Chunking Things

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Curb Appeal

In my efforts to show some 'Before' and 'After' action, I wanted to show our latest curb appeal project.

Before, the house had an "add on" A/C hide right in the center front of the property.  When it was originally installed, I'm sure it hid the unit nicely.  By the time we shopped for this house, the A/C unit installed behind it was a good 6-8" taller than the brick surround.  The hide no longer hid.

During the sale period, before we signed the final papers, that A/C shot craps.  The previous owners had to replace it.  I called them and begged to have it moved to the right side of the house.  They were only willing to pay for the unit, I had to pay the A/C installers and the electricians the price of moving the unit.  Money well spent, I think.  So the A/C hide was empty, unlike in this photo.

I thought it looked really bad and it kind of interfered with the mid-century vibe of the house.  So I went to Lowe's and bought a Bagster.  I figured between the brick and the concrete pad, we could get away with their weight limitation.  You fill the Bagster and then call Waste Management and they come pick it up for a set fee.  Grand total $130 to haul off all the stuff.

Then we went to Harbor Freight to buy a sledge hammer.  My husband came home with two.  A sledgehammer for the brick and concrete removal, and a bottle of Sledgehammer red for the after party.  Did I mention that some friends came for the weekend to help with the project?  A great shout out to some stellar friends:  Tim and Andrea Burgess spent the weekend and helped with the removal of the eyesore.  They went home with the Sledgehammer red.

Once the guys started with the brick chisels and hammers, the hide came down pretty easily.  Our goal was to save enough brick from this structure to fix the side of the built in flower bed on the left side of the front of the house.  The back end of it was removed to mitigate some drainage issues and left open.  So the deconstruction of the hide was brick by brick--trying to save enough for that task.  The guys did great.  They even knocked the mortar off a bunch of the brick, cleaning it for reuse.

Finally, the A/C hide was down and the concrete pad tipped up and removed.  We relocated that to the back yard, it's just a square of concrete so we put it in a low bald spot and put a plant in a large container on that spot.

We were left with a pretty bare spot.  Our solution?  A sego palm.  The previous owner loved his segos and as they pupped, he put the pups in pots.  Our back yard is filled with baby segos and some have grown into pretty good sized plants.

We took one of the good sized ones and transplanted it to the spot where the A/C hide stood.  But first I had to throw 10 bags of topsoil on that place to fill in the trenches from the brick footers.  Luckily, the CrossFit is paying off and I can chunk heavy bags of dirt like a pro!


So here is the 'After' picture of the front of the house.  You can see the sego is smaller/shorter than the other two on the front of the house, but I think it blends in better than that brick A/C hide did.

I'm glad we were able to take that down.  A little power washing and that angled brick column will be as good as new.  I am hopeful that the sego will like that spot and grow well there.  If not, I have more in the back yard!

--  Sandee Wagner

23 comments:

alexa said...

Looks great! I miss palm trees. Y'all are so handy.

Unknown said...

Here in Beaumont, there are palm trees of all varieties. I am pupping them without even knowing it. I need to learn how to separate the segos safely and maybe sell them on Craigslist!!

Anonymous said...


The camels will probably like some new Sago palms growing around the place.

Anonymous said...


Why don't you put a concrete splash-pad in the back yard for the camels?

Sago's. Splash-pad. Sand scattered around everywhere. It'll remind the camels of an oasis (somewhat). They will always call your place home.

Anonymous said...


Now, you need to work on building a garage.

Or you could just convert the carport into an open shelter for the camels.

You could probably start a small business doing remos on old houses and then flipping them for profit.

Anonymous said...


Doesn't look too bad for a house that's 47 years old.

It's just typical late sixties architecture for a house that was built in 1968.

Definitely not something that I would buy.

Anonymous said...


The house may look "mid century" but it wasn't even built until 1968.

Do you write these blog posts with a thesaurus?

Anonymous said...


I would never buy an old used house that was built in 1968, unless the price was so low that it was a giveaway.

The architecture is way too weird for me.

Anonymous said...


Sandra, maybe you can get a job as a house flipper and remo little starter houses like this one.

Anonymous said...


I would never buy a house like this.

Anonymous said...


I would never buy a little starter house like this either.

Anonymous said...


Do you ever shop at Zummo's?

Do you get any discounts?

Anonymous said...


Isn't this Pete's old house?

Unknown said...

Yes!! We bought it from the estate of Pete and Olivia Zummo.

Anonymous said...


Do you ever shop at Zummo's on St. James?

Do you get any discounts?

Anonymous said...


The palms you say you're pupping are called SAGO palm trees. Not Sego's.

Anonymous said...


Do you ever shop at Zummo's on St. James?

Do you get any discounts?

Anonymous said...


I wouldn't live in Beaumont.

Too much pollution and contamination.

Anonymous said...


Maybe you can turn that house into a rental property now that the remo is done.

Anonymous said...


I would never buy an old used house that was built in 1968, unless the price was so low that it was a giveaway.

Anonymous said...


Do you ever see any orbs or ghosts in that house?

Anonymous said...


Do you ever see any orbs or ghosts in that house?

Anonymous said...


I'm afraid of ghosts.