June 2011
Time to close the loop on the townhouse sale and move to the condo.
After we accepted the offer on the townhouse on 22 April, our minds immediately turned to the next step — finding a place to live for the next 19 months. Our preference would have been for a small house with a long enough driveway to park the Phaeton. We knew that was a pipe dream though; especially since we had one major criteria for our temporary home — the commute to work had to be equal to or better than our commute from the townhouse. So, we turned our attention to apartments and condos instead.
Finding a place didn’t take us long — just a week. Some might wonder why we rushed into signing a lease. After all, we had all of May before we closed on the sale. We wanted a reasonably priced place, with at least two bedrooms (one bedroom and one den would have worked), assigned parking, storage — and the deal breaker: it had to be on the top floor. We absolutely did not want anyone living above of us. When we found the place that met all of our requirements, we jumped on it.
We’re on the third floor at the far end of and on the backside of this building.
OK, so if you counted the number of floors in the pictured building, you know that there are four not three floors. What happened to our requirement to be on the top floor? Nothing. You see, the condo is a duplex with the main living space on the third floor and the bedrooms on the fourth floor.
This is the side of the building we’re on; corner unit on floors three and four.
the small balcony is a bonus we weren’t expecting to find in a rental.
Secure, underground parking with two assigned spots comes with the condo.
no more snow shoveling to clear the driveway!
We’ve never had the luxury of extra time to move from one place to another. Always before, the transfer happened right around closing. With a month on our hands on this occasion, we took our time. After our cleaning lady did a deep-clean, we started to take the small stuff over to the new place. Whatever we took to the condo was immediately unpacked and put away to reduce the number of boxes that would be laying around once the movers brought the furniture and heavy boxes.
Main Floor — Kitchen and Living / Dining Rooms
Master Suite
Guest Bedroom / Study
The distance from the door of our condo to the elevators is 98 steps (the pedometer did the counting). That’s a lot of steps going back and forth when you’re moving! But we did it. And we achieved our goal of having everything unpacked and in its place by the end of the month.
Is the place perfect? No, but we try not to notice the askew column in the living room, or the other construction details that would not be acceptable were we buying the place. I’m going to miss having color on the walls, but I can live with the contractor egg-shell blahness knowing that we won’t be here forever. It is all temporary. In the living room, we have two too many pieces of furniture, but it beats having to rent off-premises space to store some of the pieces we’re keeping for our “after we’re done being on the road” home. I’m not one to place furniture around the edges of a room and leave the center empty, but that’s what I ended up doing in the guest room; so be it, at least all the computer cords and cables are hidden from view (and the layout gives me space to do my ironing).
Main Floor — Kitchen and Living / Dining Rooms
Master Suite
Guest Bedroom / Study
(note the sofa — we took one of the two sofas out from the phaeton;
a story for another time and blog post.)
Laundry Room and Upstairs Foyer
So what about the storage requirement we had for our new place. The condo came with a separate storage room located near the elevator on the third floor. Mui quickly filled it up with his tools and gadgets. But fear not, we found plenty of space around the condo for the rest of the stuff. It pays to be creative (wink, wink)!
We’ve never been “tub people.” So, Mui built a heavy duty platform over the tub in the master en suite, put up a few posts, and voila. Hidden behind the shower curtain, no one’s the wiser to how we re-purposed the area.
We also found space in the over-sized powder room. We put foot-wide shelves in the 13-inch (33 cm) deep niche that runs along one wall, hung a couple of shower curtains, and voila — the perfect place to store paper towels, extra TP, cleaning supplies, and the vacuum cleaner.
Now you see it; Now you don’t!
All settled into the condo, we're ready to make it our home as we continue the countdown to retirement.
Well, it looks like a penal institution from the outside, but the guts are grand! And who cares, you'll be outta there in the blink of an eye. (The Tool Dude needs a tool belt to complete his ensemble ;)
ReplyDeleteClever! Talk about making every inch count...
ReplyDeleteIt all looks really nice and I'm sure the time left will go quickly. Cute picture of Mui ;)
what a great place to 'lay your heads' for the next year and a bit!..very nice!..are the rents expensive?..ours here is Coquitlam are about $1200-1300 for a condo in our building?..for about 975 square feet?..one parking space..two bedrooms two baths and a storage locker in the basement...
ReplyDeleteYou've done a beautiful job of decorating your temporary home. I was shocked to see the outside of the building. I don't remember anything that big when I lived around there. Amazing!
ReplyDeleteRemarkable! Welcome to your home sweet home. I think it looks wonderful. Need some view shots from the balcony! I bet the folks who live below you are happy you are settled in. :)
ReplyDeleteCheryl, luckily most of the move happened during the day when everyone was at work :-). What was amazing to me is that in a building this size, not once did anyone come to use the elevator :-)
ReplyDeleteAs for view shots from the balcony ... not much of it I'm afraid ... we overlook a townhome community. We'll just have to wait to get on the road to have any views worth taking pictures of. Will happen soon enough :-)
Looks like a great interim place to live.
ReplyDeleteLove your new header picture. That certainly looks inviting. You've done a great job on the condo. Mui is so handy, and remarkably inventive, too! You're making great progress on using the little nooks and crannies, and making things work for you. You'll do fine in the motor home.
ReplyDeleteFotolardan ev çok güzel görünüyor. Boşlukları da iyi değerlendirmişsiniz. Aslında 2 kişi için ideal boyutta bir daire ama baştan büyük eve alışıp ona göre dekorasyon yapınca yeni daire küçükmüş gibi geliyor. -- SIS
ReplyDelete(TRANSLATION OF COMMENT: From the photograph the house looks very nice. You did a good job of making use of the empty spaces. It's an ideal-sized place for two people, but when you're used to and have furnishings for a bigger place, it might seem small.)