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Annie Elliott Design, Washington DC

Annie Elliott Design

Greater Washington DC

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Kitchen renovation, Chapter 1: A slippery slope

Annie Elliott | June 16, 2012

Last summer, our back porch started to collapse.

Wardman row house back porch renovation

 “It did not.” (That’s my husband talking.)

“Yes, it did.”

“We could have fixed it.”

“Yes, but we would have been spending money to fix something we didn’t want.”

(Silence)

“John. We talked about needing just a teeny bit more space in our kitchen. Remember? Just enough for a table and chairs?”

Saarinen chairs and tulip table in kitchen
Fiorella Design in Houzz

“Well, yes.”

“Well, if we fixed the porch as it was, we couldn’t have bumped out the kitchen.”

Sunny kitchen in a Victorian house with white painted cabinets and rug
Sheila Bridges in Elle Decor

“Well, right.”

“Well, then.”

“Well.”

Kitchen banquette with windows and upholstered benches, wooden table
Allegra Hicks in Elle Decor

As I was saying, last summer, our back porch started to collapse. This actually was good news, because:

– What I really wanted was a new kitchen.

– But to expand the kitchen one millimeter, we had to rebuild the porch to support it.

– And to rebuild the porch, we had to build out the basement first to support IT.

– And if the porch was already collapsing (“No, it wasn’t.” “Can it, Darling.”), we HAD to get the ball rolling on the whole darn project, because, well, it was a SAFETY issue. (“Sigh.”)

The bad news was that Phase I – the basement expansion and new porch- was going to take about a year and cost a whole lot of money.

Black and white tile floor in Swedish style kitchen
Apartment Therapy

Fast forward to now. I’m pleased to report that we have survived! A bit weary and financially battered, but we survived. I didn’t even drag you through it. I didn’t want to live it; why would you want to read about it?

And now, we begin Phase II: the kitchen renovation.

This, Gentle Readers, is the fun part.

Black and white kitchen with herringbone tile floor
Tommy Smythe in decor pad

Annie Elliott – aka bossy color – is an interior decorator and design blogger in Washington, D.C. She has been quoted in publications from The New York Times to Real Simple and is considered an expert on color, residential space planning, and telling people what to do in the nicest way possible.

Category: Kitchen + bath, Renovation, WallpaperTag: Allegra Hicks, banquette, black and white tile floor, kitchen remodel, kitchen renovation, Saarinen chairs, Saarinen tulip table, Sheila Bridges, Swedish style, Tommy Smythe, wallpapered kitchen

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