Process for making home:
I started out by sketching out the exterior to make it fit within the required dimensions. Afterward, I realized I didn't include the garage while measuring and cutting up my cardboard, so I ended up with a larger house that I'd anticipated.
(These are really awkward pictures but I accidentally deleted the others I'd taken..)
I used pretty basic materials to construct the model:
- cardboard
- ruler
- box cutter
- scissors
- hot glue
- double sided tape
- packing tape
- acrylic paint
Model of home:
INTERVIEW (transcribed phone conversation with my mom):
ME: How long had you considered moving into a new house before you actually did?
MOM: Oh…about 10 years or so.
ME: What was the top priority for the move?
MOM: We knew ahead of time that we didn’t want you in that school district and once you were a little older, we moved here so you’d be at a better school.
ME: Did you look at a lot of houses before deciding on that one?
MOM: Well our old house sold in a week so we didn’t have much time. The whole process probably took less than a month…I must have spent 8 hours a day with realtors, between going myself and waiting for your father to come home from work..
ME: Did you and dad have different priorities?
MOM: Getting you into a better school district was both of our top priority.
ME: Was there a lot of debate or was it easy to come to a consensus?
MOM: At the time, the real estate market was pretty bad. There were very few houses for sale and since ours sold so quickly, we pretty much had to take the first thing available that we could find in a good school district. So we took the house not necessarily because there was anything we really loved about it, but because we felt that we had no choice.
ME: Why did you choose such a large house when you didn’t plan on having any other children or large pets?
MOM: Well your father definitely wanted an “office,” or at least somewhere to have a desk and keep old. And we also wanted to have a guest room for when Mitch and Denise came to visit. If he didn’t need the office, we would have just knocked down the wall and turned it into a larger guest room.
ME: You've made a lot of changes to the interior - did you know that you'd be doing a lot of renovating/redecorating once you moved?
MOM: Yes but that didn’t sway our decision…we knew we had to get you into a better school.
ME: Are there things you've wanted to change that you never got around to?
MOM: Definitely. The downstairs bathroom doesn’t even look like part of the house, and I’d like to replace pretty much everything in our bathroom upstairs. I also wanted to turn the living room into an exercise room, but your father was never really into that idea.
ME: Do you see any of these changes happening in the future?
MOM: No, because my daughter is a perpetual student and we can’t afford it.
ME: Right…thanks. Do you think you'll end up eventually selling the house?
MOM: I’d sell it tomorrow if I could find something elsewhere that I liked that was affordable.
ME: If you do move again, what would be your new priorities?
MOM: A really nice kitchen. A huge one with top of the line appliances - because I deserve it.
ME: Aside from the kitchen, what else would you look for in a new house that you feel that one is currently lacking?
MOM: Definitely an in-ground pool. And a place with a finished basement would be nice because then we could have an exercise room down there.
ME: Do you have any favorite memories from living there?
MOM: Not a fucking thing…I hate this fucking house. My only good memories are from when you were born, and that was before we ended up here.