The Yellow House Project

The Yellow House Project The Yellow House was built in 1897. Having not received Heritage status, it was up for demolition as part of a condo development.

We have used the act of saving this house to force City council to discuss bylaws aimed at saving liveable homes.

πŸŽ¬πŸ—πŸ‘πŸ“†
03/09/2023

πŸŽ¬πŸ—πŸ‘πŸ“†

0 Likes, 0 Comments - on Instagram: "1.5 years of work in 90 seconds! From rushing to tear the roof off of Yellow House in Esquimalt ..."

We've started something! Follow Renegade Homes for the completion of the Yellow House project & projects to follow! ;
03/09/2023

We've started something! Follow Renegade Homes for the completion of the Yellow House project & projects to follow! ;

Renβ€’eβ€’gade
An idividual who rejects conventional and traditional behaviour, parties or institutions. "She regaled him with stories of pirates & renegades of the high seas."

HiπŸ‘‹ We are Renegade Homes, welcome to our Instagram page! We are a consulting service outfitting people with upcycled & affordable character homes meant for demolishment on Vancouver Island. We focus on houses on Lekwungen Territories aka Victoria's greater regions, where houses are sent to landfills to make space for real estate development.

OUR STORY

My partner, Dave, and I Mandalena, moved to Esquimalt back in November of 2018 from East Vancouver. We are both born and raised in Vancouver but when rent became ludacris, we tried to drum up innovative housing options. We had to abandon the city in the process.

So we packed a Uhaul, boarded the ferry, crossed the straight and started renting what we lovingly call The Yellow House off of Nelson Street. The house, which was built in 1897, was owned by developers at the time who bought the neighborhood with the intent to demolish all the homes and replace them with condominiums. Nelson st was located in the heart of a low income area with a number of transition homes on the block which got completely overlooked and uncared for during the development process. (Tbc)

We were handed the keys to Yellow House at the end of a long cold moving day, and there's no electricity or heat. So with a candlelight and a large blanket I walked about the rooms and saw: endless ceilings, ornate doors and k***s, original carved wood, grain filled fir floors with 100 year old lines. The smell of a helluva lot of history. The immediate feel was that this house is exquisite & strong. An underdog. That night I promised it would not be torn down to become landfill collection.

Here we are 4 years later with Yellow House at our seaside space on the Southern Island. It was an outright battle to get her here - inclusive with uncooperative developers and uninformed building inspectors. Our saviour was the community, lobbying, and becoming experts on the process.

Please stay tuned for the completion of Yellow House & our projects to follow!

RH

Well gang we finally got our permitsπŸŽ‰πŸ‘πŸ› πŸ˜ˆ (it's an absolutely hilarious/painful story)and are now in pursuit of tradespeo...
07/11/2022

Well gang we finally got our permitsπŸŽ‰πŸ‘πŸ› πŸ˜ˆ (it's an absolutely hilarious/painful story)and are now in pursuit of tradespeople to start the foundation, and once the house is lowered on foundation, the roof. The timing of this article couldn't be better -- way back I tried to put together an all woman crew for the Yellow House project only to find one great local female plumber (yay butπŸ”). It is really hard to find women in the home construction sector and I know we all know why. So -- know any women in the trades interested and available to help build our foundation and roof? It's a unique project and we promise a great work environment. Please DM or email [email protected]

Thanks folks! Here we go!🏁
M✊️

An Ontario roofer has assembled an all-female team of skilled tradeswomen from across the country, and they're leading a united call for better support and recruitment of women in their field.

Well.. it has come to this. Hang on because this is going to get bureaucratic and frustrating, but we find sharing the p...
06/03/2022

Well.. it has come to this. Hang on because this is going to get bureaucratic and frustrating, but we find sharing the process with the community is one of the best ways forward. Especially because this project is not only a personal one, but it is meant to be replicated as an affordable housing option supported by local municipalities chalk full of sustainability.

It has been 7 months since we submitted our building plans with the CRD, the first time. 7 full months. We need the permit to start putting the foundation down and the roof up so Yellow House can stop living in the air and we can start living in our home. On Wednesday my partner, Dave, and I moved into a trailer on our property because we have run out of insurance money from the fire that took our previous home 2 years ago. We're now waking up to seeing Yellow House up in the air, physically and metaphorically, everyday -- and it's enough.

This is an extreme amount of time to be waiting for a straightforward building permit, no rezoning etc. that one could expectto complicate things a bit more. Back in October 2021, we checked off all requirements for our building permits listed on the CRD website (and online application guide) and then some, including a geo tech report, an engineer's report, architect's drawings, a septic report, a few other items we spent weeks obtaining and still aren't sure if they were necessary. We have been pleading to speak with a building inspector since October to go over what additional documents are required, to zero avail. Like, they are avoiding us.

The CRD went thru a riggamarol of inspectors since the fall - the first one who looked at our plans back in October and did not like them stating we needed a New Home Warranty, which was wrong, left. His mistake cost us months of delays, and thousands of dollars. The CRD did not replace that building inspector until a few weeks ago, and relied on contract inspectors who worked 2 days of the week. They were not available to us. The more frustrating part us the former head of inspections for the JDF district, who we talked to several times leading up to this project, was perfectly on board with it. He knew the building code, and how this process was treated. Nickel Bros moves hundreds of homes per year, so this is not a process unseen in the CRD.

When we spoke to BC Housing back in October, they clarified *back in October* that we didn't need a New Home Warranty. A New Home Warranty is necessary if one changes more than 50% of a house above the foundation. We are not and do not fall under this category as proven in our plans. We aren't changing anything on the main floor and we are simply adding a tiered partial basement following the slope of our terrain, and the exact same roof line as before, with a few added dormers. The house still has it's beautiful old floors and floor joists - this has been a point of confusion, that the floor joists for both levels are intact and remaining. We are completely confounded as to why the current inspector is having a hard time understanding this, as the details are all in our engineer and architect drawings. So we called BC Housing AGAIN last week to confirm AGAIN that we don't need New Home Warranty - they said the same thing they told us in October and added that timeline to the correspondence with the building inspector. The building inspector has not yet accepted BC Housing's ruling on the matter from what we can see, and we haven't heard from him since last week. Why? No but really, why?

The truth is this bureaubattle over the business of saving and moving homes as part of an affordable housing model, has been going on a long time. Historically, Nickel Brothers have been applying pressure on local municipalities to make permitting for these projects more accessible and clearer for the public and public-servant-building-inspectors alike. Something we've repeatedly heard and that sticks with us now is when the gas is off, municipalities revert to the same indistinguishable and innacurate rules on permitting and New Home Warranty. In the last 7 months alone, we have crash coursed the CRD permitting world, BC Housing's requirements, and all the dodge that comes with it - learning more than we expected and needing to outline rules for the rule makers.

What's especially painful is hearing the many tradespeople we've spoken to tell us the work we need done will take no time. Like a week to do the roof, a few weeks to do the foundation. It hurts. It hurts seeing her up in the air like this for so long for absolutely no reason.

Hang on girlπŸ’›πŸ‘πŸ’›
We're gonna have to get our hands more dirty now.

Please share,

Mandalena L.

πŸ€“We completely geek out when former owners of Yellow House find us on social media, and share personal stories and build...
03/07/2022

πŸ€“We completely geek out when former owners of Yellow House find us on social media, and share personal stories and building history. Rick Van Krugel owned her for a relatively short period of time
- 10 years- in the early 80s but did significant restorations and renovations on her. Learning about her bones is so helpful in the current rebuild process.

If you have photos of Yellow House in her former states we'd love to see and share them. Thank you!

Update: She is currently, patiently, waiting for building permits on her Nickel Bros stilts at an undisclosed spot on the coast. Once foundation and roof are installed she will be liveable once again. We hope soon.

πŸ’›β„πŸŽ‰πŸ‘Hey folks -- happy winter solstice, holidays and 2022 from the Yellow House Project pod! We took a moment to celebra...
12/27/2021

πŸ’›β„πŸŽ‰πŸ‘Hey folks -- happy winter solstice, holidays and 2022 from the Yellow House Project pod!

We took a moment to celebrate the survival of this old house! It was a great accomplishment saving her from demolishment this year while providing ourselves an upcycled house to replace our fire damaged home; which devastated us last winter.

The feeling is surreal, elated and positively emotional. We faced a few scheduling hiccups since Yellow House landed in November, due to a few unnecessary building redraws, but the final engineer drawings will soon be in our hands to distribute out to our potential tradespeople and the CRD for final building permit approval.

We are now in full gear determined to see her to the finish line, working as our own general contractors, to get the foundation, roof and hookups done and ready so we can move in by end of April (🀞).

To say we are anxious to get Yellow House on a foundation and ready so we can get in there is an understatement. Cannot wait to give this house all the loveπŸ› πŸŽ¨πŸ›‹ Cannot wait to start counting down the days to move in. This is a new beginning for us with a very rebirth-from-ashes feel.

Take good care & stay tuned for 2022 Yellow House updates.

M&D

πŸ“Έ: brother



By 6am this morning Yellow House pulled into her new homeπŸ’›πŸ‘πŸšš Nickel Bros Pardon the francais, but it is a delightful min...
10/15/2021

By 6am this morning Yellow House pulled into her new homeπŸ’›πŸ‘πŸšš Nickel Bros

Pardon the francais, but it is a delightful mindf**k walking inside the house because it feels like we're still in Esquimalt. Dave and I were immediately hit with emotion.There was so much work we did over the years to make this happen, esp this last week on such a ludacris time frame. We have to acknowledge all the great efforts by our excavators at Stoney Creek Trucking and Excavation. Thank you for everyone's support and engagement on this precedent setting project!! Proves that saving liveable and oldie homes can and should be done.

Stay tuned for the process of moving back into Yellow House, while working as our own general contractors. Stay tuned!

We wanted to share some photos from last night's move with this supportive community. It was wild and surreal seeing Yel...
10/14/2021

We wanted to share some photos from last night's move with this supportive community. It was wild and surreal seeing Yellow House make her way out of Esquimalt. We definitely got held up at Fraser and Carlisle, with the two big trees at the streets entrance. Something to keep in mind is that there are many city boulevards that impede the ability to move these homes out of harm's way.

Caught up on πŸ’€ and preparing for the 2nd leg for Yellow House tonight. The plan is for her to reach her final destination up the coast by 5am tomorrow. If you are interested in saying adieu, she's currently parked at the Esquimalt Gorge Park on Tilicum RdπŸ’›

Thank you for all the comments, neat stories and support! Stay tuned!

Mandalena & Dave

w Nickel Bros Industrial

10/14/2021

Bye and thank you Nelson street! πŸ‘‹πŸπŸ›£πŸ‘

Nickel Bros Industrial behind the helm tonight. Here we goπŸπŸ›£πŸ‘

10/14/2021

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