THE MARTHA IRELAND COLUMN: Renovation, permit process done after all these years

RENOVATING A PRE-PERMIT home isn’t always a nightmare.

In the spring of 1951, the Ralph R. Cary family poured the concrete foundation for a new home at what is now the southeast corner of Spath and Kitchen-Dick roads, west of Carlsborg.

On Oct. 10 of that year, they all signed a board before nailing it in place, signaling completion of construction.

The Carys were dairy farmers, not carpenters. The home they built was sturdy, but not square.

A year later, another family tacked on a mudroom that was neither sturdy nor square.

No one objected. Clallam County didn’t issue building permits until 1974. Inspections came later.

When my husband, Dale, and I bought the place in late 1988, we figured fixing up the farm would be a 50-year project.

As a licensed general contractor, Dale specializes in small jobs, so we attacked our big project step-by-step.

Replacing the dangerous electrical wiring was the first step. No electrician would mess with an old house during that construction boom-time.

Dale dusted off his skills from wiring mobile homes in the late 1960s and, with some very helpful advice from the state electrical inspector, got the job done.

That electrical permit was likely the first permit ever issued for work here, although our home site dates back to the original circa-1880s Spath family farm.

Our second permit was for a replacement septic system in 2007.

In between, we resided, reroofed, insulated and carried out other renovations and repairs too small to require permits.

All the while, we were kicking around ideas for resolving the house’s major issues without going in debt.

Coming up with an affordable concept took years.

Having plans professionally drawn took two months.

Permit processing would take three weeks, I was told. Sure enough, the permit was ready May 21, 2008 — three weeks to the day after I turned our application in to the county.

Emptying the old mudroom with its sagging, leaking roof and salvaging the beams that supported a crumbling patio cover consumed most of that summer.

Diamond Construction’s excavator handled the demolition in a single day.

The tear-off opened up under-house access, which enabled replacement of all the plumbing, making for drains that drain throughout the house.

Laying a new water line from the well to the house gave us clean water coming in.

The original bathroom became a half-bath, next to a new full bath. The bedroom expanded with a large closet

We briefly slept in our fifth-wheel trailer, then moved to our upstairs guest bedroom.

Rebuilding went fast. The fact that people in the construction trades were — and still are — scrambling for work made it easy to find help when Dale needed an extra hand.

Once Berneking Concrete had the foundation in place, the frame virtually sprang up, with more than a little help from our super-framer son-in-law.

From July 22 to Nov. 25, 2008, county inspectors Tim Taff and Sheila Miller visited eight times.

The multiple inspections seemed excessive to me, until Dale explained they had to inspect before the foundation, framing, plumbing, insulation and such were covered up.

He also credits the inspectors for always being helpful and friendly.

Taff even passed along an “Installer’s Pocket Guide,” illustrating how nails are to be installed according to the universal building code.

Our remodel was essentially complete a year ago, but Dale delayed calling for a final inspection until last Friday, two months and two days before the two-year building permit expired.

On Taff’s final inspection visit, he signed the “fire alarm initiation” and toured the remodel.

Construction is slow, Taff said. The only thing keeping the inspectors busy is the new Walmart store on the east side of Port Angeles.

Walmart’s permit is most of an inch thick, Taff said. He and Miller will be there far more than nine times.

It’s good to have our final inspection done.

In fact, Dale’s finishing up another project. It didn’t require a permit.

________

Martha Ireland was a Clallam County commissioner from 1996 through 1999 and is the secretary of the Republican Women of Clallam County., among other community endeavors.

Her column appears Fridays.

E-mail her at irelands@olypen.com.

More in News

A cyclist rides by the 26-foot sloop that was dashed against the rocks along the Larry Scott Trail on Wednesday due to 30 mph winds from an atmospheric river storm buffeting the North Olympic Peninsula. A 29-year-old Port Townsend man, who was not identified, and his dog were rescued by a Coast Guard rescue swimmer from Coast Guard Air Station Port Angeles. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Storm aftermath

A cyclist rides by the 26-foot sloop that was dashed against the… Continue reading

D
Readers contribute $73K to Home Fund to date

Donations can be made for community grants this spring

Court vacates receiver’s extension

Master lease at Fort Worden deemed to be rejected

Washington College Grant program set to expand with new state law

Support for low- and middle-income families available

Port Angeles to recycle Christmas trees

The city of Port Angeles will pick up Christmas… Continue reading

Agencies partner to rescue Port Townsend man

Rough seas ground sailor on Christmas

Ellen White Face, left, and Dora Ragland enjoy some conversation after finishing a Christmas dinner prepared by Salvation Army Port Angeles staff and volunteers. The Salvation Army anticipated serving 120-150 people at its annual holiday meal on Tuesday. (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
Hundreds served at annual Salvation Army dinner

Numbers represent growing need for assistance, captain says

Jefferson separates prosecutor, coroner roles

Funeral director hired on one-year basis

Public concerned about hospital partnership

Commenters question possible Catholic affiliation

Sylvia White of Port Townsend is making a major gift to the nonprofit Northwind Art. (Diane Urbani/Northwind Art)
Port Townsend artist makes major gift to Northwind

Artist Sylvia White, who envisioned an arts center in… Continue reading

Skaters glide across the Winter Ice Village on Front Street in downtown Port Angeles. The Winter Ice Village, operated by the Port Angeles Chamber of Commerce, is open daily from noon to 9 p.m. through Jan. 5. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Fresh ice

Skaters glide across the Winter Ice Village on Front Street in downtown… Continue reading