STYLE AT HOME contributor Liza Finlay found a way to avoid the dust and chaos of living through renovation: have most of the construction off-site. Check out our slide show of the step-by-step process.
There's something so fanciful about rooftop patios. Morning lattes, martinis at sunset, summer star-gazing, I could go on. But while these are all romantic notions, in reality my third-floor deck had become a repository for draught-ridden petunias and pigeon poop. What I really needed was space -- specifically, my own space, a master bedroom and en suite bathroom that provided both storage and solitude.
Enter contractor, Matthew Costin of Englelake Ltd., in Oakville, Ont., who not only made my dream a reality but also spared me months of plaster dust and a seemingly ceaseless parade of tradespeople by doing most of the work off-site. His gang constructed modules that were air-lifted into place by crane on "delivery" day. A large-scale reno that is not conducted in situ is a new notion that's time has come (no more reno hell? Hallelujah!) and, as you can see, pre-fab has come a long way.
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1 The master bedroom's main dimensions (walls and floor) were constructed in my contractor's heated shop over the winter, when inclement weather brings most reno crews to a halt. Each one of the four walls and the wormed-maple floor (which will be stained on-site) is considered a single module; the modules get dropped into place one at a time by the crane and then snapped together like giant puzzle pieces.
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