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Everything posted by ProDave
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The planning can be locked in once you have "started" the development. there is then usually no rime limit on completing it. What constitutes "starting" will be individual to each site, but in our case we had a planning condition that the entrance to the site must be formed prior to building work started. I had a letter confirming that once I had created that entrance, the development had "started" so If I wanted to bail out, I could have sold it then with no fear of the planning lapsing. I suspect in any scenario where you are selling a part built house, you would be lucky if the sale price recovered the plot price plus what you had spent.
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Steeling the Show. And an attack of wind
ProDave replied to ToughButterCup's topic in RSJs, Lintels & Steelwork
My only though, is if you bring to the attention of BC that there might be "voids" in the concrete fill of the blocks, then you re opening a huge can of worms, if Mr BC wants to be picky? Find a solution without him? -
Scotframe were the company that refused to talk to me when I started mentioning getting one of their standard offerings and increasing the amount of insulation...... Their exact waffle was "there is no synergy between what we offer and what you want"
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Tell him I'll give him £600 for the SB
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I am pretty sure this was the one I bought from Germany https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/20-Rollen-proclima-TESCON-VANA-All-round-Kle-be-band-30-Mtr-x-60-mm/381452848613?hash=item58d05c8de5:g:DG0AAOSwwbdWMxxx Be careful when comparing roll prices between one manufacturer and another. The Tescon is 30 metre rolls, some others are only 20 metre.
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Originally the design was for the OSB joints to be taped and the OSB to be the airtight layer, but I decided a proper air tight membrane was better. Some of the OSB did get taped first before I made that decision but I consder that a waste of tape.
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Mine is between the OSB and the batten that forms the service void.
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Check it's weight. If less than 200Kg per square metre, buy some of these https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/EX-DEMO-Versadock-Low-Profile-Floating-Pontoon-2m-x-1-5m-VERSADOCK-APPROVED/292409877779?hash=item4414fca513:g:aIcAAOSwxKBZisXi Do you need PP to have a cabin / houseboat floating on your lake?
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Hi and welcome to the forum. It sounds like an interesting project, probably best not to divulge the exact location until you have secured it, if not done so already.
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If you go to one of the established TF suppliers, chances are they will do the building warrant submission for a very reasonable price. If you are happy with a "standard" timber frame construction that may well be the best approach to this. We wanted something a bit better and none of the standard TF companies would do anything other than their standard make up, one even refused to talk to us. So we employed an archtectural technician and structural engineer to design it all and then got a local firm of builders to build it. Building control are a whole lot easier to deal with than planning. If they encounter an issue they will talk to you and work out a resolution, they will not normally just reject it. They will hapily give you a list of items that need to be altered and you just work at it until that list all gets ticked off. You will need to know the heating system for the design SAP assesment but you can change it later as long as the as built SAP is still a pass. If you make too many changes as you build it, then BC may want an amended "as built" set of drawings at the end.
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My wood shed at the old house has those (from B&Q perhaps theirs are better?) and after nearly 10 years they are still fine (outlived the roof felt on the other shed) with no sag. Supported horizontally every 2ft.
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Ah rack and pinion or lead screw?
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Electric or pneumatic actuator?
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I would never ever ever use "roofing felt" for a shed roof again. Miserable product with a very short life before it starts leaking. Corrugated bitumen impregnated solid panels is my choice of shed roof now.
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As I suspected, it was built to the portable building / caravan spec so would have been exempt from building regs. In that case it should be possible to separate the 2 halves and move it again. You might even be able to sell it, so I am sure you could give it away. Take lots of photo's and put it here in the market place and on somewhere like Gumtree It is in effect a "twin unit" mobile home, but quite possibly built better than most static caravans. It would make someone a good temporary home while building if nothing else. How far are you from @Nickfromwales ? Crane hire and 2 low loaders. Worth getting a quote? Would a large hiab lift each half? have you looked underneath? are you sure it's not on 2 mobile home chassis with wheels?
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Does it HAVE to go? It looks too good. I would be trying to retain that and build on a different part. It would make a smashing workshop / shed / man cave, plus temporary accommodation while you build. I had the offer of something similar, but I had nowhere to put it and the condition for having it free was I would have had to remove it. How was it built? is there a chance it was a sectional prefab? in which case it might be possible to remove in sections with a crane and low loader.
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The usual sequence is: You peg out the house footprint on the ground "That looks tiny, make it bigger" You dig the foundations and lay the dwarf walls "That looks tiny, make it bigger" The timber frame goes up "Oooh it is quite big isn't it.
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Reasonable yes for 10 man days, but avoidable for a DIY install, so still a premium you have to pay to get the FIT
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A raging convection flow and a cold nose...
ProDave commented on curlewhouse's blog entry in Sips and stones may break my bones...
Have a look at compriband expanding tape. Now is the perfect time to install it, while it is cold (keep the roll somewhere cold until you need to use it) In this cold weather it takes a long time to expand, so plenty of time to unroll it and slide it into the gap then it will gradually expand to fill the gap. -
My 2 pence worth. This thread highlights, if you want it done properly, do it yourself. At least you would have got the gap you wanted. Having said that, the unit is fixed to the wall with 2 (or more) brackets, so I very much doubt it's doing much more than touching those pipes, and not putting the full weight of the unit on the pipes.
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A raging convection flow and a cold nose...
ProDave commented on curlewhouse's blog entry in Sips and stones may break my bones...
I'm off to start the CPL (Caravan Protection League) -
New Build Wet Plaster or Dot & Dab on thermalite
ProDave replied to GHDirect's topic in General Construction Issues
The big issue with dot and dab is the risk of creating a "plasterboard tent" with the top of the gap open to the cold roof space. There have been plenty of thermal image pictures posted before about this. If you are going to dot and dab, then parge coat the walls first to seal any air leaks and then pay attention to seal any gaps along the to edge to the roof space. You could consider the modern method of making a service void. Screw 50mm by 25mm battens vertically to the wall and fix the plasterboard to those. It really makes running services easier. Use 50mm deep battens where pipework will run. Again seal the top to the loft space. A service void avoids the need to chase the walls for cabling and socket boxes and makes future alterations a lot easier. Whatever you do, get the plasterboard skimmed for a better finish rather than just tape and fill the joints. -
I presume you bought it with the intention of extending it so agreed to the uplift clause and expected to pay the uplift? What matters is the wording of what you actually signed nor some previous draft copy.
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Hi and welcome to the forum. That looks fantastic and all self done, even better. Get those questions rolling.....
