EXTEND YOUR LIVING SPACE
Get set for winter with heated space for fitness and fun
When COVID lockdowns appeared in Canada earlier this year, the weather was getting warmer, providing at least some opportunity to spend time in isolation outdoors. But with talk of second-wave lockdowns, we face what amounts to another round of house arrest, except with the added burden of a cold, wet, freezing Canadian winter outside to make our social world even smaller. All this is why more and more people are scrambling to extend their indoor living space while they still can, and three approaches are popular.
BASIC BASEMENT FINISHING
Got an unfinished basement? Making this space comfortable is the single most useful thing you can do to increase your household living area, but there are two challenges. First, finishing a basement in the usual way can take months or longer. The second problem is cost. Any full basement finishing is guaranteed to run into five figures. Speed of completion and economy are where a basic approach to basement finishing can help.
Basic basement finishing is a simplified process that aims to deliver all the physical comforts of a fully finished basement, but without a finished appearance. Heat, paint and a comfortable subfloor are the main ingredients of basic basement finishing and you can make it all happen on your own for a few thousand dollars instead of $20,000 or $30,000.
Game plan: Install subfloor panels on all parts of the basement floor you intend to use. DRICORE is the most widely available, they're the best I've seen, and they're made in Canada. Leave these panels bare or paint them. A fresh coat of paint on walls makes them look so much better, and painting the exposed ceiling joists and underside of the subfloor makes a huge difference in how the space feels. Most Canadian furnaces have the capacity to heat the basement as well as upstairs rooms, but only if cold air return ducts are extended so they draw air up from the basement floor.
GARAGE AS WORKOUT SPACE
One of the hardest parts of COVID-19 isolation for some has been that public gyms have either been closed or sufficiently restricted to make them unusable. This is why there's been a run on the purchase of exercise equipment, but that's only part of the equation. Space to use that equipment is also essential, and this is where a garage retrofit can help. So, what has to happen to make a garage your own private exercise space when it's cold outside? A comfortable floor and a little heat will do the job.
Game plan: Install subfloor tiles in a section of your garage to keep feet warmer and more comfortable, while greatly reducing the shock on joints and limbs that would happen if you exercise directly on concrete. The kind of foam-bottomed subfloor panels I recommend for this application can handle more than 6,600 lbs. per square foot, so they're more than strong enough to work out on. A 5,000 watt electric construction heater costs about 75 cents per hour to operate, yet it's large enough to take the chill off most garage spaces during workout sessions.
TOUGH INDOOR PLAY ROOM
One of the challenges of having children indoors at home for extended periods is the household damage they'll probably inflict as they play. You can reduce this problem by designating a decent sized space as an indoor play room.
Game plan: Take down and store pictures and wall hangings, then protect the current finished floor with subfloor panels. For temporary applications like this, panels can even go down over carpet, too.
A little household modification can go a long way when it comes to extending the living space in your home. By all accounts it looks like we're in for a very interesting winter indeed.