Casita Chuparosa

February 9, 2008

Architect Responds

Filed under: The Plan — admin @ 12:30 am

Well, one of the two architects we contacted responded on February 7th — this was the one that said he would provide three plans for us to choose from within a few days. He sent one plan. It was nice — but left out several of our main concerns, in particular the stone wall we planned for the front property line.

Like any small Mexican town, Cerro de Ortega has lots of noisy truck traffic — much of it local residents who earn their living with huge trucks that move the local produce (primarily coconuts, but also several other tropical crops like bananas, almonds and citrus) . We don’t want to be awoken at four A.M. when these trucks go to work (they try to get a day’s work done before the hottest part of the day). We need a thick wall, about three meters high, to block out some of the road noise.

Since we will not be living at the site year-round, and it may be vacant at times, a good stone wall will also provide better security. Of course we expect to hire a gardener to take care of our tropical garden when we aren’t there, and a maid to serve the needs of guests when we have rental customers, but still the site itself needs to be secure to ensure it does not get looted by folks who feel they have greater need of our goods then we do. They may be right — but a business that brings in tourists who will spend money in the community will do more good in the long run.

We sent an alternate plan back to the architect, and requested an immediate response because we had plans to go there next week to have that stone wall built, to get the project started. We would prefer to have the architect handle the project — but we need to know he will do it the way we want it done. I’ll let you know if he responds.

January 23, 2008

The Architects

Filed under: The Plan — admin @ 7:34 pm

Over the weekend (Jan 18-20) we went back to Cerro. This time we stayed in the casita, just to see what it would be like, as is. It was a bit like camping. First, we had to chase a bat out, and clean out the pigeon nest. Those big wavy metal laminate sheets that make up the roof are open to the outside — it just sits on top of the walls, so there are plenty of openings for dust and animals. Se we slept inside mosquito netting.

Part of the plan is to put a cement roof on the place, and raise the laminate up seven feet to create an up-stairs patio. The current structure is about four meters wide, and we want to take out at least part of the wall facing the road and extend the building to the front property line, about three and one-half meters out. That would give us space for the bathroom, and living-dining space. In all the finished structure would be about  77 square meters of building, a rooftop patio of about 50 square meters, and a back-yard ground level patio with palapa cover of about 44 square meters.

That is the current plan, of course when we see the cost we might decide to cut back on that some. We contacted two architects to get bids — one said it will take about two weeks for him to get back with plan and cost estimate, the other said his plan should be ready in a day or two. They are to contact us by email.

We came back to Chapala on Sunday, and heard nothing from either of them, so on Tuesday I sent them both emails, to make sure they have my correct email address, and to make sure the junk-mail filter recognizes them as correspondents and doesn’t trash their mail. We will see when (if ever) they reply.

I took several photos, but will have to post them another time.

January 10, 2008

More on the back-yard

Filed under: The Plan — admin @ 11:50 pm

Here is a picture of the existing bathroom, if you can call it that. It is about 5 feet high, divided into two sections, each about one meter wide and two deep. The front is covered by a hanging cloth. The toilet side has the bottom-part of a toilet, flushing is accomplished with a bucket of water. The other side is the ’shower’ though there, again, water is provided by a bucket. The only structural feature of the shower side is a hole in the cement floor to drain the water. The light red brick in the photo is the neighbor’s wall, which forms the back-support.

Existing Bathroom

I call this the ‘duende baño’ or leprechaun bathroom, because you would have to be about three feet tall or less to use the darn thing. The Plan calls for removing the toilet, and cementing in the two drains, removing the brick wall between the two parts, and putting a brick wall over part of the front, plus a door and ceiling, to make a storage shed for garden tools.

Here is a picture showing the neighbor’s good truck, which he parks behind his house on his own property, but uses ours for access, the driveway being through the backyard of our property, which starts a foot or so in front of the truck. They also have a laundry line and other junk there — all just behind the so-called bathroom. There is another house on the opposite side, so measuring from the back of our ‘house’ there is a wall for 14 meters on one side, and 11 meters on the opposite side.

The Neighbors Truck

The Plan calls for fencing in the rest of the property from the ends of those walls around the back, using a typical local method of fencing made from slabs of coconut palm. When the coconut palms are cut for wood, they have to be squared off before lumber can be cut, and the resulting arch-profiled slabs are placed vertically, side by side, to form a solid wooden fence. It is only a few inches thick, but if tall enough will keep the animals and children out of the yard.

Hen and chicks

The above picture is of a hen (I’m not even sure which neighbor it belongs to, though you can be sure they do) that laid her eggs in our backyard, and now has four or five chicks following her about as she forages. These and the pigs one neighbor occasionally has are the animals we want to keep out. The wild squirrels and other natural wildlife we want to encourage. We may even get some iguanas, which are native to the region, and set them loose in the garden.

The humidity is always high this close to the ocean, the rainfall is actually a bit less than we have in Chapala — about 3/4 meter annually is typical. So we will need to have gardener to take care of the plants and water them when we are not there. But with the humidity, it is an ideal environment for orchids, so we plan to have lots of those, which should need little care as they thrive naturally in that humidity.

January 4, 2008

The Backyard

Filed under: The Plan — admin @ 6:49 pm

To implement The Plan, we will first have to find an ‘ingeniero’ or architect, who can evaluate the current structure, and see if it is feasible to work with that, extending it both upward and outwards, or if it needs to be razed to make room for our planned structure. But more about that later. First, I want to show you the back yard:

The current back yard area

The current back yard area

The neighbor who takes care of the place has filled the back yard with his junk, including an old truck. He will have to remove all that. The big tree at the center is a fig tree, and attracts fruit bats when in season. OK, so there was one little bat in the house when we were there, and it is not the fruiting season for the tree.

After the house is structurally complete, The Plan calls for having this whole back yard dug up and screened to remove the stones marble-sized or larger. Those will be used to form footpaths through the garden. Then we will probably have to bring in a truck load of sand, since the soil is fairly heavy with clay. Finally, we will need to add one or two truck loads of organic matter to enrich the soil, or else plant legumes and then cut them down and mix those into the soil.

Here is another image, looking back toward the house:

Here we see the stump of an old coconut-palm Isabel’s father planted, and new palm toward the right. Overhead are a few fronds from the large coconut-palm still remaining, which was loaded with coconuts when we were there. The white ground to the left is an area where the neighbor’s son has been mixing cement, for use on his own building projects elsewhere. We will either have to remove that, or perhaps we will put a little gazebo there, we aren’t sure yet.

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