I may need a boarder to pay the bills, convenient parking is available at a modest rate.I’m moving in....uh, you got parking, right?
This may help set the stage for the reveal in a day or two. The basement is not under the entire house but is about 2500 square feet. Not counting the storage areas, utility/workshop & stairwells I ended up finishing about 1800 square feet. Bedroom with legal egress windows at ground level, walk-in (walk through?) closet, bath w/shower, coat closet next to main stairs off the oversize hall (not sure what will go there...pinball maybe?) which leads to sliding walk-out door, media room, bar and small kitchen, and of course the billiard room.
I may need a boarder to pay the bills, convenient parking is available at a modest rate.
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Both, the 0ld Brunswick sold before I moved, The Gold Crown III was a great deal but I didn't want to store it for a year, wasn't crazy about the look of it with what I wanted to do and was able to make a nice profit selling. I did stick with a Gold Crown but a different one I found 5 states away. You'll see.
Yes, but was able to incorporate the pillars in the design to hide some them. They mimic some on the main level. One is inside the pillar on the left side of the back bar, one in the pillar one the same side of the opening to the theater area, two that flank the stairs and another within the bedroom wall.Great basement. How many poles were needed to support the house? Are they the small black dots on the drawing?
Tile in the bar/kitchen area, bathroom and the sliding door area (walkout). The rest, about 1100 square feet is engineered hardwood. Most people avoid wood in a basement but if it's dry and you use the right materials it's fine.Very, very nice! What kind of flooring did you use?
Tile in the bar/kitchen area, bathroom and the sliding door area (walkout). The rest, about 1100 square feet is engineered hardwood. Most people avoid wood in a basement but if it's dry and you use the right materials it's fine.
Back at it since I'm stuck at home...finally tearing into the cigar lounge...err, I mean home office.
Sent from the future.
It's actually just Excel. Changed row and column heights and widths to get the cells more or less square, used scale of 3 cells/foot and then just shaded cells to draw walls (1 cell is a wall about 4" thick). Inserted shapes or more shading for furniture.OP,
What software did you use for the layout shown in post #55?
Thanks,
Keith