Spoiler alert: the drain is just a straight pipe to a bucket below the counter.
Yo, calm down there Holmes. I’m a pro. I put gravel in there to filter out the big chunks.
Hahahaha 👌
No. It goes to the piss drawer.
If razors can go in the wall, why shouldn’t piss go in a drawer? I gotta do some home improvement work to make this happen.
I’m sure my landlord will appreciate the new piss drawer :D
That was pretty much my legit setup in my last rent house. I’m so so glad I finally got out of there.
What the christ dude.
It’s called fashion look it up.
I like people who are fashionate about their work
I need you to design an apology to the entire human species.
Let me get my pinking shears.
Apparently, the workers installed the countertop on top of the sink when the owner was not at home, and the wife signed the documents accepting the work.
The dude had to cut holes with improvised tools.This is my version of what happened.
I’m thinking the workers drilled a couple of holes themselves while they were there. Just not in the countertop.
Looks like you had your work cut out for you
Nah, looks like they did it themselves
DIwhy?
YOU’RE DID IT!!!
So, what’s the real story here?
Counters are installed whole like that sometimes. I can imagine that maybe the contractor’s router broke or was lost or stolen and they had to come back the next day with the router to cut the proper hole but in the meantime he just rough cut a couple holes with the buzz saw so that the homeowners can use their sink.
My guess is that they followed the manual, skipping a few steps, glued the sink before cutting, panicked and then voilà.
@BonesOfTheMoon wait, this isn’t a SovCit post!
Thought I’d try something new. I always have more sovcits though.
Well, DIWhy you holding out on us?!
Those are my favorites on the fediverse so far, but this is also funny, so keep branching out!
Who do you think installed the countertop?
✨exquisite✨
Some hipster design shit right there.
It’s rustic really.
Perfect 👌
Modern Meth Man approach.
The mythical meth man month
It’s got that rustic look to it.
I’m more fascinated by the countertop. Although thin and probably composite rather than natural stone, it’s still stone and that can get really expensive. It might honestly get more expensive to do this and fix it later than just do it right from the getgo.
Looks like corian, so plastic. So long as those cuts don’t extend past the basin, it can be fixed with a router and a couple bits. If they do extend past the basin, probably bottom right, then you could fix it with resin and make it pass anything but a close inspection with some skill.
It might be the type of basin that drops in from the top, which would be easier to fix and would be more likely to hide the bad cuts under the flange.
Repairs on marbled Corian can be pretty hard to match cleanly, so hopefully it isn’t that. Whenever I’ve installed these we always cut the sinks out at the factory, but I guess you could use a router onsite 🤷
The repair wouldn’t be perfect, that is why it would require skill and no close scrutiny. Even an OK job would at least stop water from going through and that is the bigger issue once the basin install is unfucked.