For the last couple of weeks, I’ve been writing about many
of the aspects and levels of ‘resilience’ addressed by eco-thrifty design
thinking. One of those articles focused on the peace of mind provided by a
low-energy and low-resource home, and the other talked about the growing global
movement towards resilience to storms: both literally in terms of damaging
storm surges such as Hurricane Sandy in New York, and figuratively like the
damage caused by financial ‘storms’ such as the global financial crisis which
appears focused in Europe.
While examples of resilience can be gleaned from around the
globe and connections can be made to our local context in Wanganui, I do not
mean to overshadow another important component of eco-thrifty design thinking.
There is no reason things cannot be made as beautiful as
they are resilient.
This also gives me the opportunity to thank Terry Lobb for
her kind words three weeks ago when we swapped columns. Terry wrote about the
aesthetics of our $2,500 eco-thrifty kitchen by focusing on a number of key
elements including the cabinets over our hob with their leadlight doors that
reminded her of fantails.
I love fantails, I love those leadlight doors, and I love
where we got them: Hayward’s Auctions. Not only is the weekly auction great
entertainment, but bargains can be had of an eco-thrifty nature: low cost and
high performance. We paid a fair price for the leadlights – about $50 for the
pair – but ended up with a design element in our kitchen that punches above its
weight. In other words, the value we receive from these beautiful doors far
outweighs the price we paid for them.
This is not to ignore, however, the fact that we had to sand
back the wooden frames, and then carefully apply two coats of primer and two
coats of paint. The other thing I had to do was build cabinets to suit them. It
took me nine months from purchasing the doors to realize the cabinets had been
here all along. I just had to remove part of the forest to see the trees.
During the process of turning the old kitchen into the new
bathroom, we had to take down the old cabinets with their classic 1950’s
Kiwi-mint-green doors. While that color is bound to make a comeback one day, it
is not today.
We removed the unit and put in a back room to serve as
miscellaneous shelving. And there it sat until one day, for no particular
reason, I had a vision.
The vision was that by cutting away at the cabinet and
reshuffling some of the bits, this old rimu unit could see new life in a new
kitchen in the same old home. The process was almost exactly like pruning a
tree, a process that also starts with a vision. The series of photos show how
the process unfolded.
First, I removed the Kiwi-mint-green doors and took the
cabinet outside. I carefully measured and marked where I wanted to remove parts
of the old cabinet that was too big for our new kitchen.
Next, I pruned away some off the length.
Then some off the
height.
Then – and this was the hardest part – I had to reshuffle some of the
bits so that the new, smaller doors would be centered on the pruned (smaller)
version of the cabinet.
Like any form of renovation, the work may proceed
slower than building something new because we are forced to work around
pre-existing elements. However, when care and time are taken, the results can
be worth the effort.
Peace, Estwing
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