Building Work (Week 4) – Site clearing

Before I start on week 4 there was some work completed in Week 3 which I managed to completely miss.

Down Loft Ladder

If you look at this photo of the loft hatch which Dad and I installed last summer you’ll see there is a wall behind it, that wall is load bearing as it holds the purlin up.  We need to put an opening in this load bearing wall for the shower (to the right of this) so that little lintel you see spanning the corridor had to be removed, a much bigger one put in to span both the corridor and the new shower opening and the wall above it completely rebuilt.  When I was at the house in the morning the builders were chatting about doing this and also about how big the lintel actually needed to be (there was talk about taking it all the way over the the chimney breast) but when I went to take a look the following day, it looked pretty much the same, so I figured they hadn’t.  I even snapped this half hearted photo into the eaves as a ‘before’ (I wasn’t about to climb all the way into the attic in my work clothes).  During week I kept trying to make suggestions to make the lintel business easier (moving the shower closer to the outside wall etc) until it was brought to my attention that the lintel was already in.

Loft LintelAnd yes, I think that is another vodka bottle!

Okay, so on to Week 4.  In week 3 I managed avoid photographing the enormous pile of rubble which had been produced from the demolition.  Even though they had saved quite a few bricks to reuse and we’re planning using some of the rubble to fill in the floor, there was a lot of rubble left.  So week 4 mainly consisted of clearing it all.

This photo wasn’t taken until Tuesday evening so you can imagine how much there was!  The needles and acrow-props have gone now too.

Rubble

There was a concrete bed outside the patio doors, I was told the mother of the previous owner (who lived at the house in the 80s) had a greenhouse on there at one point. Sounds a bit odd to put a greenhouse right outside a window but it is the sunniest part of the garden so maybe.  I didn’t want it to stay as I’ll have to have a patio outside the bi-fold doors and I don’t want too much of the garden concreted. This is what it looked like last April when I was building pallet fencing (don’t ask).

Green house base

and this is what it looks like now!

Greenhouse foundation gone

It looked like it was extracted with the aid of one of my trees 🙂 I think there is still a sling tied around it now. Here are the big slabs of concrete in the trailer.

Greenhouse base in trailer

By the site is at the end of the week the kitchen floor (quarry tiles on a cement and rubble base) had been broken up and the foundations had been dug.

How cool are my ten foot high ceilings?  I wish it could stay like that!

Foundations Dug

Foundations Dug 2

Building Work (Week 3) – Steels and an Open Plan Bathroom

The builders started attacking on multiple fronts at the same time this week – the extension, the hall and the bathroom – I’ll go through them one by one.

Extension

These little metal strips appeared on the side of the brickwork – I think they are to bind the old and new brickwork together.  The extension will have a brick outer wall and a blockwork inner wall.  I originally asked for the brickwork on the outer wall to be ‘toothed in’ but as the original bricks are imperial this caused a whole world of unforeseen (to me) consequences.  One factor was cost, the imperial bricks were £1.05 each rather than about 22p for a metric brick. It’s not really possible to just use metric bricks with a bigger mortar joint (as the internet suggested) because then the courses take longer to dry so they can’t get as many done in a day but the main problem is, as the blockwork used for the inner wall is metric, you have to have mortar joint line up to put the wall ties in.  You could have an inner and outer leaf of imperial bricks (if you can afford it) but they you have the problem of the insulation also being metric! Needless to say, when all this was explained to me, I agreed to go with metric bricks and a joint down the front of the house.

Metal ties brickwork

At the back – there will be bi-fold doors to the right of this pillar, so they’ve just neatened it up.  Looks good doesn’t it? I like bricks…

Brick end pillar

Steels went in next, by the time I got home from work it was already dark (and the next morning the brickies were working on it) – I think here they’ve replaced the bricks on the inner wall.

Steel RSJs in place

And now they’ve done the outer.  I’m not sure why the needles (which apparently is what the mini steel beams are called) are still there – while it dries perhaps.

Brickwork above steel RSJ

Hallway

The old door wall between the dining room and the hall has been blocked up.  A new doorway opened up and that old backdoor got put to its third use!

Doorway moved

This is a photo of what it used to look like inside the hall.

original hall

And this is a photo of what it looks like now – the coat closet and porch have gone.

Opened up hall

From inside the living room.  It feels huge now – the builders reckon I should forget the little WC and leave it as it is!

Opened up hall

Bathroom

The door frames were removed from the bathroom and toilet.

toilet and bathroom

The following day the wall came down!  It’s a shame open plan bathrooms aren’t really en vogue….

Open Plan Bathroom

I made a couple of animated gifs showing the progress / destruction to date – because who doesn’t love an animated gif?

Downstairs – Weeks 1 to 3

Downstairs - Weeks 1 to 3

Upstairs – Weeks 1 to 3

(except it all happened in week 3)
Upstairs Weeks 1 to 3

Building Work (Week 2) – Holey Home

Walls came down last week – here was the start of it.  Back door and pantry door are out, window is gone and the bricks are coming down.

Wall Half Removed

A whopping great big hole!  Also the suspended floor has all been removed.  You can see the rubble under the quarry tiled part of the kitchen.

Wall Gone

Did you spot the barrel of beer cans above?  Here’s a close up.  I’m not sure if that was all of them or some of them had already been taken to the recycling point (which by the way is about 300 yards away – making the collection all the more shocking).

A barrel of cans

Those neat little holes upstairs look less neat and less little now.

Steels Upstairs with wall gone

So the next job was to dig out the old wall foundations so that steel could be put into the floor.  See that slightly deeper patch before the blue bag – that’s as all they managed before the first whacker gave up.

Start of the ditch

The full length dug out.

Ditch for steel

Here’s the steel – it came in bits and was all wired together.  I only took a photo of this end as Dave was still working on the other end – he was on a tight schedule as the building inspector was due and I don’t think my photographing him would have helped the situation!

Steel for floor

The reason for this floor steel is because the RSJ which will go in to hold the wall up will be supported on either end by a steel post, those steel posts would have too small a footprint alone so a whole steel support has to be put through the floor filled with concrete and agitated to make it even stronger.  I completely failed to appreciate this complexity at the plan stage – or rather the complexity I created by insisting that the pillars which hold up the RSJ be as small as possible (I think I gained 20cm each side or something ridiculous). If you ever see a dotted line on structural engineer’s plan – beware, that may mean steel in the floor and a world of phaff and expense!

Here it is laid, concrete poured and curing over the weekend.  Plus overalls that scared the bejesus out of me when I came for a skeet in the twilight.

Floor Steel In Place

Oh the other thing is that the steel guys came to measure up and burst my little bubble from last week, the joists can’t go into the RSJ – there isn’t enough surface area, they have to go above it, which means the RSJ will hang down into the room. See the marks above the door in the picture above (click the photo to enlarge)?  That’s to show me where it’ll come down to.  The first short line is the actual RSJ, the next wide dark line is plus the plasterboard and the line below is if I want spotlights in it.

I was also right about the two stray bricks being set out to teach me something – it wasn’t what I expected though.  Dave wanted to check I was happy with new bricks not being quite as smooth as the old bricks, I had to admit that I didn’t think I would have noticed in a million years but it’s nice to be asked!

While all this was going on at the house I spent every lunch break last week getting one astronomical quote after another – my ‘worst case scenario’ spreadsheet is starting to look a little optimistic!