Spanish... a very poetic and valuable expression at this stage.

So what has happened since our last report?

Blinded by the Light

Wandering through our house late one night after working all day, we stepped into the guest bedroom and we noticed light streaming through the window. The streetlight is meters and meters away, but it was shining brightly right into the space that will one day hold a guest bed. We considered buying a BB gun and making short work of the lamp, but decided that would probably not get us off on the right foot with the neighbors. Instead, we talked with the architects the next day and arranged to build a small wall above the roof near the front of the house which would block the light. The architect had a few design suggestions, and the end result is an arched nicho (niche) with a bench in front of it, which not only blocks the light but makes a perfect place to sit and look back at the house we have built. A little problem solved where the solution turned out to be an unexpected gift.

Laundry sinks

The laundry room has been completed (except for paint and actually installing the washer and dryer). We covered the sink with ceramic tile (which we don't particularly like and don't have anywhere else in the house) as we were advised that it holds up the best under cleaning fluids like bleach. We also installed a "Mexican-style" cement sink, as opposed to a "Yucatecan-style" sink. The Yucatecan style sink is rectangular, with a washboard-like surface on the bottom, and it tips to one side. We've seen them in the most remote pueblos and in the laundry rooms of some of the most expensive homes here. The Mexican-style sink is actually two side-by-side sinks, one for soaking and one with the built-in washboard bottom. Who knew? In any case, they were both available pre-made from the same concrete store that makes columns, molding and other pre-cast concrete and cement items. By the way, these cement items are very inexpensive. As we recall, the sinks both cost about $100 pesos (that's less than $10 US).

Iron Men

Our architects hired two different iron workers to work on our house. The doors upstairs facing the patio with the outdoor bathtub were done by one man, who did a markedly sloppier job than the other iron worker. His doors didn't seem quite as well put together, and when he installed his work, he made a lot of unnecessary holes in the walls. Upon observing that, our architects repaired the damage and gave the rest of the doors and windows to the second iron worker. His work has been neat, careful and consistent. In the past two months, he has built and installed bannisters for the inside staircase, the divider between the living and dining rooms and for the stairs next to the pool. He's also built the three arched iron doors leading into the kitchen and dining rooms, as well as the rectangular-paneled doors for the living room and master bedroom, which
are at this moment resting in the pasillo, waiting to be installed. This man is also creating the custom-designed chandeliers (seven of them!) which are going to light the pasillo. Of course, we have now given him a lot more work than he was anticipating, so he's now a bit behind schedule. We're also waiting for Don Martín, the electrician, to actually electrify the first prueba (test) chandelier, install the focos (lightbulbs), and install the chandelier in place to make sure we like the way it looks. If all goes well, the iron man will then proceed to make the other six. If not, back to the drawing board.

Polishing

The floors upstairs (and many of the downstairs floors too) have all been polished at least once or twice. Apparently, there is an ongoing debate amongst Yucatecan contractors about whether to polish or paint first. We elected to begin polishing first, to guard the tiles and white cement against any unwanted staining, not just from paint, but also from general wear and tear and the occasional bat that decides our empty house makes a great cave. The white cement counters in the bathrooms and master bedroom are also being polished, as are the yellow counters and shelving in the kitchen. Even the white cement walls in the bathrooms will be sanded down and slightly polished, then sealed to prevent cracking or staining as much as possible. From what we can tell, polishing is an intermittent and ongoing process. The men use both machines and elbow grease, depending on what is being polished. In the end, those mosaico tiles and the cement surfaces shine and glisten. It is quite a transformation.

Chips Off of Many Old Blocks

A lot of work has been done on the floors in the past two months. The long pasillo which reaches from the front of the house in the garage to the back of the property, has been floored with diamond-shaped areas of grey cement, separated by rows of white chipped stone, called rajuela. Rajuela can be any color; the term refers to the style of placing chipped stones side by side. We ended up using rajuela for the pasillo floor, for the water wall that is the focal point of the swimming pool, and as the backdrop for our Virgen de Guadalupe statue that graces the courtyard fountain. (We found our Virgen on the road from Tulum to Valladolid. It was created by the men who have a roadside store set up at about 15 km inland from Tulum.) The work of creating rajuela is tedious, as the large stones must first be chipped into small pieces, and then painstakingly set into place. The result is beautiful, but we pity the workers who have been doing those rajuela lines in the floor for what must seem like centuries now! Our plain grey cement floors look beautiful with the rajuela delineating the diamond shapes, and they rhyme with the diamond layout of the saltillo tiles in our patio and next to the pool... an unintended but very harmonious effect, if we do say so ourselves.

The Back Forty

After all the tile work had been completed, which included Talavera tiles in kitchens and bathrooms, and mosaico tiles on most floors (in combination with white cement), we took the leftover pieces and created a cement potting table in the back area behind the pool. Hidden from view, this table also takes advantage of unused column pedestals for its base. With the big garden and all the outdoor terraces this house has, we think we're going to put this table and this area to good use.

The area behind the pool is where the pool equipment (regular pool filter, additional saline filter, pump for the pool and pump for the "water wall" fountain that flows into the pool) is now partially installed. We also built two concrete bins in that area for holding and processing compost. All this will be hidden from view from the house but easy to access.

In an informal ceremony last week, we created a sort of monument on the wall behind the pool to the trajabadores (workers) who have built this house. We ordered lunch from a place we've found that delivers great lunches (Burrito Express, 926-7851...try it!). Forty burritos arrived individually packaged and labeled... an easy and tasty solution for serving such a big crowd. After lunch, we invited each worker (there were 33 of them) to put his handprint in black paint on our garden wall, and to print his name underneath. Our architects, our assistant Beatriz and we added ours as well. The result is a line of black handprints on our wall, reminiscent of the ancient Mayan handprints you sometimes find in caves in the Yucatan, and a meaningful tribute to the men (and a few women) who built this house.

The same day, we also planted our first tree. A ceiba tree (which was given to us by our friend Lucy from Selva y Jardin) was planted carefully, far enough away from the wall so it can grow for twenty or thirty years (or more!) without damaging it. Working Gringo sprinkled a few drops of ceremonial Coca Cola on the ground, and we welcomed the tree to her new home. A few volunteer native palms that were hardy enough to have survived the last six months of abañile basura being thrown on them were also dug up and replanted along the wall. It has been many months of rock, tile, dirt and dust, so it was a real pleasure to see a few spots of green going into the back yard.

Kitchen

The island in the kitchen, made of colored and polished cement, has been finished for awhile. Ditto the yellow cement shelving along one wall, and the kitchen counters along the other wall. A few weeks ago, the younger half of our father-son carpenter team came by to get our approval on the kitchen cabinets and discuss the color of the stain. We settled on all that and last week, the kitchen cabinets showed up and were installed. We rushed out and bought handles (at a great store called Jako across from Costco), and we're very pleased with the results. The carpenter will probably finish the installation the week after Christmas. The doors and windows to the kitchen are all made of iron and glass, for maximum visibility to the outside world (and maximum ease of maintenance too). The iron is in (see the first photo in this article), but still needs to get the final coat of paint and to have the glass installed. Once that is done, the walls will be painted, the fan hung, the stove and sink installed (all waiting in the wings for their grand entrance...) and we'll be cookin'!

Appliances

We have purchased a number of appliances for our new house. Thanks to a growing number of U.S. chain stores here in Merida, we've had no problem finding familiar brands from back home. These stores include Walmart, Sam's Club, Home Depot, Sears and Costco. There are also a number of Mexican stores where you can shop for appliances. The most well-known of these is Liverpool. As you can imagine, we've spent a number of hours shopping around and have found the lowest prices at Costco. However, another important consideration is maintenance and repair, so we are careful not to buy a brand from Costco that is not well supported by authorized dealers in Mexico. As it turns out, the only U.S. branded appliances we've purchased are the washer and dryer, manufactured by Whirlpool. Our stove is actually a popular Mexican brand called Mabe. All of our air conditioners, as well as our refrigerator, are made by a company called LG. We had never heard of LG before moving here, but we have come to appreciate the reliability and affordability of their products. Plus, you'll never have any trouble finding someone to service an LG appliance.

What Lies Ahead

There are a lot of things that are partially completed that need to be finished. The largest jobs that lie ahead are the painting, the garage door, the landscaping and irrigation, the stone patio and the chicum finishes.


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We have employed our painter, Isauro, who we have used over the years for repainting the interior or exterior of our former home, Casa del Panadero. He is a very good painter and he and his team are both good at what they do and neat about it. Before we started painting, we asked Isauro for a presupuesto because he is not working under our architects, but directly for us. He walked around our house and measured every wall and ceiling. His final presupuesto came out to about $76,000 pesos, roughly $25 pesos per square meter. We have agreed to pay him based on work he accomplishes, so each Saturday, we go through the house, counting what has been done, and then we pay accordingly. This arrangement seems to be working out well.

Another worker who we wanted to employ directly is Carmelo, the man who did our stone patio at Casa del Panadero. In his case, he is so busy installing over 3,000 square meters of cut stone at the new Yucatan Golf Club, that he said he could only provide the stone. We would have to ask our albañiles to install it. So we arranged for our architect to visit him on the jobsite to understand the process. And the stone will be delivered this week: 40 square meters of it for $32,000 pesos. A lot more expensive than the paint! We're budgeting another $4,000 pesos to install it. We've been told our albañiles earn between $125 and $200 pesos a day, so this is about 25 man-days of installation. Hopefully it will go a little bit faster than that!

The other main job still left to be done are the chicum finishes on the pool, the outdoor bathtub, the bar and the two outdoor cement banquets. Our former home had a plunge pool covered in chicum finish. It is an ancient Mayan technique of mixing white cement with secret ingredients which may or may not include an extract of chicum tree bark, cement, Coca-cola, urine, water and honey. Whatever it is made of, it has a lovely honey color (as compared to the greyish white of plain white cement) and it is especially water resistant. On top of that, it ages really well, developing a lovely mottled patina that we think looks ancient and very rich. That's the good news. The bad news is that there are very few people who know how to make the chicum concoction, and it costs about $25 pesos per square meter as opposed to white cement which costs about $15 pesos per square meter. It's more expensive, but we know it will be worth it.

The garage door has been co-designed with our architect and is being built by yet a third iron man. He has been telling us it will be deilvered any day now for a few weeks. So we suspect we'll see it any day now.

The landscaping and irrigation is a big "to do" on our list. Our architects have a gardener who can come in and dig holes and plant plants. But we need to come up with a general outline of what we want in our garden, and then have the irrigation designed and installed. We plan to plant a few big trees, a big patch of grass and a few palms, heliconias, gingers and bananas to start. Then we'll let the rest grow somewhat, well... organically!

Everything else that needs to be done now is partially done. Some lighting fixtures are in, some plumbing fixtures have been installed. Some white cement walls and mosaico floors have been polished. Some metal and glass doors are installed. Some wooden doors have been refurbished and installed. Some of the kitchen cabinets have been installed. Some of the pool equipment is in. Some of the water system has been installed. Finishing up all these little things are going to drive us crazy for sure. We can't wait to move in, but they don't call it the fin sin fin for nothing. Wish us luck!

 

To read the past progress of our house project, here are the links:

Building Our House VI
Building Our House V
Building Our House IV
Building Our House III
Building Our House II
Building Our House

 

Comments

  • robert 15 years ago

    Hi,
    Very exciting. Do you have any fotos of the cocina? I am designing my colonial home now and love to get fresh ideas. Thanks and buena suerte.

  • Andrew Kash 16 years ago

    I am looking for a contractor in the San Christobal de Las Casas area. The project is a building project that involved a walled complex including a dormatory building, an office building, a store/kitchen/dining room building, and a chapel. Andrewkeatonkash@gmail.com

  • Pocomo 16 years ago

    This is an informative and entertaining saga that I think we all enjoy. But not to your detriment. However, the question remains; it's August, is it soup yet?

  • sabrina 16 years ago

    Thank you guys!

  • John & Dorianne Venator 16 years ago

    In Cancun there are two tile stores you shoud check.

    JOBEN has one store 1/2 way on the way to the airport and their other tile store is at the intersection of Bonapak and Lopez Porteo (spelling?)

    YOU WILL FIND EVERY KIND OF TILE INCLUDING WHAT YOU ARE LOOKNG FOR THERE.

  • sabrina 16 years ago

    hi guys!
    can you tell me where can i find the typical oaxaca tiles in the area of cancun, plase?
    i'm crazy for it! great job and enjoy your hard work!

  • Patti 16 years ago

    Thank you very much for your feedback on the construction. I would also enjoy the contact information for your wrought iron worker.
    A short while back I read an article about a small tile manufacture in Merida. We would like to visit this location while in Merida in January. I did see that someone had asked for the location but I did not get the response.
    I very much enjoy all of the articles published. I read each of them quite intently.
    Keep up the GREAT job........

    Have a wonderful day.

  • Working Gringos 16 years ago

    Yes, we moved into the house in February 2008 and as of July 2008, are still finishing up a few things here and there. We want to get it all done before we write the last installment of our story... which we will do, we promise!

    We started with a small building on a larger piece of land. The building, which was at the front of the property, was a colonial which we renovated. We added on a new house behind the front two renovated rooms. The cost per square foot of the new construction was about $50 US per square foot.

    Our architects were Mercedes Sanchez and Alvaro Cervera. Their contact information is in this article:
    http://www.yucatanliving.com/real-estate-yucatan/how-to-build-a-house-in-yucatan.htm

    We know a lot of realtors... in fact, we have a poll going on right now for the best real estate agency in Merida. We suggest you look at the results of that poll and see who the readership of this website believe are the best realtors in Merida.
    http://www.yucatanliving.com/readers-choice-polls/best-real-estate-agency-in-yucatan-2008.htm

    Good luck in your search for property here!

  • Patti Rogers 16 years ago

    I am reading this article in July 2008. Your article mentions a February completion, I have to believe that this was February of this year.
    i have several questions.
    Did you start from scratch or did you buy an existing building and renovate? What is the total square feet of your home and what was your price per square foot for completion?
    I would love to have the contact information of your architec.
    I know that you have lived in Merida for a while. Do you have a realtor that you would recommend?
    My husband and I are coming to Merida in January of 2009 to look for property. We would very much appreciate any information that you could send our way.
    Thank you, in advance for your feedback.

  • Peregrina 16 years ago

    Hola Amigos:
    It has been a long time since I wrote even though I have occasionally read your articles, however it was last year in September when James came by "Peregrina" you where back at the States and planing to move to your new home by February, did you move in finally?? I was in Merida in March this year attending my sister's health issues and was unable to get in contact with you guys.
    It is summer already, time sure flies I am now planning my trip back to Merida for my "55th" Birthday (3 X Quinceanera + 10 lol); and I want to invite my amigos to come and celebrate with me on September "20th" after 6:00pm, the place of course the famous "Peregrina" my beach front beauty in Chelem, you can also check out our new addition "La Chichi".
    I sure hope to see you there and really enjoy a good time, remember "mi casa, es su casa"
    p.s. Great articles thanks again for keeping us update, by the way do you have any comments regarding "red tide" in Chelem, is it going away?

  • Anita Saganich 17 years ago

    Hello wonderful people, we need help. We are in San Cristobol Chiapas currently and have a home in Chuburna. It is one street off the beach and has been all redone (what they say is Americanized. It is one bedroom (huge) we have a sitting room and queen bed, two antique roperos, loveseat, recliner... you get how big. Living room, dining room, kitchen, new back porch, new concrete roof, instant-on gas hot water heater and brand new baño.
    WE NEED TO SELL! My health has never been good, but now it is horrible. We are asking $55,000 USD but will consider an offer today! It is completely furnished, pans, dishes, brand new fridge, stove, bed and washing machine. It has a new tinaca, pozo, and storage in the back yard. It has been updated with screens, antigue doors, etc. Please help us to sell the place we love and are crying about now.
    The most important part is the neighbors. We have several American, Canadian and Hispanic couples that are the lifelines you need when you are new to a foreign country. The address is Calle 7A #332A. The house is blanco y violeta off the Huanchanango exit from Chelem to Chuburna. Walk around and then call the number on the notice. Our phone number is 999.215.7558 and there is another number listed at the house if you go out to see it.
    In Christ´s Love,
    Anita & Ricardo Saganich

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