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Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

Posted October 14, 2009 12:01 AM by Mello

When we recently purchased our first home, my husband and I knew the previous owner was a smoker and pet owner. We planned on repainting everything and tearing out the old carpeting. I did a little research online to find out the best ways of getting rid of nicotine stains and smoke and pet odor, which led me to "Krud Kutter" cleaning solution and "Kilz" oil-based primer.

But, I'm getting ahead of myself... upon our final house walkthrough before the closing, we found out that the previous occupants left us a lovely housewarming gift-- an infestation of fleas! We decided on flea bombing the main floor of the house (it's a ranch-style home), tearing up the old carpets as fast as possible, and then hired professionals to spray the whole house. While we saw a few fleas in the following couple weeks, after 3 weeks they were completely gone and we haven't seen any since. Fortunately, we weren't in any hurry to move in right away, as there was a ton more work that needed to be done.

Fast forward through 3 weeks of scrubbing walls, ceilings and floors – and while I highly recommend Krud Kutter and Kilz, I also highly recommend not buying a smoker's house! The cleaner worked quite well, but having to refresh your clean water bucket every 3 foot section of wall or ceiling is not anyone's idea of fun. And just think, the gunk we cleaned off the walls was what ends up in your lungs if you smoke!

After a while, the smoky smell was replaced by pet odor. Turns out the previous occupant wasn't very good at house-training their dog, as there were quite a few stains on the carpets that went right through to the plywood subflooring. After initially cleaning with Ajax, figuring the bleach would help, we ended up scrubbing the heavily-stained areas several times with the Krud Kutter solution.

Unfortunately, one section of the floor just seemed beyond hope; but, after we started using the Kilz primer on other parts of the house, the pet odor smell was replaced by oil-based primer smell, so it's hard to tell if the pet odor will come back to haunt us on some humid day in the future. Goodness knows it would be too late if we put flooring over it, so we're still contemplating replacing 2 pieces of plywood so we don't have to worry about it.

With the initial cleaning completed, we moved on to the kitchen.

Other blogs in this series:

Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 1: Don't Panic

Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 3: Demolition Time

Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 4: Starting to Rebuild

Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 5: Bathroom Remodel

Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 6: Basic Maintenance and Repair

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#1

Re: Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

10/14/2009 5:05 AM

For the price of two pieces of plywood, and some labour I'd have thought it was a no-brainer.
I find that one invariably regrets scrimping on quality. Sometimes you just can't afford the ideal, but for 2 pieces of plywood I'd say go for it.
(Dog piss...)
Del

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#2
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Re: Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

10/15/2009 1:33 AM

If is really stinks it couda bin Cat Piss

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Re: Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

10/15/2009 2:44 AM

In which case I fail to see any problem

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#3

Re: Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

10/15/2009 1:35 AM

I agree with Del.

And even if you can't smell it any future visiting pet's may feel obliged to make their mark too.

Or if someone has a liquid spill ugh...

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#5

Re: Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

10/15/2009 5:41 AM

I agree with the replacement of the 2 pieces of plywood.

But if you come across smaller areas of either dog or cat markings. Natures Miracle deodorizer works wonders. Its available in pet stores. Sometimes Hardware stores carry it too.

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#6

Re: Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

10/15/2009 7:09 AM

Hi Mello,

When my parents were smokers (they've since kicked the nasty habit, thank God), the walls and ceiling use to get a good visible coating of nicotine after about 12 months. Annually they use to clean the walls and ceilings using Sugar Soap, diluted in warm water. The nicotine would virtually just melt away on application of this solution, leaving a wall/ceiling that looked newly painted. Great stuff.

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#8
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Re: Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

10/15/2009 3:07 PM

Sugar Soap

a.k.a.

TSP

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#7

Re: Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

10/15/2009 1:00 PM

My vote is rip it all out and replace it. It is more expensive than cleaning, but in the end will take about the same amount of time. Furthermore it will give you an opportunity to inspect the wiring inside the walls and the plumbing under the floor. I'm renovating my house now and some "short cuts" I have made are about to bite me in the... you get the idea...

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Re: Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

10/19/2009 2:13 AM
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Re: Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

10/19/2009 8:28 AM
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#9

Re: Home Renovation for Newbies, Part 2: Prep Work

10/18/2009 6:15 PM

Sorry for the late response, all, as I have just returned from vacation... we will indeed be replacing the 2 pieces of plywood in question. Figured we're much better safe than sorry-- Thanks for the continued suggestions!

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