Lowben Drive - Wislocki Self Build

Del & Sarah Wislocki build their new family home - Lowben Drive

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Bricks

We ordered some samples of bricks, as it's impossible to tell what a brick will look like by looking at a photo - so don't go by the photos on the blog. We've chosen a Terca brick, Chester Dark Red Multi, which we intend to use a light grey mortar with. The trend nowadays is to use coloured mortar to either match the brick colour, or to contrast; we realised we prefered older properties with straightforward sand/cement mortar, with the particular shade of grey varying depending on cement used (blue circle/rugby/castle etc).
Sarah asked Terca for some sample bricks, and they sent us 60 each of two colours we liked the look of, enabling Ben and I to build a sample panel, to see how the bricks would look set in mortar. The colour is generally red, with purple & brown - not that you can tell from the photo.
Can you tell who built which panel?


Unfortunately I managed to drive a digger into the panels and bring them crashing down, so the pics are all we've got until the brickies come back!

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Mixed Day

Monday saw the brickies run in a couple of courses round the beams ready for the installation of the soleplate.
Tuesday morning, while having my breakfast, a lorry full of house panels arrived. In reversing down the drive the driver turned a neighbours fence to matchwood (literally), and exiting the drive once unloaded he churned up another neighbours front lawn! Not a good start to the day, and many apologies and promises to rectify damage to remarkably understading neighbours.
When I got home from work, the whole ground floor had been erected! and scaffold on it's way up for the first floor.
We were able to walk through the various rooms, and finally get a feel for the size of the house - which now seems big!
We are now seeing the house progress rapidly - the beauty of timber frame construction.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Block Party

Busy weekend!
63 cocncrete beams were delivered last Friday, and we planned to install them over the weekend. Friends and family were roped in for a weekends hard labour installing the 7.7ton beam and block floor. Big thanks to (in no particular order) the Webbers, Johnsons, 2Joes, Gramp, for all their hard graft. We managed to install all the beams, and all the full infill blocks on Saturday.

Ben is particularly enjoying seeing the house take shape (after months of asking 'are we building the house today Mum/Dad?) and enjoys being outside (getting muddy!) while we're busy.

Sunday saw all the cut blocks installed, screed applied to lock the blocks in place, and telescopic vents (to ventilate sub-floor)installed in 8 hours non stop rain.
We've managed to get to 'oversite' (foundations & ground floor slab) in 2 weeks holiday and a few weekends! - with many aching muscles.

The immediate schedule is:
Monday - brickies to complete a few walls around the beam & blocks.
Tuesday - scaffold & commence timber frame installation.

of which, more later!

Ciao

Friday, October 13, 2006

A lot has happened since the last posting. I've had a fortnights holiday to commence the build properly. To save some money I'm carrying out as much of the groundworks as possible (with my brother Joe's help). Here's whats happened:

First we stripped the topsoil, and ducted under the driveway for gas, water, electric - so that we don't have to dig our access up three times. Then we could stone up the road ~ 9 inches of crusher run on geotextile, should be sufficient for lorries to drive on.


Now the house proper, mark out the foundations and excavate. 1m deep minimum, 2m adjacent to the trees. We used a level to to keep the depth consistent and minimise the concrete we require.
We had a nightmare of a day for the first concrete pour. Joe had enlisted two of his friends to help with the pour, as most of it would have to be barrowed (beyond the reach of the excavator). Some of the sides of the excavation had fallen in overnight, due to the rain, and had to be dug out by hand. Of course it continued to rain, but we managed to clean out the excavation before the first load of concrete arrived. It took 2 hours to discharge the first concrete truck (6 cubic meters, about 15t), and had to cancel the second as more of the excavation had collapsed in the rain. Not a good day.
The next day we'd arranged for a lorry to collect some of the spoil from the excavations, and managed to get the lorry bogged down as he drove off the end of our stoned road! three hour delay waiting for a second lorry to tow it out. At least we shifted about 32 cubic meters of muck.


On the middle Saturday of my fortnight off, Ken (an excavator driver from work) came to re-dig the worst of the collapsed excavation, and generally tidy up the access and mound of spoil.
Monday we had a second attempt at pouring the foundations - success, and the following day set aside for accurately marking out the house on the foundations and delivery of materials (the first 1000 concrete blocks for the foundations, 0.5t cement, 16t sand).

Early hours of Wednesday I'm woken by thunder and very heavy rain, which thankfully stopped by the time the brickies arrived. First trades we've employed on site, and it's exciting to see the blocks go in.

The brickies finished all the blockwork in the sub-structure (1400 blocks) Friday. The plan for next weekend is to fit our 'beam & block' ground floor. Keep watching!