Monday, 20 December 2010

Felting, battening and slating!




Very frustrated wiating for a relatively windless day to start laying the felt we eventually managed to get started. The weather has been relentless, either snow and ice or wind and rain makes working on a roof very uncomfortable! Once the felt was in place we started what seemed like the endless process of nailing on the battens....lots of them.










Battens in place, we have now made a start on the slates. We are hanging the slates on hooks and not nailing and are very pleased with the rustic look of the beautiful slate. The amount of weight the roof is supporting is worrying! First velux window is in now just the rest of the roof and the other four velux windows!!!

Saturday, 20 November 2010

The start of the roof!


The house is beginning to look like a house! With the floor joists securely in place we could at last make a start on the actual roof timbers. A good friend spent a couple of days with us to "show us the ropes" of roof construction - thank goodness for good friends! Having completed what seemed like a taxing mathmatical equation, we eventually arrived at the angles we needed to cut for the rafters to fit to the ridge board and for the "birdsmouth cut" where the rafters would meet the wall plate. Our aim was to try and have a sufficient number of rafters in place to have the ridge board secured across the length of the house. This would make it much easier for us to complete the remainder of the roof with just two pairs of hands.



By the end of the two days with the help of our friend (and saviour!) we managed to complete our goal.










We continued just the two of us, albeit much slower, to add the remaining pairs of beams. A few days later (a couple of them very wet!) we completed the rafters.








Our next tasks are to build up the gable end walls, concrete in a steel reinforced ring beam on the gable ends and fix "outriggers" for the overhang.

Saturday, 30 October 2010

Floor joists





We're working with timber at last. We have secured a wallplate to the top of the walls ready for securing joists and rafters. We are using joist hangers to lower the floor joists by 100 mm both for ease of securing and to allow more head room in the roof rooms. With all 60 hangers in place we have secured all thirty 225mm x 75mm joists. The size of the joists are to compensate for having no internal loadbearing walls. We cut each joist to allow 75mm of the depth to sit over the wall plate. This will have the rafter bolted to it.












We were able to continue further with the gable ends and, at last, have cast the final lintel for the first floor window.

Next stage is to sit the ridge board in place and start to cut and attach the pairs of rafters. Thankfully we have a good friend coming to help us get started next week!






Friday, 8 October 2010

Gable ends


Rain stopped play for a week...following a very dry summer we had our share of rain over just a few days which was great for the gardens but impossible to work in. So now the sun is back shining the building continues. The concrete ring beam has now had chance to completely harden off so the start of the gable end walls commence. Our house will have quite a steeply pitched roof at 51 degrees so we have started with the centre of the wall to enable us to secure a timber through the middle to "string out" our finished angle. The remaining angles of the wall will be built and finished with a further reinforced cement top.



We have now had all the wood for the roof delivered, it's quite scary how much it weighs and that our poor four walls will have to support that weight! The slates we have collected from a supllier about 15 kms from us. Five trips with the trailer and aching backs and arms and they are stacked ready to finish the roof. We chose slates from Spain as we had been warned to avoid the Chinese imports. You know you have been bitten by the building bug when you can spend 15 minutes admiring pieces of slate!












Monday, 20 September 2010

The ring beam


Finally, the house has a big collar! After hours of tediously shuttering the beam and the lintels, the concrete has been poured and voila the ringbeam and lintels are all in place and make it look a little more like we are building a house. Leaving a little more time for the concrete to cure and then we will be ready to start building the gable ends. Still waiting for some of the timber yards to finalise their quotes but we have found a great place to buy the natural slate to eventually cover the roof so we can get on with ordering those at least!


Monday, 23 August 2010

More blockwork!

Well, it's been a while but at last we are at the full height of the walls (excluding the gable ends). Looks like we've built a very large shoebox now!!! Next step is to pour a concrete ringbeam which will incorporate the door and window lintels. We now have all the shuttering wood so just need to get it firmly secured and we're back to mixing concrete!




Once the ringbeam is in place, it's time for the gables and starting the roof....pretty scary stuff!!!

We've planned the wood we need for the roof and are now in the process of obtaining quotes from various timber yards and merchants ready for delivery at the beginning of October.

Friday, 25 June 2010

The walls rise


The site is really beginning to look like the beginnings of a house now! Four course up on the blockwork and going up. We now have two doorways and a great place to have an apero at the end of a long, hot day!