There's probably too many photos for one post here really, but if I don't put them up now it probably won't happen...
The builders have just about finished the work on the roof structure and on the incredible number of rafters needed to form the sloping ceiling and contain insulation. As I write the roofers are finally in starting to lay the breathable roofing membrane and battens, ready for tiles to go back on early next week. We've now missed the planned deadline of end of April to have roof back on and Bat Loft boarded out, which is a shame but was unavoidable due to the heaviest April rainfall in years. It's essentially been exactly the wrong kind of weather for roofing. The horrible blue plastic was never meant to be on the roof for as long as a month, but it has just about held up - mostly. The number of leaks has increased, especially in the torrential downpours combined with the winds, and almost inevitably one of the ceilings I was hoping to save was trashed by water. Oh well.
While the builders have been working I've been managing to do bits and pieces in between, taking out internal walls that are no longer holding anything up, lifting paving slabs in the garden in preparation for groundworks, removing the rest of the manky insulation from the loft, and the like. Also bits of general project managing, trying to make sure I'm ordering things in time for them to be on site when needed (biggest of these recently is the rainwater harvesting tank and paraphernalia), and answering queries about design as they come up. There are so many decisions to be made about every last detail! I'm getting quicker at making them now, but I think by the time I get home, even simple decisions (such as "what to cook?") are too much.
I would still prefer to be doing more of this stage myself, but the time restrictions imposed by the Bat Plan - and by needing to get back on schedule so that I have some chance of doing the rest of the preparation in time for the
strawbale courses in July - mean that a burst of professional activity is necessary. I do have to admit as well, that having seen how complicated some of the carpentry turned out to be: I would never have done as good a job as these guys or in anything like as little time.
Here's the latest progress photos:
|
Preparing openings for roof windows: doubling up rafters, and fitting trimmers (rafter sized timbers to hold top and bottom of window). This photo from before I pointed out the windows weren't that big... |
|
Apple trees recovering from their brutal but necessary pruning |
|
Kit and Simon contemplating the rooflight openings |
|
Most satisfying demolition yet. Knock three bricks off, cut through one timber, then wobble and shove right over. It was a doorway to nowhere that had been irritating me for a while, but the wall supported a beam that held up a large amount of ceiling until recently. |
|
Rooflight openings trimmed to correct size |
|
Collected future firewood in one place, so it doesn't get buried under a mound of earth when the groundworks start. |
|
So many new rafters. Bottom row support plasterboard ceiling, top row to contain insulation. Top end of top rafters also acts as load-spreader to spread the load of the main roof rafters across the top of the new glulam purlin. |
|
The Bat Loft taking shape. |
|
A phenomenal amount of timber went into the soffits. This is to act as a wall plate for the strawbale wrap - we need a solid structure to compress the bale wall down from, using bottle jacks. |
|
Gable roof extension, to cover the thickness of the bale wrap. |
|
Accidental self-take on scaffolding. Switching from looking like this to looking clean and respectable for massage work in the middle of the build is odd. |
|
Rafter extensions to cover bale width at back corner of bungalow. The conservatory roof will start on the closest side of these three rafters. |
|
front soffit/eaves work finished, including fascia-board. The OSB offcuts between the rafters are to contain the recycled cellulose insulation which will be blown in from inside the loft later on. |
|
Soffit/eaves detail. This cavity will be filled with insulation to help avoid thermal bridging where the strawbale wrap joins the roof. |
|
Ceiling stud-work complete |
|
This will be main living area and kitchen. |
|
Loft-hatch! One of those little things that I found disproportionately satisfying when it was done. |
|
'Flying gable'. Eventually the wall will follow the line down from that stud-work. |
|
I was hoping to save this ceiling to minimise old plasterboard waste, but the rain got in. The plastic went back on less than brilliantly above it after work on the roof, with the result that it funnelled rain straight in here rather than off the roof. In fairness, the amount of rain that fell was ridiculous. |
|
Bat roost. Getting it up into that position was hard work on my own. In the course of being sensible and safe about it (I never like working at heights), sitting securely on the sloping ceiling rafters on the cross timbers I put in to support me - I managed to thwack myself in the forehead with the sensible and safe prop I was wedging the bat roost up with... Doh.
Bat roost: two scored boards separated by battens, with a few battens horizontally inside to create niches for the bats to hang-out. |
|
Valley boards, to support the felt and flashing in the join between the two bits of roof. Left hand board needs cutting. |
|
Massively pleasing sight: permanent roof covering going on at last ("breathable" Vapour permeable membrane/VPM, underlay which original tiles be replaced on top of). |
|
The Bat Mesh in place at the apex of the roof. The VPM is lain on top of this. The mesh allows bats to crawl down the underside of the VPM without the layers of VPM separating and entangling the bats. |
|
Gary working alone on a bank holiday weekend and on his birthday too. |
|
Glimpse of the roof through the trees |
|
Spring on Watton Hill |
No comments:
Post a Comment