I always keep my shoes behind the back door of my house, but as shoes accumulate it becomes increasingly difficult to open the back door, and the number of shoes is about to increase. I finally decided to make a little more room by adding a boot nook behind the door.
I can add a boot nook there because the landing is three steps below the main floor of the house, so behind the wall in the previous photo is the basement laundry room.
I start by tearing out some of the wood behind there. A useful trick for pulling out individual nails that are flush with the surface is to use a straight clawed hammer, then use a second hammer to drive the claws into the wood right behind the nail. Then pull as usual.
I used a stack of rare earth magnets to transfer the location of the opening from the back to the front. I fix the magnets to a corner of the future opening with a clamp (a clamp with plastic jaws, I should add).
I then used a compass to locate the magnets behind the wall. I only had about 1 inch (2.5 cm) of material to go through, but this method also works with a regular wall, 12 cm (5") thick, provided you have enough magnets and the wall is not full of big nails.
I made this adapter piece to connect a ShopVac hose to a cheap skillsaw. I used duct tape to attach this to the saw.
My contraption is able to suck away most of the dust, though I should have been more thorough with the duct tape. I still had some leaks. Still, much better than using the saw straight!
I suked the dust up with a ShopVac outside, running without a filter (so as not to ruin a filter). This worked out ok, though I later had to flush out the ShopVac
Busting out the wall. At right, a section of the wall. From top to bottom, a 3 mm layer of gypsum, then a 13 mm layer of mortar, and below that a 6 mm layer of gypsum.
The walls were built similar to the old (pre WW2) wood lath and plaster walls, but using gypsum boards as "lath" instead of strips of wood. The advantage of gypsum was that the mortar stuck to it MUCH better than to wood lath, so these wall are sturdier than lath walls, and also sturdier than the drywall construction from the 1960s onwards.
Cutting out the framing with a reciprocating saw. Reciprocating saws are awesome tools for demolition!
Hole in the wall done, looking down at the mess on my dryer.
Checking the fit. I attached one of my clamping squares to the bottom of the landing to keep the box from falling out as I fit it.
As usual, I made the box as large as could possibly fit in the hole, and went a little over in size, so I had to chip out the opening a bit to make it fit.
This is checking the fit, I still had to cut out some notches in the bottom corners so the box could fit with the edges flush to the wall.
With the box fitted, taking it back to my shop for painting. Much easier on the workbench.
Nook painted and screwed in. I also painted the outside of it to make it look nicer from the laundry room.
I also added a new vertical board where I had removed the broken one. The original boards tied the landing to the joist above, so it's very important to put one back in to hold it up again. I used a lot of screws, and screwed in at an angle to really pull the landing up against the joist.
I also moved the outlet for the sump pump.
Nailing it in place, mostly just to the plywood I installed. Brad nailers are so handy for this sort of work.
I used some caulking to glue the tiles down.
This is not the proper way to install tiles, but these
won't get walked on. And for about two and a half tiles, caulking is
more convenient.
I also used caulking as grout to fill the gaps between. Working these flush was a bit of a messy job though. I have learned to always have a roll of paper towel handy when working with caulking, because otherwise, it gets smeared just everywhere. Even with paper towel, it's messy. You have to be careful not to re-wipe a piece or you end up spreading caulking everywhere.
Professionals are good at putting down a good bead the right way the first time around, and for inside corners, I can barely manage myself. But I couldn't make any sort recessed bead between the tiles (like grout would be).
That was a lot of work to make room for three pairs of shoes!
But then again, this nook will probably end up holding a lot more than three pairs over time!