Jump to content

saveasteading

Members
  • Posts

    10663
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    91

saveasteading last won the day on July 5

saveasteading had the most liked content!

6 Followers

Personal Information

  • About Me
    Another daughter, another barn conversion. A steel shed this time, commencing May 24.
  • Location
    SE England / Highland depending which.

Recent Profile Visitors

17183 profile views

saveasteading's Achievements

Advanced Member

Advanced Member (5/5)

3.4k

Reputation

  1. ouch. The SE should be able to advise the likelihood of agreement. The purpose is that your design should not apply any weight at all to the pipe or its surounds. Also to allow the pipe to be worked on or replaced without added dificulty. I expect the solution to be to excavate on both sides to below the pipe bedding, and pour concrete bases to above the drain level, and ensure gravel is over the top. Then a layer of polystyrene to ensure no loading from above, and then a bridge of concrete with reinforcement, up to ground level or wherever the post goes. That's all straight-forward, other than being old-fashioned spade work. But I think the next stage is still to get the information you have paid for, and find a builder or two. A good one will give an approximate cost based on gut feeling, or a think about how long it will take his 2 or 3 guys. (labour x 3 will be about the cost.) And if they say £50k or more I assume you can then make your decision easily.
  2. Doesn't have much argument if the instructions say to mix and rotate and dry lay. It's good that the instructions do say that, as I don't think they always do. I hate repeated when products mimicking a natural product have obvious repeats. Tilers, vinyl layers, paving slab layers are not necessarily aesthetes. But it's part of their job so well done for hanging on to that boulder.
  3. Presumably all bills are paid so you have invested deeply. I can see that this very small extra floor could greatly improve the upstairs room. The SE sounds OK. Don't burn bridges but ask for all the work so far and you will " come back to them". Did the architect select them? So may be close, which isn't bad in itself. Ask for all thearchitects's work too, incl any correspondence. Same excuse.. it's on hold but I'll have what I've paid for. I fear it will be surprisingly little. Especially ask for all enquiries and responses re building over the drainage..... I do think that should have been concluded before planning. Talk to the architect ASAP. Then find that builder. The cheapest is unlikely to be best value but you never know. £20k + vat, off the top of my head, to include bco , and that should include all except an SE visit. But do nothing until the drain issue is permitted.
  4. The colour I need is Buckingham Green, like the lighter colour on the photo. Hammerite only make it as "garage door paint". There isn't much said about it's properties so I'm guessing the name sells it to the diy shopper and it sticks to primer or gloss. So I'll try that but with rust converter first.
  5. That's great. We can see so.much more now. My immediate comments are . 1. This is a small fiddly job, all edges and no middle. So it really needs to be by a general builder who does the lot. 2. I see and understand the drain now. I was thinking of it being beneath the canopy, not beneath footings, but OK. It's a hand dig. Structurally this isn't difficult but will be adapted on site and the Engineer will inspect the excavations and possibly revise to suit. Is the drain just yours or serving other properties? But permissions-wise is a concern if it is on the ownership/ control of the drainage company. What has your Architect said? If it needs permissions then that should have been dealt with as a priority. 3. It's a small job. The fees seem steep unless you have been changing your mind a lot. I wonder if this discussion can be moved to its own place.
  6. In all my jobs, hundreds, and bigger than this, I never chose to tell electricians or plumbers how to do their jobs. Because i couldn't. They did their own design. We might say where we wanted anything specific. But anyone can draw crosses on a drawing. Bothers me too. Ask them whose list and what they will be sent. Builders of the size you need will not welcome fancy contacts or bills of quantities. They just need the accurate drawings. "Building over". That should have been considered already. What if the authorities refuse? But why would they?
  7. Another option is to discuss with a very experienced builder at this stage. It's a different way of working, through discussion rather than a linear process. To my way of thinking, the building control drawings should be working drawings by default, ie not just generic statements. The builder may also have practical methods for the process. But.... how good is the builder? How good is the Architect? We don't know.
  8. If you've a kitchen or lots of doors in the project then make sure they know, and that might change. Or try another branch, having a detailed look at their small display and showing/ feigning enthusiasm. we had a proper stair from a kit supplier, because it needed a landing, even though temporary. Still worth it.
  9. Yes, batten the walls leaving gaps for cables, sockets and pipes. You could provide some insulation using plasterboard with eps backing and perhaps more where there are no services, but the void itself has some benefit. Yes the window sills and surround would be deeper but perhaps they could be stepped to avoid a tunnel effect.
  10. This is what our chippies are using on site, with 2 bits of 4x2 on the brackets, and a sheet of osb. very sturdy. Roughneck sawhorse twinpack. £120 but I've seen them cheaper.
  11. welcome and we look forward to your company over the next couple of years. 1. Living with it. You will be short of at least one room at a time so you need space. Putting stuff into storage gets it out of the way but the cost adds up. A shipping container would cost £1,000 but will have a value at the end. Or it could be your workshop. 2. Plan everything in principle as the priority. Insulation, draughts, heating system eventually. 3. Insulation . a) I'd avoid EWI as it is complicated (too complicated for many installers) and it requires the roof to be extended over the width of it. eps beads is prob a good option and doesn't reduce room size ( and it can be done at any time.. But others are more expert than I. b) loft easy to insulate? If it has any it is likely very thin. This is the easiest place to get a good value increase and before winter. c) what is the floor construction? There's no point in ufh on a draughty or otherwise cold floor. d) making a service void over the walls will make services much easier, and help the insulation a bit. some photos would be good. Not showing the whole property unless you don't mind the world knowing your business. but a bit of wall/ floor/ roof/ loft. Or describe. I wonder if anyone knows of an old textbook on how the bungalows were built? I have some old books (MacKay etc) that provide great info, and came from second hand shops.
  12. When we converted this house about 30 years ago the system was different, and any conversion was a low band (C? from memory) , presumably to encourage change of use and retention of buildings and we have benefited all that time.
  13. No, I'm not against this. I'm just considering that the average person perhaps does not have £300 to invest (which is what it is) and the space, and the available socket to spare. If we were to add interest, labour and a lifespan cost the numbers wouldn't look great. But if every developer fitted an automatic one (linked to detect the optimum times to charge/discharge) then the cost would maybe be £300 all up, and it works x the number of units. New houses 10,000 p/a??? .. a lot of power used more efficiently, and we turn off a gas turbine.
  14. That's good and also a tidy sum due to scale. But would you bother for £60 a year? To which apply that it takes space, needs funding which not all can afford, and of course the risk of failure. But perhaps if all new homes had one fitted as standard that would be 1. Cheaper, 2. A big deal on the national scale.
  15. A couple of comments. Thd article says a £300 battery is sufficient to run a fridge for 2 days, and pays itself in 3 years. But this month's which magazine says a fridge freezer costs £30p/a to power. Does not compute. 2 fridges cost £60p/a. 5 years. So a decent return but not ground breaking due to the small scale. Add financing the £300 and it's not great. This also assumes that it's all automatic. Recycling. I understood that I take batteries for recycling rather than for safe disposal.
×
×
  • Create New...