Jump to content

Timber Cladding, Zinc Guttering, Brise Soleil and External blinds


Thorfun

2965 views

Greetings on a miserably rainy Sunday October morning. Perfect weather for catching up on some blog writing!

 

As the title suggests this blog will be about our external coverings of the house and, by the end of it, the outside of the building will be pretty much finished allowing us to crack on internally.

 

We started many months ago by battening the outside of the buildings. As we are having external blinds and they have a requirement for fitting the blind cassette we needed a large gap between the house walls and the outside of the cladding. This meant 50mm x 50mm timber battens and counter battens.

 

944350613_IMG_2319Large.thumb.jpeg.b1ca397a5dea79537cbe4156f7caef8b.jpeg

1973320247_IMG_2724Large.thumb.jpeg.87c0191feb1f02c9d7342c9ea4c5acb9.jpeg

 

We did this ourselves and saved many thousands and, even though it was slow going (as, it seems, everything is when you do it yourself!), it was very satisfying with the carpenter saying that it was good work and he’d seen chippies do a lot worse jobs than we did. Nice warm fuzzy feeling ensued.

 

We are having a mixture of burnt Siberian larch (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yakisugi) and, to contrast the black, standard Siberian larch on the ‘arms’ of our property and entrance porch (all will be revealed in photos below) and I ordered all the cladding to be delivered on-site prior to the carpenter starting.

 

19470068_IMG_2671Large.thumb.jpeg.6d941f015b2927d629cca7579231bd67.jpeg

 

1098272435_IMG_2668Large.thumb.jpeg.7bb32129a79fc4308d3170f2dc7a4774.jpeg

 

The carpenter started on the garage using the standard Siberian larch which we bought from Jewson at a very reasonable price, and quite a bit cheaper than we could get from the usual timber cladding suppliers and we are very happy with the quality of the wood.

 

599923035_IMG_2747Large.thumb.jpeg.b4b21bbea8b95d39f698cef509299709.jpeg

 

1913151350_IMG_2778Large.thumb.jpeg.9bf4c96d0476fcf09ef7ed2ff345064b.jpeg

 

He then went on to the black charred larch (which gets everywhere and he and his tools looked like they’d been in a coal mine by the end of each day!). We purchased the charred larch from Permachar (https://permachar.co.uk) who gave us a brilliant price. The wood itself was burnt and delivered from Lithuania (https://degmeda.eu) but they will only sell to the UK via Permachar. It is stunning wood, but incredibly fragile and any sort of dragging or scraping will cause the black char to flake off.

 

1111782026_IMG_2799Large.thumb.jpeg.53fd60c2e7fd6c040e0381dbc89d007f.jpeg

 

673779770_IMG_2808Large.thumb.jpeg.0781c5c8982db8f4715fbe25b06d8dec.jpeg

 

While he was busy doing that and while the scaffolding was up I thought it a good time to get the guttering started. Our architect specified Zinc guttering and after a lot of thought and looking at stainless steel and zinc we also decided that zinc was the choice for us. We ordered it from Rainclear (https://www.rainclear.co.uk/guttering/copper-zinc-guttering/guttering-fittings.html?color=235) who offer next day delivery if in stock and were incredibly helpful and very well priced. It’s also a clip on system which even I managed to install without any major issues!

 

1607104420_IMG_3023Large.thumb.jpeg.ba55cc68e83cd119ff75117b240ef9bd.jpeg

 

1354895796_IMG_3032Large.thumb.jpeg.89b0c63900a599f448eafea8a7f0665a.jpeg

 

1521668939_IMG_3059Large.thumb.jpeg.4b90ff967c632610031a47cbd020db5f.jpeg

 

Around the same time and while the carpenter was busy putting the cladding up our external blinds got fitted. We bought those from a local company called Powell blinds (https://powellblinds.com) who stepped in brilliantly at the last minute after we were seriously let down by Cornerstar Aluminium (long story which I won’t get in to here). The blinds are fitted up behind the cladding above the windows but externally so they will be hidden from view when lifted up. We absolutely love them and during the heatwave this summer we lowered them and this drastically reduced the temperature inside the house.

 

559143314_IMG_3028Large.thumb.jpeg.a5d9bc2a0d75f353242240df0f4025b1.jpeg

 

589873024_IMG_3005Large.thumb.jpeg.5cad90821b089654635e475d9545dd06.jpeg

 

469827696_IMG_2979Large.thumb.jpeg.a2afea2532cad0fac55c8d3ec30ab15c.jpeg

 

There was still one large south facing window that didn’t have blinds that needed shading. We wanted and the architect designed a Brise Soleil in this area but all we had to go on was a 2D drawing. I contacted a few companies about getting one made and installed and the quotes came back at between £6k - £7k! A figure we simply could not afford. So I did research and spoke to a local forge called Horsham Forge (https://www.horshamforge.co.uk) with an idea I had. He said ‘that could be done but how about this instead?’. He suggested brackets with a pole running through them and vertical timbers slid on. Genius! On to Sketchup where I draw up the brackets and gave them to the forge to be created and spoke to my timber manager at Jewson who procured me some thermowood at the size I needed and got my carpenter to fit it and it cost me £1700 in total. So we saved around £5k by doing it ourselves and we also enjoyed the journey and got a solution that we designed (with the help of the forge of course). We think it looks fab and it does a good job of shading from the sun apart from a couple of hours when the sun is directly facing that side of the house. So we will still get some solar gain but it is definitely reduced and it’s a brilliant architectural feature. 😉

 

385760256_IMG_3097Large.thumb.jpeg.d1747acc0d1e4c5cd0a4f20a6d12ef10.jpeg

 

340647227_IMG_3101Large.thumb.jpeg.d9dc8ad1ad7bcdb1c581baea99d31db5.jpeg

 

1865577198_IMG_3105Large.thumb.jpeg.bfedcd9949e46c3446dff562e7f460b6.jpeg

 

2107197675_IMG_3117Large.thumb.jpeg.1e94120db87c1c0d5e868dad14de1b6a.jpeg

 

Right, while all this was going on the chippie was finishing up the cladding and now that it is all finished and I have put the downpipes on we have an almost finished external facade to our dream home. We love it and think it’s stunning. So very happy with the carpenter’s work (http://www.kmlcarpentryandroofing.co.uk). Kieran’s attention to detail at the junctions between the 2 types of wood is fabulous as it is in other areas too. He would also discuss any issues and potential solutions with us to make sure we were happy with them rather than just doing something he thought was right. Hopefully the pictures below do it all justice!

1616076479_IMG_1098Large.thumb.jpeg.5e9e55372985f83ccf578c0151d83329.jpeg

 

193101003_IMG_1099Large.thumb.jpeg.a85d1a57f987b692f4fcc2683f77ac09.jpeg

 

280912606_IMG_4228Large.thumb.jpeg.6c9b42a6199ccdc4621c20db1e85a830.jpeg

 

(Note: please ignore the 110mm brown downpipe in the below photo! It will eventually be a rain chain but this works for now. 😉 )

 

2135057476_IMG_4229Large.thumb.jpeg.ed4082f42fd0b79ef6b02eaedab37be0.jpeg

 

689608845_IMG_4225Large.thumb.jpeg.bca391c258f7b948b0a1a37a9fba26fd.jpeg

 

Thanks for reading and we hope you like what we’ve achieved so far.

 

  • Like 12

26 Comments


Recommended Comments



Just now, CaptainRatty said:

@Thorfun, Sorry to have hijacked your thread and made a bit of a mess of it as well.

don't be! that's the whole point of a forum and any post that creates good discussion is a benefit to all. 🙂 

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...