Forgot I couldn't rotate once in the blog! Turn head sideways to see our ensuite - nearly useable!! |
eightmangana
Friday, August 26, 2011
That lived in kinda feeling...
In amongst it all the house blog just slowly died of neglect... We'll roll it gently over to the side of the road, pay our last respects and add some photos of the house as it is now - having just gone past 100 days in residence!
Sunday, March 13, 2011
A few little projects of my own...
It's a sad fact of working with people who are highly competent in their own area that you tend to end up feeling pretty inadequate. And so, despite being the 'architect' for our place (in inverted commas due to a complete lack of formal training or academic qualifications - not to mention 4 or 5 years of hard slog at University - on my part), on site I've definitely been (and known that I should be) labourer, lackey, helper, gopher and general run-about.
So...
It's nice after watching, helping, doing and learning for a while, you can take on a couple of little projects and call them your own - and nice to know that someone (Phil) trusts you to get them done and then says something like, "Yeah, that's a pretty good job, isn't it..." once you've finished.
Project One:
Heater and display alcove just inside the lounge doors off the entry. This is a double thickness wall that needed to fit snugly in underneath the kitchen bulkhead and has 2 recesses built into it - one to house the floor mounted heat pump unit and the other above it just 'because' - maybe for a painting, photo, cool-looking vase, shell or rock collection, fancy statue... you get the idea.
I had to get all the measurements just right to fit the heater, plus make sure there was wood in all the right places for the plasterers to be able to attach their plaster to, plus make sure it was all straight as it went in. Due to the fact that Phil has all the cool tools and wasn't there for some of it, I had to do all this for at least one day with a handsaw and no nail-gun - and still got it straight! Very proud of myself...
Project Two:
Staircase display shelf base - filling in a section next to the stairs that we initially weren't quite sure what to do with. It steps up with the stairs and will eventually have shelving put in above it. Phil left me alone with a nail-gun and few tips (possibly while he went away to fix something else that hadn't been done quite so well...)
Project Three:
Phone alcove - just outside our bedroom and near the kitchen. We wanted to make sure we had a 'spot' for the phone - so that it didn't end up sitting on the bench because there was no-where else to put it; in a house of 36 squares and built from scratch!! So I made one! Will have a power point made for it and a spot for the wiring from the phone to run through into our cupboard behind. Beautiful...
So...
It's nice after watching, helping, doing and learning for a while, you can take on a couple of little projects and call them your own - and nice to know that someone (Phil) trusts you to get them done and then says something like, "Yeah, that's a pretty good job, isn't it..." once you've finished.
Project One:
Heater and display alcove just inside the lounge doors off the entry. This is a double thickness wall that needed to fit snugly in underneath the kitchen bulkhead and has 2 recesses built into it - one to house the floor mounted heat pump unit and the other above it just 'because' - maybe for a painting, photo, cool-looking vase, shell or rock collection, fancy statue... you get the idea.
I had to get all the measurements just right to fit the heater, plus make sure there was wood in all the right places for the plasterers to be able to attach their plaster to, plus make sure it was all straight as it went in. Due to the fact that Phil has all the cool tools and wasn't there for some of it, I had to do all this for at least one day with a handsaw and no nail-gun - and still got it straight! Very proud of myself...
Project Two:
Staircase display shelf base - filling in a section next to the stairs that we initially weren't quite sure what to do with. It steps up with the stairs and will eventually have shelving put in above it. Phil left me alone with a nail-gun and few tips (possibly while he went away to fix something else that hadn't been done quite so well...)
Project Three:
Phone alcove - just outside our bedroom and near the kitchen. We wanted to make sure we had a 'spot' for the phone - so that it didn't end up sitting on the bench because there was no-where else to put it; in a house of 36 squares and built from scratch!! So I made one! Will have a power point made for it and a spot for the wiring from the phone to run through into our cupboard behind. Beautiful...
You are my sunshine
Tuesday 1st February a little team of guys arrived to put up our solar electricity panels. It's not a big system - standard 1.5kW - but we're hoping it will make a significant difference to the power bills. It was something we looked at in the first house but had to cross off the list due to cost at the time. It's still not cheap, but we came across a deal that allowed us to pay a very minimal amount up-front and then pay the rest off interest-free over the next couple of years. We figure it makes sense to get some of the pretty much endless supply of sunshine energy that hits the earth during day-light hours and make something out of it.
It was nice to see the panels go up - 8 of them altogether - in a very pleasing kind of straight line along the back roof. Spoils the roof-line a bit from the neighbour's place behind us (except there's no neighbour there yet) but approaching the house you can't even see them unless you're looking for them specifically, in which case you get a split-second glimpse if you're looking in the right place at the right time (and don't run off the road attempting it).
Our grand plan was to have them on and for us to greedily reap the rewards whilst not even living in the house - 2 or 3 months of electricity credits racking up in our account ready for us to move in... However, the electricity company's on to people like us and won't allow us to connect to the grid until we've moved in and moved off the 'construction' tariff onto the 'residential' tariff. Clever people...
It was nice to see the panels go up - 8 of them altogether - in a very pleasing kind of straight line along the back roof. Spoils the roof-line a bit from the neighbour's place behind us (except there's no neighbour there yet) but approaching the house you can't even see them unless you're looking for them specifically, in which case you get a split-second glimpse if you're looking in the right place at the right time (and don't run off the road attempting it).
Our grand plan was to have them on and for us to greedily reap the rewards whilst not even living in the house - 2 or 3 months of electricity credits racking up in our account ready for us to move in... However, the electricity company's on to people like us and won't allow us to connect to the grid until we've moved in and moved off the 'construction' tariff onto the 'residential' tariff. Clever people...
Now you see it...
As we moved towards the end of January things started to pick up and the number of people on site increased.
Thursday 27th January we had the solar hot water system delivered - big 315L tank with gas-boost mounted on the side, and 2 solar panels for the roof. They ended up sitting around for quite a while as all sorts of other more important things got done around them. Even at the time of writing, the tank itself is still sitting patiently in the container waiting to be put in place and hooked up.
Phil and I also started framing in the kitchen bulkhead the same day, after mapping out the kitchen with chalk lines (which allowed me to see how close my amateur permanent marker scribblings on the floor were to reality... we'll not say too much more about that...) Basic idea is that the roof rakes quite high over the kitchen area, so we didn't want it to feel like we were preparing meals in a circus tent or giant cave - the bulkhead brings down the ceiling to a normal, flat 8ft across the kitchen area while the rest of the space rakes up to it and around it.
Thursday 27th January we had the solar hot water system delivered - big 315L tank with gas-boost mounted on the side, and 2 solar panels for the roof. They ended up sitting around for quite a while as all sorts of other more important things got done around them. Even at the time of writing, the tank itself is still sitting patiently in the container waiting to be put in place and hooked up.
Phil and I also started framing in the kitchen bulkhead the same day, after mapping out the kitchen with chalk lines (which allowed me to see how close my amateur permanent marker scribblings on the floor were to reality... we'll not say too much more about that...) Basic idea is that the roof rakes quite high over the kitchen area, so we didn't want it to feel like we were preparing meals in a circus tent or giant cave - the bulkhead brings down the ceiling to a normal, flat 8ft across the kitchen area while the rest of the space rakes up to it and around it.
Then the extras began to arrive...
Plumbers first. They spent a few days on site running all the pipework through - cold water, hot water, gas pipes, outside taps (which run off a different system so that we can get full pressure), etc, etc. This was certainly one of those, "Well, if we don't get it right now..." moments as they set up inlets and outlets for every tap, toilet, bath, sink, plug and other liquid dispensing (or draining) item throughout the house. Being efficient sub-contractors they just work to the principle that unless someone tells them (at least twice) exactly where something should go, they'll just assume it's meant to go wherever is easiest, quickest and least hassle for them - sometimes even writing things down doesn't always work! All the pipework looked quite impressive running across the ceilings - I found myself wondering how they kept track of which bit went to where.
Black pipe everywhere! |
Mixer set-up in our ensuite - we decided to spend a little extra and have a double shower in this house. Whether we get to use it together in a house with 3 kids remains to be seen! |
After the plumbers (and overlapping with them, to the accompaniment of the usual jokes that little cliques always have to make at the expense of any other - where plumbers are concerned, that will often involve some level of toilet humour... naturally...) came the electricians.
If I thought the plumbers work was complicated, these guys took it all to another level. Photos don't really do justice to the somehow organised, but to the untrained eye completely random and undecipherable, jumble of wires running through every available roof-space, draped down through walls and hanging out of the framing everywhere you turned. They somehow kept track of what seemed like several kilometres of wiring and appeared to know exactly where each bit should go and confident that it would actually do what it was meant to do when it all got connected up later. We designed the house and the electrical plan and still get confused about which wires are meant to do what...
The other amazing thing is that with all this complexity and effort and time gone into making all these bits of the house 'work' - so that we have access to lights that turn on and water on-tap - in the space of a very short time, it'll all get covered up and forgotten about. People will walk in and flick a switch and think it just kind of magically makes light... but behind the paint and plaster, running through the cavities and framing and empty spaces of the house, lies the work of some very clever people. It's been good to see it and appreciate it up close.
Monday, March 7, 2011
Mr. Wiiiillllssssoooonnnnn!
Title is a reference to the now ancient movie 'Dennis the Menace' and a fairly common greeting in my early days of teaching - it was meant to be a reminder that I'm back at school, but in reality I haven't heard students use it for quite a while; the movie's well and truly past it's use-by date now...
Last post was 3 weeks ago and funnily enough, I haven't got back to this to post anything new:
Last post was 3 weeks ago and funnily enough, I haven't got back to this to post anything new:
end of long service leave + start of school again = no time to update blog
(a little algebraic equation for you)Plenty has happened, though, so I'll try to catch up a little bit over the next weeks and follow the process.
Along with the wrapping, windows were going in, which is always a great stage - suddenly the breezes don't blow through the whole house, the views get framed, rooms get enclosed and it all feels much more like a house. Nice to see the double-glazed units - glass is still a terrible insulator but at least double-glazing is so much better than single. Plus glass lets in sunlight, which is free heating if you plan the rest of the house right!
Friday, February 11, 2011
All good things...
Wow!! What a day! Last 'real' day of long service leave (where have those 51/2 months gone?) and it was a big one. This is one of the few posts so far that I've decided to write as they happen instead of playing catch-up in hindsight after-the-fact - and as a result there probably won't even be any photos just yet... the day was so full-on that I left the camera behind and Phil had to pick it up for me, so it's not here to down-load.
Got to the house early this morning to get a good start and found the insulation guys already at it, frantically (well, more like efficiently and with the kind of flowing rhythm that indicated they'd done it thousands of times before - but that doesn't sound as cool and frenzied as 'frantically'...) working away to keep ahead of the plasterers, who turned up before 8am ready to get started themselves. So 4 or 5 plasterers joined 3 or 4 insulators who were joined by me then Josh and then Phil, followed by Pete the electrician (briefly) and then later on the roofing guys to do a last couple of things to make everything water-tight enough to keep the plaster dry, which was going up at a rapid rate.
The first hour or so just seemed to blur... crazy! Insulation guys here, plasterers there, Phil checking bits we hadn't quite done yet, Josh dispatched on little projects to keep ahead of everyone... and I had a list of little things to do that wouldn't matter if you bought a house but you'd kick yourself if you didn't when you were on site for the build. And all impossible to do once the plaster went up. Adding to the chaos was the fact that the plasterers started with a big pile of off-cuts from some other job which meant 6 blokes going in 6 different directions whacking up plaster in random fashion - looked like anywhere they saw a piece of wall. Which created in me one of those senses of minor panic and adrenaline rush in case one of my little jobs got covered over, never to be done and always to be regretted... In case you wondered (and may sometime build your own house), this is my list of little jobs:
1. Put solid wood 'noggins' behind plaster to hold any future speaker brackets or shelves in the lounge
2. Check that I'd done the same in the bathroom for a 2nd set of towel rails above the first (yes, I had)
3. Put solid wood 'studs' up the side of our shower area to fix glass and hinges to
4. Wire some speaker cable through the ceiling space from the spot where the sound system will be to the spot where the speakers will be
5. Move our overhead shower location by 150mm
6. Put noggins in our entry to attach some coat hooks to later
All small jobs, but the kind of thing that can make a difference later on (anyone ever struggled with the range and not-so-easy installation of things that apparently are meant to 'fix' into plaster-board but end up either wrecking the plaster, not fixing anything securely at all or just frustrating you completely when they drop a toggle into the wall space and become useless... ah, the joy of knowing there's a solid piece of 90x35mm pine sitting right where you want it behind the plaster that you can screw into :-) ? or wanting to put your speakers somewhere different to your sound system but debating whether the speaker wire trailing over the floor or tacked over door frames is worth the better sound quality?)
And that was the rest of the day, at one point feeling like you had nothing to do and then spotting plasterers heading for a certain spot and thinking of something that suddenly became urgent, making a frenzied set of measurements, cuts, nailings and fixings, breathing a sigh of relief and moving on to the next thing. Lunch-time was driving around to get bamboo floor samples and to the paint shop to try stains so we could match one and get the front door frame stained and varnished before it went up. I did some framing, some wrapping, some solar hot water installing, some cable running, some cleaning and some trouble-shooting...
Then it was 3 o-clock and I had to pick up the boys from school - last day of long service leave and last full day of building all done...
That's it.
Got to the house early this morning to get a good start and found the insulation guys already at it, frantically (well, more like efficiently and with the kind of flowing rhythm that indicated they'd done it thousands of times before - but that doesn't sound as cool and frenzied as 'frantically'...) working away to keep ahead of the plasterers, who turned up before 8am ready to get started themselves. So 4 or 5 plasterers joined 3 or 4 insulators who were joined by me then Josh and then Phil, followed by Pete the electrician (briefly) and then later on the roofing guys to do a last couple of things to make everything water-tight enough to keep the plaster dry, which was going up at a rapid rate.
The first hour or so just seemed to blur... crazy! Insulation guys here, plasterers there, Phil checking bits we hadn't quite done yet, Josh dispatched on little projects to keep ahead of everyone... and I had a list of little things to do that wouldn't matter if you bought a house but you'd kick yourself if you didn't when you were on site for the build. And all impossible to do once the plaster went up. Adding to the chaos was the fact that the plasterers started with a big pile of off-cuts from some other job which meant 6 blokes going in 6 different directions whacking up plaster in random fashion - looked like anywhere they saw a piece of wall. Which created in me one of those senses of minor panic and adrenaline rush in case one of my little jobs got covered over, never to be done and always to be regretted... In case you wondered (and may sometime build your own house), this is my list of little jobs:
1. Put solid wood 'noggins' behind plaster to hold any future speaker brackets or shelves in the lounge
2. Check that I'd done the same in the bathroom for a 2nd set of towel rails above the first (yes, I had)
3. Put solid wood 'studs' up the side of our shower area to fix glass and hinges to
4. Wire some speaker cable through the ceiling space from the spot where the sound system will be to the spot where the speakers will be
5. Move our overhead shower location by 150mm
6. Put noggins in our entry to attach some coat hooks to later
All small jobs, but the kind of thing that can make a difference later on (anyone ever struggled with the range and not-so-easy installation of things that apparently are meant to 'fix' into plaster-board but end up either wrecking the plaster, not fixing anything securely at all or just frustrating you completely when they drop a toggle into the wall space and become useless... ah, the joy of knowing there's a solid piece of 90x35mm pine sitting right where you want it behind the plaster that you can screw into :-) ? or wanting to put your speakers somewhere different to your sound system but debating whether the speaker wire trailing over the floor or tacked over door frames is worth the better sound quality?)
And that was the rest of the day, at one point feeling like you had nothing to do and then spotting plasterers heading for a certain spot and thinking of something that suddenly became urgent, making a frenzied set of measurements, cuts, nailings and fixings, breathing a sigh of relief and moving on to the next thing. Lunch-time was driving around to get bamboo floor samples and to the paint shop to try stains so we could match one and get the front door frame stained and varnished before it went up. I did some framing, some wrapping, some solar hot water installing, some cable running, some cleaning and some trouble-shooting...
Then it was 3 o-clock and I had to pick up the boys from school - last day of long service leave and last full day of building all done...
That's it.
Monday, February 7, 2011
Wrapping it up
This is the stage when something really looks like it's happening! The roof's on and then you cover all the walls and suddenly you're cocooned inside and can really feel what the house is going to be like and the outside gets filled in and looks much more like a house...
Usually a house gets wrapped in sisalation - 'silver paper' which is blue on one side and reflective silver on the other. For our climate you put it silver side in so that any heat inside the house gets reflected back in and keeps the house warmer. In a hot climate, you'd put it the other way around to reflect extra heat outwards and keep it out of the house.
For us the wrapping is far more interesting and fun... We decided to wrap up our place in giant sheets of space-age bubble wrap which is also silver on one side and a very cool-looking bronze on the other (the bronze is pretty much the same as silver but it's less reflective, so doesn't completely blind the bricklayers when they work on the outside of the house - or fry them to a crisp...)
Usually a house gets wrapped in sisalation - 'silver paper' which is blue on one side and reflective silver on the other. For our climate you put it silver side in so that any heat inside the house gets reflected back in and keeps the house warmer. In a hot climate, you'd put it the other way around to reflect extra heat outwards and keep it out of the house.
For us the wrapping is far more interesting and fun... We decided to wrap up our place in giant sheets of space-age bubble wrap which is also silver on one side and a very cool-looking bronze on the other (the bronze is pretty much the same as silver but it's less reflective, so doesn't completely blind the bricklayers when they work on the outside of the house - or fry them to a crisp...)
Ah - so it does look like I thought it would! Wrapping gives the whole structure a real shape. Still pretty easy to break in though - just need a nice sharp knife... |
Front entry - wrapped up and windows in. Not the easiest place to get into just at the moment - might have to look at that before we move in... |
Suddenly the house has 'walls' and once the windows started going in, everything really started to look like it should. |
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