Posts Tagged ‘apartment’

Brockstone Manor: Now Classier Than Ever!

Sunday, November 12th, 2006 at 7:08 pm
Froggy

This afternoon I found a poster tube that had been stuck in a closet when we moved (and probably the last time I moved, too). I was hoping to find a couple posters I had back at RIT, but I guess they got tossed when I was moving out.

What I DID find was some drawings from Casey and Natalie from about two years ago. Casey gave me a “botched” print of this frog she drew two summers ago, and I’ve also got a sketch of me that she did for the CSH yearbook the year before that. That same summer, Natalie drew me three “quit smoking” signs that were hung in my room during another failed attempt to quit (even though they were very inspiring).

I looked into frames for them all today at Target, but it turns out those are a little pricier than I thought. For the time being, I just got one for the froggy (which you can see here). I feel really bad for leaving these all rolled up in a poster tube, because I love them all. I’m just glad I found them before they got lost in the next move, so I could do something with them. I’ll be picking more frames after my next paycheck, and I’ll post more pictures when I get them all up.

Shit, These Guys Have Class!

Thursday, November 9th, 2006 at 9:20 pm
Shit, these guys have class!

So, we’ve only been living here at Brockstone Manor for a little less than six months. As such, it’s no surprise that we have nothing in the way of decorations (except for that thong on the dining room chandelier) and there are still a few unpacked boxes kicking around.

However! My brother was made aware of our dire situation, and for my birthday, sent me the classiest of Guinness posters. Tonight, it was framed and hung, and now, Brockstone Manor is truly a classy, swinging bachelor pad. It made such a difference that we’ve started discussing house plants.

Click on the picture to see just how awesome we are.

Weekend in Review

Sunday, August 20th, 2006 at 11:22 pm

Friday 11 hour drive home. That was fun. Pittsburgh, as it turns out, isn’t the quickest way to Buffalo.

Saturday Wedding: wedding-y. Sharon looked all fancy. Reception: rowdy. My cousins are fun, and my parents have loosened up a lot since I moved out.

Sunday Finished fixing the parents’ computer. Visited Grandma. Had lunch at DiBella’s with BP and Lucas. Drive home from there only took 7 hours, thank goodness.

Then I got home to find that Matt moved all his stuff into our house, but there’s a couch on the balcony so it’s OK.

This Bed & Breakfast Is Closed, Sally

Thursday, July 6th, 2006 at 3:53 pm

As I tiptoed into the living room and quietly gathered up my pocket litter and keys this morning, I couldn’t help but feel like something was out of place. I snuck into the kitchen - nope, giant pile of trash is still there. I crept into the living room, stepping over empty cups and bottles to avoid making too much noise - those were right where we left them.

And then I realized the couch seemed unusually flat. For the first time in a month, no one was sleeping in my living room.

So I turned on the lights and enjoyed me a loud breakfast.

Gonna Be A Blackout Tonight

Wednesday, June 28th, 2006 at 8:55 pm

Power outages are fun for about half an hour, and then I lose interest in standing on the balcony and playing flashlight Morse code with the folks in the South tower. It went out Monday night around 9 or 9:30, and didn’t come back till about 5 this morning. It came back for about 30 seconds last night - just long enough for me to do a jig and Fotios to flick the lights on and off to taunt the South tower, which was still dark.

Thankfully, I only had to climb back up the nine flights of stairs once - that part sucked.

Reasons My New Place Is Way Better Than My Old Place

Sunday, June 11th, 2006 at 1:03 pm

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  • It’s safer.
  • This wasn’t a big one, because I was never really concerned for my safety at my last place. I decided long ago that I wasn’t going to live in fear of anything - life’s too short for that shit - so it didn’t bother me if I had to park a few blocks away late at night, when no one else seemed to be around except for the cops that walked around the neighborhood after dark (THAT was reassuring). Granted, I’m not likely to be mistaken for a helpless little lass, or even a person with more than $5 in my pocket, but the possibility of theft was not lost on me.

  • We’re on the ninth floor.
  • Living on the ground floor sounded great, at first - it was easy to move in and I had my own front door. But after a week or two, I realized that I didn’t like people glancing in when I had the curtains open, and that the lock on my door wasn’t great, and that there were tall bushes around my corner of the building that could easily hide anyone trying to get in through a window. I had some expensive (or expensive-looking) electronic equipment in there, and since I knew it wouldn’t be hard to break in, I usually kept my blinds shut to avoid advertising it to the neighborhood.

    Here, the only people that wander by are nine stories down, and the only people looking through my blinds are the girls across the way (that story in a minute). I like having the blinds open, so the sun can come in, and I don’t feel quite to voyeuristic (or voyeuristicized?) here.

  • The neighbors are friendlier.
  • It seems I never related this story here. On the day we moved in, I was taking a quick shower while our impromptu moving crew was relaxing out on the balcony after getting everything inside. Somebody noticed a girl across the courtyard, on a balcony of the opposing building (the south tower of our building, actually), and she was watching them with binoculars. Schmitty found himself a marker, wrote his cell number on my whiteboard, and held it up for her to see. When she called, he invited her and her roommate over, and they spent an hour or two just shooting the shit on our balcony. This is how we came to know Autumn and Jasmyn, who we’re seen a few times since then. The other day, after Jym and I went grocery shopping, we were standing at the elevator with big armloads of groceries, waiting to go up. A young couple got in before us, and when they realized they were on the same floor, they offered to help us carry our stuff. Turns out, they’re across the hall and one apartment down from us, and promised not to be shy about letting us know if we ever get too loud.

    People say good morning in the elevator. They offer one another a helping hand when someone is trying to get up a few stairs with a stroller. People smile at each other. It’s the little things that make this place so much warmer and friendlier, something I never saw in my old neighborhood.

  • We’ve got a balcony.
  • And it’s totally sweet. I know we’ve been extolling the pool-view virtues of the thing for a while now, but it’s so much more than that. I woke up yesterday to a beautiful sunny morning in the mid-70’s, so I dragged our little kitchen table out there and did some writing in the sun.

  • Location.
  • We’re in the perfect spot. I can Metro home drunk and get back without paying for a cab. I can wander over to a few different bars (and a liquor store).

  • Price.
  • Divide rent three ways and it gets real cheap.

  • It’s just so much more awesome, OK?
  • For serious.

    Brockstone Manor

    Monday, June 5th, 2006 at 10:39 pm
    Balcony 2

    Now that we’ve been in the new place for almost a week, I’m finally settled in enough to post about it.

    The long and short is that it’s totally bitchin.

    This place is orders of magnitude above my last place. The living room and bedrooms are huge, the balcony is great, and the location really couldn’t be better. There are still a few lingering boxes of crap lying around, but aside from that, we’ve got all our stuff put away, and we almost need to buy a bigger entertainment center for our combined collection of electronics.

    It’s been a busy week, but people have been here visiting a lot and a bunch of us went and played paintball all day yesterday. This week should quiet down, and we’ll start falling into our groove. FN met us at the paintball place yesterday to pick up my car (with, as it turned out, Fotios’ wallet in it), so I’m car-less again.

    This is going to be good. We’ve already got plans for a poker game and some house guests. The couch isn’t on the balcony anymore, but we’re talking about replacing it. It will be a good summer.

    Obligatory ‘My, the time flies’ Post

    Sunday, May 21st, 2006 at 10:16 pm
    Matt and Sarah

    I’ve been in Virginia for just a week shy of six months. It certainly doesn’t seem like it’s been that long, but at the same time, it feels like a lifetime since I left RIT. DC has been good to me - it’s nice living in a real city - even if I haven’t met as many new people as I’d hoped to. Thankfully, I had quite a few friends down here already, which made the move down a lot easier.

    As I’ve mentioned in passing, I’ll be moving really soon. Jym, Fotios and I will be taking up residence in the Crystal Plaza in Crystal City. It’s less than 5 miles from my current place, but it’s a totally different neighborhood. The place I’m at now isn’t too bad, but it’s certainly not good. We’ll be on the 9th floor of a much nicer building with some really nice facilities - pool, balcony (overlooking said pool), billiards room, two laundry rooms, two fitness rooms, and a little coffee shop, among other things. It’s also connected to the Crystal City Underground, which is basically an 8-block long underground strip mall, with all sorts of restaurants, shops, and even a couple doctors and dentists. Within 3 blocks, there are a few more coffee shops, the Metro stop, at least one bar, a liquor store, and much to Jym’s delight, there’s a McDonald’s practically under our building.

    We’ll be moving next week Tuesday, right after I spend the weekend visiting family and friends in Buffalo and Rochester for Commencement/Memorial Day (and no, I won’t be walking). I started packing up some books and stuff today, because I want to have most of my crap ready to go before I leave Friday. I’ll be back here Monday around noon, then I’m taking a half day Tuesday so I can move in the afternoon.

    It’s going to be a hectic couple of weeks, and I’m already looking forward to being done with it. As it is, the living room is full of Jym’s crap, since he moved in last Sunday, and the entire kitchen and bathroom cabinets are in boxes - I had to empty everything out when pest control visited our building early this month, and never bothered putting it back.

    I hate feeling like my world is in disarray, with my stuff in boxes and crap in every corner, but it’s much better than the last time I moved; at least I know where I’m going, when, and more or less how I’m going to do it (UHaul, duh). I just look forward to being through with it. When all is said and done, my stuff will be in a much nicer place for at least the next year, and my car will be in the capable hands of FN (who needs it much more than I will, sinec I’ll be so close to the metro and a mere 8 blocks from work).

    Oh, and our place has grills near the pool, and people will be visiting throughout the summer, and I’m going to make it to a couple bluegrass festivals. This summer is sure to rival last year’s.

    Hello, Wisconsin!

    Tuesday, December 27th, 2005 at 10:37 pm

    I’m comin to you live from my couch! I got me some wireless yesterday. Lucky for me, Best Buy has the Linksys WRT54G Wireless-G Router - the one I’ve been looking at - for $40 after rebates.

    I took some pictures before I started unpacking and building furniture. Even after spending four hours working on stuff, I don’t feel like I got very far - my couch is still buried in crap and there are boxes all over. I don’t remember having this much stuff…

    At any rate, it’s nice having a real DVD player. I had my iBook connected to the TV for a while, but it looked like crap. Real wide screen kicks ass.

    The apartment keeps getting better and better, and it feels more like home every day. On the other hand, I moved in with every intention of leaving at the end of my six-month lease to get a place with Matt (and now Drew and maybe others). I almost don’t even want all this furniture, since I’ll just have to move it again soon. But I’ll deal with that in six months.

    I’m Drivin A Truck, Drivin A Big Ol Truck

    Tuesday, December 13th, 2005 at 11:25 pm

    ($1 to the first person to name the reference)(Rhubarb doesn’t count)

    I spent my entire evening driving. I didn’t even have time to read The Post. That’s right, I get The Post now, because I care about current events, and lingerie ads.

    After work, I headed out to Sterling, which took waaay too long. My uncle’s friend gave me a bunch of furniture, and I had to pick it up out that way. Lucky for me, my uncle has a pickup truck and he offered it for the move. Even luckier, he and his friend loaded the couch, dresser, desk chair, and coffee table into it for me. I drove out there, drove back to Arlington with it - grabbing Matt on the way - and unloaded it at the apartment. Unfortunately, the coffee table was in the back seat of the truck. I have no idea how he got it in there, but we couldn’t get it back out.

    We had dinner at this little diner in the plaza by me, then I dropped him off, dropped off the truck, and drove my car home - more than five hours of my day just to get some furniture, but it’s better than buying new stuff. I need to get a cover for the couch, because the cushions are in rough shape, but it fits well in the living room. I’m almost ready to entertain guests.

    I found tonight that it’s hard to tell the difference between a light bar and a taxi sign (not to mention pizza guys), so I invented a game I call Cop or Cab. So far I’m winning (you lose when you get a ticket).

    I also decided tonight that the Saturn definitely has to go in the spring, and I’m thinking of just buying a motorcycle instead of replacing the car. It would be so much easier to get around in the traffic on a bike, but I’m not sure I can justify the purchase. Either way, the Saturn won’t fetch me much, so it’s Drive It Like You Stole It Week here at BrockLi.com (or, taking a cue from NaNoWriMo, DriLiStoWe). I encourage you all to participate.

    Just remember, the rules for Cop or Cab are always in effect.

    Suck It Long and Suck It Hard

    Sunday, December 11th, 2005 at 7:54 pm

    Yesterday I bought this cheap little Eureka vacuum. I knew I’d need one sooner or later, and now that I’m mostly settled, it was time to clean up all the leaves that had been tracked in while moving and the drywall dust left over the wall-bashing incident. I wanted something cheap and little, and this thing looked like it would do the trick.

    I had a feeling it wouldn’t handle carpeting very well, because something that small and that cheap can’t be too effective, right? The damn thing ate my carpet. I had barely started when I noticed a big ball of lint swirling around in the dust cup thingy. I wanted to take a picture of all of it in there when I finished, but it clogged up halfway through and I had to empty it. My 640 square foot apartment produced, by my estimation, a cubic foot of carpet shit. It was quite impressive, really. And now I have an excuse to skip vacuuming, because I don’t want to have to replace a carpet when I move out.

    The State of Things is Virginia

    Sunday, December 4th, 2005 at 10:29 pm

    People keep asking me where I’m working, what I’m doing, and how the hell I wound up in Virginia (which I’ve been wondering myself). I don’t feel like writing much, so this is the abridged version.

    I’m living in Arlington, VA, in a spacious one-bedroom apartment that is starting to feel like home. I moved down with a Saturn worth of stuff - I stuffed the car with as much as I could, and the rest is in a heap in my parents’ family room. The first few days were sort of depressing, as my apartment was full of holes, I didn’t have any furniture or Internet access, and I spent most of the first two days at work looking over code.

    But things have quickly improved. The cable guy came yesterday and blessed me with Internets and TV. My parents surprised me with a wide-screen HDTV for graduation (I had totally forgotten about the part where you get stuff), which came yesterday. Last night and early today, I started looking for some furniture on Craigslist (at Sarah’s suggestion), and by five this afternoon I had a couch and a desk (before pics, and the rest of the place). My uncle lives near here, and knows a guy with some furniture he’s looking to get rid of, so I might get another couch and a table. I’m still sleeping on an air mattress, but they fixed the heat in my bedroom so it’s not freezing cold any more (I had to use an electric blanket all week). I’m sort of living out of boxes, since I don’t have a dresser, but that’s OK for now. I’m hoping to find a cheap one on Craigslist soon.

    I’m working for a tiny company called AetherQuest Solutions. I had debated whether or not I wanted to discuss work at all here, but enough people have asked about it that I’ll say a bit about it. There are only about 10 of us working there, it’s really laid back, the other developers are around my age, and I’m doing web programming - I couldn’t have found anything more perfect. It’s also only five minutes from my apartment, which is almost unheard of around here; I know people who live in Maryland and go two hours each way. I couldn’t deal with that.

    Now, the important bit - how did I wind up here? Honestly, I’m not even sure. Some of the CSH-DC crew had mentioned to me before that I should move down here, but I never really took them seriously. I had every intention of finding something in Rochester and staying there. I talked about looking in Boston, Toronto, NYC, San Francisco, and Alaska, but at the back of my mind, I figured I would settle down somewhere in western New York. I didn’t even really start looking elsewhere until a few weeks before graduation, when I realized how soon I needed a job and how little I’d found in the area. I stumbled on a job listing on Craigslist (seriously, it’s been pivotal to this whole experience), and before I knew it, I was planning a trip down here. It worked out wonderfully with the weekend in Pennsylvania - I just kept going south on Sunday afternoon. I had an interview on Monday, accepted the job on Tuesday, and was back in town the following Monday to start working on Tuesday.

    I never really had time to sit down and think about my decision and the implications. I had no intentions of winding up in Virginia; it just kind of happened. I’m having a hard time shaking the feeling that I’m only here temporarily, much like my co-op in Pittsburgh, but I know I won’t be back at RIT in three months, or going home for break week. It’s a weird feeling that slowly disperses as I make this a home - having some furniture helps a lot. Until this afternoon, this was just the place I kept my clothes, but now it’s starting to feel like it’s my place.

    It’s exciting. I just picked up and moved to a city I didn’t know and had only seen for a couple days. I moved away from parents who never lived more than 20 miles from where they grew up (this experience has been harder for my mom than I thought it would be), and it’s unlikely that I’ll return - the economy here is doing just as good as Buffalo is bad. I found myself a place to call my own, and I’ve starting filling it with stuff. I’ve started over fresh in a new place.

    I’ve started my own life, and it’s as scary as it is exciting.

    Lennox Club, or, I’m A Virginian Now

    Thursday, December 1st, 2005 at 5:44 pm

    The guys I work with have been getting lunch at the deli across the street almost every day for the past couple years. They assured me that the two girls who work there would know my order within a couple weeks. Today is my third day on the job, and when I walked in today, she asked me, “Number 18 on a sub?”

    “Yes ma’am,” says I.

    Things are getting better. The night I moved in, three maintenance guys were knocking holes in my walls looking for the source of a leak in the kitchen, so everything I own down here is in my bedroom. The plumbers did their thing yesterday, and the drywall guys were supposed to be coming today, so I’m hoping it’s all fixed when I get home (cable guy doesn’t come till Saturday, so I’m stealing Internet at work).

    Now that I’m in the city, traffic isn’t an issue, since my apartment is five minutes from work. There’s a plaza a couple miles away with Target, Barnes & Noble, and Best Buy, and a Giant grocery store is right around the corner. The guys I work with are totally awesome. My neighborhood seems to be safer than I anticipated. Aside from the holes in my walls, things are going well, and I suspect they’ll only get better once my apartment is fixed and I get some furniture.

    Protecting the Children of Tomorrow, TODAY!

    Friday, July 29th, 2005 at 12:51 am

    Tonight, I am a low-grade hero.

    Tonight, I fixed our couch to prevent scrapes, cuts, tetanus, and other owie boo-boos.

    You see, we currently have FN’s ancient ugly green feather couch, which is incredibly comfortable, but just as dangerous. It has these metal strips with nails along the bottom to hold the fabric to the couch. One of them had been bent and poking out for as long as I’ve known the couch personally. It wasn’t a problem, unless you walked close by, or sat in it, or looked at it, or drove through the same area code. Like many others before me, I’ve cut my foot pretty good on it a few times.

    This morning, when it put a huge hole in one of my socks, I vowed to fix it once and for all. Lucky for me, Fonny is a real man, so he owns a hammer. I pried the thing off, saving several (dozens, even!) of other people from a similar fate.

    You should give me money for making everyones’ lives so much better.

    The College Apartment

    Saturday, July 16th, 2005 at 7:04 pm

    The College Apartment is (hopefully) the worst apartment one will reside in during one’s adult years. I’d like to think that the next place I live in will be nicer, cleaner, home-ier, and will have fewer holes in the walls. For those of you that haven’t been to college yet (or lived at home while you were there), allow me to indoctrinate you.

    First of all, there are no clean dishes. It’s just not an option. The only function of the kitchen sink is to act as a repository for dirty dishes: since that’s all you’ll have, you’re going to need a place to put them. When you run out of clean dishes, use paper plates. When you run out of those, use paper towels. When you run out of those, find the cleanest spot on the kitchen counter and call it a plate.

    If you do run out of paper towel, you’re in trouble. Paper towel serves in far more roles in a college apartment than anywhere else. For one, it’s the lone cleaning tool. It can be used on dishes (not that it will be), floors, and, more commonly, spilled beer. Furthermore, toilet paper is like that spare bottle opener in the third drawer in the kitchen - it’s always there when you’re looking for something else, but never when you need it. Make sure there’s always paper towel in the bathroom, because you don’t want to get caught with your pants down (if you will).

    Some people are wine connoisseurs. College students can identify different flavors of Ramen noodles based on smell alone, while average citizens find no distinguishing features in taste, smell, or appearance. Macaroni and cheese can be consumed if you’re willing to spend 50 cents on a meal - DOUBLE the cost of Ramen. Of course, these things are only eaten in the second half of each week, when the pizza money from pay day has been exhausted. Lucky for you, the half of the fridge that isn’t occupied by Brita filters is full of condiments, so you can make mayo-ketchup-barbecue sauce sandwiches any time you want. Be careful, though: some of those jars have been around longer than any of your roommates [it's worth mentioning at this point that the fridge will be full of condiments and water because you will have a second fridge for beer alone]. If you’re lucky, you might find Jello shots hiding among the condiments.

    Through the combined efforts of two to four roommates, your apartment will amass more electronics than you could have imagined. The entertainment system in the living room will be the best you will ever have in your place of residence. At the moment, our apartment has a receiver, four speakers, two TV’s, two TiVo’s, an XBox, a Dreamcast, Super Nintendo, an original Nintendo, a DVD player, and a wireless access point. In addition, each of us has a laptop, at least one PC, and a sound system to go with it. We have one telephone, but none of us know the number for the place because we all have cell phones.

    Beer will provide the majority of your liquid intake. Since college beer (Miller High Life, Natty Ice, PBR, etc) is cheaper than water, this is economically reasonable. Late in your college career, you will discover the joy of higher quality beers, and you will be able to afford it because you already have every electronic device you can conceive of and you’ve learned to love pasta.

    Trash will become an issue. Despite the fact that you can’t afford much food or anything else that results in packaging waste, you and your roommates will produce more garbage than Rhode Island. This trash won’t be taken out to the dumpster, because you all have more important, college-related things to be doing, like playing video games or looking for a roll of paper towel because the toilet paper is gone.

    In the real world, people knock and politely wait for the door to be answered. Not so in college apartments: your friends will give the two-tap warning before coming in, just in case someone’s nekkid in the living room or something. You learn to love this policy, especially on nights when you come home looking for something to do and the only people home are three people that you’ve only met once, and one of them is asleep on the couch. On the rare occasion that someone actually knocks or rings the doorbell, you will shout “COME ON IN,” despite the fact that pizza delivery guys and FedEx folks will never come on in, so you’ll have to get up and open the door.

    The décor is unlike that of any other home you will have. Beer signs and movie posters will festoon the walls while empty liquor bottles are proudly displayed on some high shelf or window sill. Christmas lights will no longer be relegated to the tree in December; the living room will be strung with them year-round. The furniture that isn’t built from stolen milk crates will generally be futons or old couches disguised with blankets. Video game consoles and DVD cases will be strewn about the floor and milk crate furniture. A bike will be parked in the corner, but chances are good that no one will know who it belongs to. The only pet you will be permitted to keep is fish, and you will have a Beta due to their resilience. It will live in an empty vodka bottle, in about three inches of water because you will forget to clean it, on four food pellets a week because you will forget to feed it.

    You might think that a dirty apartment with strangers asleep on the couch wouldn’t be the kind of place you’d want to spend much time, but that’s only because you haven’t tried it. Living with friends is critical. I’ve been blessed with some really cool roommates over the years, so I’ve never really gotten too worked up about the state of the place. Just remember that college is supposed to be fun, and you’ve got much more important things to be doing than worrying about the cleanliness of your apartment. Like finding a way to eat cereal when there isn’t a single clean dish in the house.