"In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." –John 16:33

Year: 2021 Page 1 of 2

First Mexico house goes on the market!

The first house in Mexico is not converted to four (soon to be five) apartments with just the flooring, interior work, and some external doors to go. We put it on the market yesterday. You can see the offering here. The page will be updated with interior pictures as soon as the finish work is complete. We have our eyes on a couple of places for our next project if this one sells pretty quickly.

Retirement PhD: Article 2 submitted

I submitted article number 2 last night which should turn into the second third of my dissertation. It had to do with the release of the GRIME2 software package as a free, open-source application with commercial-friendly licensing. I have now started work on my third and final article. When I have three, then my dissertation research is complete and all I have to do is accumulate them into a dissertation. Of course there are other procedural, exam, and classes to be completed but it is a great milestone.

New blog header (San Pedro)

I changed the header to the blog this morning. The image is of the City of San Pedro Garza Garcia where we have our house. The location of the house we plan to remodel and keep is about a quarter of the way up the left side of the mountain in the middle of the image. San Pedro is to the left of the mountain and Monterrey is to the right. The mountain is 6788 feet high. We should be able to post some new images in the next couple of days of the work Lynn has completed on first house we purchased that we plan to put on the market within the next month or so.

Casa Mexicana 1: Extended facade

The end game for the remodel of the first house has really begun now. The final parts of the facade are a wall that rises to the level of the house to the left in the image to the left, large numbers for the street number of the building, and accent lighting for the numbers, pointing upward from below and pointing downward from just above the top windows.

Work is going on in earnest inside the house, too. The picture to the right shows the state of the walls inside the house. Plastering has started and our builder (and Lawyer), Lynn, has promised us pictures in the next day or two of progress that should give a better image of what we can expect for the final appearance of the house. The idea about what we are going to do with the building after the first phase is complete is still in a state of flux. We hope to have a much better idea of the possibilities within the next month or two.

Casa Mexicana 001: Progress accelerating

Torre T.op.png

We were looking at our map and browsing the internet and determined our house up on the hill in San Pedro Garza Garcia is only four miles from the largest building in Latin America (Torres Obispado) and a little over seven miles from what was the largest building in Mexico (Torre KOI) before that. I think we can so the both of them from the house on the hill but I am going to confirm that with Lynn, my brother-in-law and our contractor and lawyer or my artist brother-in-law Lauro who has promised us a couple of pieces specifically for the house that we can add to our collection of his work.

Lynn is our partner in this enterprise. It cannot be overstated how much it has helped us that at he is both a practicing lawyer and the owner of a construction company. He has deep connections in the kind of subcontractors and laborers as well as knowledge of the local economy and opportunities in the specific neighborhood where we are planning to continue this work. The economic realities in San Pedro are just as complicated as they are in the USA. Lynn has the finger on the pulse of raw material and labor prices, knowledge of what is a good deal and, more importantly, what is not, when to buy, when to sell, and about every other aspect of doing anything to do with real estate in his part of the world. We are glad to be in business with him. You can see his picture in front of the apartments to the right.

Work continues on the house on the apartments. The current schedule has the transition from work on the apartments starting in late December or early January. A couple of images of the current state of construction of the apartment transition below.

Ongoing work on the facade at the front of the apartments
The patio at the back of the apartments

A little more calmness and a tentative retirement plan

Life has been somewhat crazy since we left Centralia six months ago, but we have hope that the pace of change is slowing a little. The Texas house is getting organized, fall classes are in full swing, and the kids have already bought their airline tickets to come home for Thanksgiving. My countdown clock for retirement is well under a year now, but the definition of retirement is changing rapidly. With the current state of world affairs, the wildly interesting things I am doing at work that actually could contribute at some non-insignificant level to the precision, repeatability and velocity of biological research, a similar story for the research on which I contribute at University of Nebraska, the added benefit associated with making money rather than draining retirement savings, and a desire to do something rather than nothing in my retirement, God willing and the creek don’t rise, I hope to be at this for a few years more. I am considering the idea of staying on at work until I finish my degree. Hopefully, that will be around the end of spring semester 2024. After that all bets are off, but with my current mindset, maybe I will continue both my UNL research and to consult part time at my day job.

Casa Mexicana 002: We closed and have the keys!

The front of the house from the street
Looking across the street from the front of the house
A partial view from the back balcony

Lorena and I have been excited about this house. It is in a very quiet neighborhood up on a hill with just spectacular views. We cannot wait to take some pictures at the right time of day with the entire panorama. It is small enough that there will not be a lot of maintenance that needs to be done. We have a ton of things we want to do and, thankfully, there is not going to have to be a wholesale restructuring of the house like Casa Mexican #1.

Casa Mexicana 001: Getting ready for the facade and plants

Our builder, Lynn Neri, tells us there are going to be major changes in the appearance of the exterior of the house over the next 2-3 weeks. The area of the images marked in red is open to the soil in front of the house. A planter or two and a couple of trees are planned for that area. Tile for the entire facade of the house is scheduled to start this Saturday. I am not sure exactly what Lynn has in mind for the tile, but I am pretty sure it will create some pretty dramatic changes. After that, the clean-up and finish work required for the interior of the house is really minimal and should take only another 2-4 weeks. When the exterior is cleaned up and while we are still working on interior finish work, plumbing, and wiring, we will put the house on the market and start thinking about the next project.

Retirement PhD Fall 2021 Update

A colleague of mine, John S., has joined me to start his PhD in Natural Resources Science at University of Nebraska. He is a highly skilled software architect and an image processing application development expert with decades of experience. He is less than ten years younger than I am so I am sure the average age of the PhD students in our department has gone up a good chunk. We will be doing a hydrology independent study class together and his research will extend some of the stuff I have already started. Honestly, his programming skills are broader and deeper than mine so he will be a huge addition to the program. I am really looking forward to working with him.

As for me, I will be two credits short of half way complete (will have 43, need 90) after fall semester. After that, I have four more classes to take, research to perform, comprehensive exams, and a dissertation and defense and I am done. There is some chance I can get this all done by the end of Fall 2023, God willing, but it will probably be Spring 2024 if I am being realistic. I am still really enjoying it, but have been disabused of any notion that I want to wallow in the petty politics of academia and especially in academic publications. That being said, I really enjoy writing and hope to continue to contribute scholarly work through Troy and his colleagues at UNL if/after I graduate.

Casa Mexicana 001: Changes, front and back

Front of the house — before

Front of the house — after (so far)
Back of the house — midway through the process
Back of the house — after (so far)

Casa Mexican 002: A house to keep

Lorena just signed the contract to buy the house with the red circle around that features four arched windows. It is in the Monterrey area and we are very excited about it. We really liked the first house we purchased, but this is a category difference from the first house because of the spectacular view and proximity to very steep hillsides where it will be difficult for anyone to build. Because this is a house where we believe we would really like to stay and spend the time and effort to make it, God willing, the way we have done with previous homes, we hoping to keep this house. I will put up more pictures when we have some.

I might mention that I am using the “royal” we as Lorena is actually owner of the house and signer of the papers.

Casa Mexicana 001: The facade is almost ready for finishing

It is difficult to explain how much work has gone on in the house infrastructure, but Lynn has been very hard at work. We are hoping for completion of the house–actually conversion to apartments within less than six months, keep in mind this is a part time project for Lynn. We are very, very pleased with the progress. In the meantime, we are working on purchasing house #2 and it is not a house we plan to flip. We want to keep it.

Casa Mexicana 001: Stairs to the first floor

Lynn has made great progress on the house over the last several weeks. Most of the internal infrastructure (plumbing, electrical, support structure) is complete and now the final structural elements are coming into place before the face of the house will start looking much more modern. The stairs on the right lead to the second floor of the house from the sidewalk. There will be a sister set of stairs to the to the left that will lead to the first floor of the house from the sidewalks. Most of the openings in the front of the house that are not blocked in will be windows. Notice, there will be no balcony on this (the street) side of the house which adds quite a bit of extra internal space.

Casa Mexicana 001: Rebuild starts after tear down

The tear down is complete, all the interior structural work is done, and Lynn has started to rebuild. Notice that he has reclaimed what used to be an exterior balcony on the second floor and a porch on the first floor to increase the interior floor space of the house. There is a ton of plumbing for new bathroom and kitchen locations, adjustment of walls to add less invasive and easier to access stairways, and removal of interior walls to improve the layout. Next will come the front exterior which should change the street appearance in its entirety.

The house is packed and we are ready to go

We sold our house, packed all our earthly goods, and are ready to load it on the truck so we can leave for our new house in Texas. We thought we would have been closed on the house in Texas by now, but the house was not ready on the date promised by the builder. They promised that it would be ready yesterday and that might have actually happened, but we are not sure about it. Nevertheless, we have an inspector lined up for next Tuesday, our real estate agent lined up to do a final walk-through on Wednesday, and a closing lined up with the escrow agency on Thursday. We just hope we can get to Texas in time to sign for the closing by 4:30 on Thursday and then all we have to do is wait for the truck to arrive with our stuff between May 3 and May 5. Excited to get this done!

Moving to Texas

Home

We are on the move again. One of the things for which I am most grateful is the opportunity Lorena and I have had to live in lots of interesting places in the United States and Mexico. It would have been nice to do that around the entire world, but the USA has been good to us. Giving the kids the perspective that there are lots of nice people in lots of nice places. We enjoyed our time in Washington a LOT–especially the apples and the people. We very much look forward to Texas–we love the people and the culture of friendliness there, but will still buy Washington apples. God willing, we will be living in Texas by mid-May.

Casa Mexicana 001: Empezando con limpieza

Lynn esta llegando al fin de la demolición en la casa y, después de cortar unos agujeros para instalar escalares, esta limpiando escombro para poder empezar en construir cosas en espacios nuevos que son mas abiertos. Aquí están las ultimas fotos de demolición antes de empezar la reconstrucción.

Aquí se esta cortando un espacio para construir una escalera
Qui esta el plan de la escalera nueva
Esa área antes estaba toda dividida entre paredes

Casa Mexicana 001: Starting the cleanup

Lynn is getting to the end of the demolition in the house and, after cutting a few holes for things like stairways, is cleaning out the debris so he can start building new things in the new, more open spaces. Here is the last set of demolition image before the building starts.

Cutting a space to build a new stairway
The plan for the staircase
The wide open area that was once full of walls

Casa Mexicana 001: Demolición

Read in English

El plan es de convertir la casa para una sola familia en un edificio con cuatro departamentos para estudiantes. Se empieza con demolición. La idea es de convertir el balcón y la entrada de abajo a unos espacios adicionales que están adentro de la casa. Después, unas escaleras, paredes, y otras estructuras permanentes tienen que estar derrumbadas para acomodar los cuatro departamentos estudios con baños, cocinas, roperos, salas, y ventanas con luz natural para cada uno. Con este fin en mente, el paso de demolición ha empezado.

Área debajo del balcón tenia que estar bajado porque había un paso por arriba pasando de adentro de la casa.
La misma área después de que el escombre ha estado quitado.
Esta es la escalera interior que fue destruida–observe la vieja silueta del escalón en la pared posterior.
Escalera temporal.
El inicio de la demolición de la cocina.
La cocina después de la demolición.
Llevar la cocina a la calle fue un trabajo duro.
Más trabajo de limpieza de la cocina.
Los escombros se llevan a la banqueta enfrente de la casa donde un camión de servicio de la comunidad los recojerá.
Cargando el escombro al camión.
Un camino lleno de escombro.
Estado actual de la casa.

Mexico house 001: Demolition

Leer en Español

The plan to convert the single family home into a four unit student apartment building starts with demolition. The idea is to turn the balcony and the lower entry area into additional inside space. After that, stairways, walls, and some other permanent structures must be demolished to accommodate the plan for four studio apartments with bathrooms, kitchens, closets, living rooms, and windows with natural light for each of them. To that end, the demolition stage has been started.

The area beneath the balcony had to be lowered, because there was a step up from inside the house.
This is that same area after the broken concrete is removed.
This is the inner staircase that was destroyed–notice the old step silhouette on the back wall.
Temporary stairway.
The start of the kitchen demolition.
The kitchen after demolition.
Taking the kitchen refuse to the street was hard work.
More kitchen cleanup work.
The debris is moved to the sidewalk in front of the house where a city service truck and crew come to take it away.
Loading the truck with debris.
The loaded truck.
Current state of the house.

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