
We distinctly remember bringing this couch home from the Sears Canada Outlet Store in Coquitlam, crammed into the back of my old Ford Ranger in 2006, so we knew it could leave in one piece. However, to lighten the load today, we stripped out the mattress and springs first. That was when we discovered a twenty-year-old manufacturing anomaly: the heavy metal frame was secured with two bolts and a screw on one side, but only a single bolt on the other. Someone skipped a step on the assembly line, yet it held together for two decades regardless.
I should have taken photos of the transit. Dismantled, the couch required multiple stages to move. We loaded the springs into the back of the Kona EV for the first trip, a journey involving twelve floors down on the elevator into the parkade, and then up one level to the designated junk collection zone. A second automotive run took care of the mattress and cushions. The main chassis, however, required pure physical transit. Jay and I pushed it 300 meters across the concrete floor of the parking garage. A utilitarian, fitting end for an old domestic friend.



















