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Everything posted by Ferdinand
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Am I being too sensitive or should I be concerned.
Ferdinand replied to MikeSharp01's topic in Surveyors & Architects
Exceptions to copyright law are also important, as compared to "use" of copyright material which is an infringement. We all have the right to reproduce copyright material for private study or research, or for criticism or review (write an article on your blog :-). "Works of artistic craftmanship" on permanent public display are also exceptions to copyright protection, so if you photograph a mosaic in the pavement you are probably OK making postcards of it for sale. Good source is the Design and Artists Copyright Society factsheets: https://www.dacs.org.uk/knowledge-base eg https://www.dacs.org.uk/knowledge-base/factsheets/exceptions-and-limitations However, architectural arguments will be about the copyright that exists in the *design of the building* as well as the one that may exist in the buidling itself. I would not like to argue this with a copyright lawyer, but would be happy defending myself against a hectoring critic using it as they would need to spend money to take it further. There was a time a few years ago when Local Authorities went flappy about letting people have copies of plans on copyright grounds (had the RIBA circulated a missive?), and started using lots of popup boxes on website, but that seems to have gone away more recently. IIRC I saw a few FOIs refused on those grounds. Obviously designers and lawyers sending letters will pretend that all kinds of acceptable activities are infringements, but that is what lawyers are for and why we have courts to draw the lines. Equally I would as a user probably go a little over the line the other way. F -
Am I being too sensitive or should I be concerned.
Ferdinand replied to MikeSharp01's topic in Surveyors & Architects
@Sensus: I have some sympathy with that, and I think the same applies to the term "self-builder". There is no typical architect or self-builder, and the ground each may need to cover is so great that we cannot expect that. It is not reasonable to expect any architect from the phone book or the local large practice to understand say the intricacies, how to use, and availability of types of oak frame or self-cleaning curtain wall glazing or CLT vs Timber Frame for a 4 storey house on a site on Gigalum Island; we can reasonably expect them to have the knowledge of how to find it out, and capability to make a sound judgement once they have found out, and experience/professionalism to refer us somewhere else if appropriate. Equally self-builders might be the person building a timber frame house starting, as Harvey Jones quipped of Morgan, with the standing tree and who learns how to shear the local sheep they have russled to make insulation for 4p per tonne. Or they could be a well-off person who just wants a Gin Palace with a swimming pool, who may be interested in the internal texture of his Quoins or just wants to move in asap. Or they could be a turbo-DIYer expanding their scope. There is a spectrum. The key skills on both sides are probably communciation and listening. Which is what we are about on this thread. In quantity, perhaps, but as far as I can see ALL of the longlisted houses in the RIBA House of the Year could be described as self-builders - people building or modifying their own houses. Perhaps one issue is misunderstanding of roles. And negotiating expectations and establishing particular roles and recognising what those are is perhaps the thing easiest to miss, especially as self-builders doing one or two projects may not recognise the vast zoology of architects out there - it is no use having a Hummingbird architect if you actually need a Termite Queen. Personally I think of the RIBA as being rather pompous, or (more colloquially) a little "up themselves" - the quintessential establishment. That is a view I share with several architects known to me. I think they would be more approachable after a few years were their headquarters to move to say Burnley, Haverford West or Cumbernauld. i am not sure if that is much different from eg the main membership organisation for Actuaries, but we see the products of architects every day when we leave our beds or our front doors whilst in our relationship with actuaries either us or them are dead by the time we discover it was a dud. That House of the Year is limited to "architect designed" is a good illustration of that somewhat pompous tendency imo. There's something Barchester Chronicles about it. I have views about the architect I would employ: 1 - I value people who put their money where their mouth is, so I would hope for someone who built or modified their own house and is able to communicate their rationale to me or talk about projects in that way. 2 - I expect my views in the areas I know about to be given equal weight. 3 - For the main part I prioritise practicality / pleasantness to live in, long term maintanability, simplicity and cost-effectiveness over artistic expression. But that does not rule out attractiveness, just white elephants. 4 - I would expect to see experience similar or adjacent to the project(s). Were I wanting a very effective 100sqm rental bungalow on a 250qm site I would not recruit Zaha Hadid or Calatrava; I would look for the person who designed the one built round the corner three years ago that the inhabitent likes living in.. 5 - I would expect to kiss several frogs to find my prince. But then one of my frogs could be somebody else's prince, as we are all varied frogs ourselves. 6 - As Client I get the final say having listened carefully, and specifically given my architect the right to challenge vigorously. I would hope to be billed monthly on the basis of time spent, to have the full electronic model, and a right for that design to be used on that site without further supply of spondulicks. But I have been around architects for a long time and worked in the commercial side of construction research for some time so can to an extent talk constructionese nearly as well as I talk gibberish. It is a similar dilemma to hiring an architect :-). A web designer has combine practicality and a limited selection of technology from umpteen options have to be combined with satisfying a client who does not understand all the areas (eg latest practice in accessibility design, video technology, online copyright law, traffic analysis etc) while being a designer with a desire for artistic expression (and probably higher fees than architects :-o ). I would be fascinated to hear how this goes. Ferdinand -
There are some ideas there, but so many that it is not clear what he really wants. And I think it is perhaps unfortunate that the input has come from a smallish, rather expensive, house builder. The numbers are way off imo and should be doable for 70% of that even if we like the scheme and even in The Islands. Running through his house wizard gave me a build cost of 195k for a 136sqm WH202 house, which is a trad 1.5 storey rendered double fronted house with 3 beds and 2 dormers and an extra room at one end.that is standard not posh spec with them building it. Compare with a conversation on GBF a couple of weeks ago where a chap is building passive houses in lots of 4 or so at a cost of 90k each not incl. plot. THese are pairs of 3 story semis at 100sqm ea. Link http://www.greenbuildingforum.co.uk/newforum/comments.php?DiscussionID=14688&page=2 The closest I can find for HebHaus is 160k though detached. Basically 50% more for a lower spec product, allowing 25k for the detached over semi. A crude comparison, but that difference is not absorbed by location costs and extra things included if any. CLT is interesting, but not afaik particularly enviro-friendly over the lifecycle - about 15% better than trad concrete frame. The scheme seems to be a big government factory and giving houses away to lucky groups. That is a recipe for wasting a lot if money imo, and there are better schemes possible. There already exist LA supported mortgage schemes in England. Do they in Scotland? I could see the benefit of extending Help to Buy style schemes to self build. The timber frame idea seems good as it is weatherproof quickly. But then crofting etc is a little unique and may justify subsidies etc. I wonder if a specialist Housing Association would be a way with shell and basics provided on a leasehold or rented plot and sweat equity for part of it? Needs a custom designed scheme perhaps. Knowing a little about the Scottish landscape, I could see standard house type kits working as there are well defined vernacular styles. Staying off negative equity and market prices this time. Ferdinand
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Am I being too sensitive or should I be concerned.
Ferdinand replied to MikeSharp01's topic in Surveyors & Architects
The old PM rule: cost increases x10 for each stage later in the project it is corrected. The old book to read: The Mythical Man Month. F -
Welcome @Simplysimon Not planning extensive comments, however: 1 - It feels short on garages to me. 2 - That is a hell of a lot of circulation space. Do your corridors need to be that wide? To me a 1.4m wide passage is neither one thing nor t'other. The space could perhaps be better used in the downstairs shower room and utility. Perhaps others have opinions of living with corridors of that width - good or bad? 3 - I am not clear on the dead space between the kitchen and garage. What is it for? Is it outside the thermal envelope? I might be tempted to make it a cool pantry / wine room with a door for your produce, or put the boot room there. 4 - Is the front door prominent enough? With a house that size, and listening to @ProDave's sales difficulties on a large house in Scotland documented elsewhere, I would want to give some careful thought to exit strategy - whether for you in a few years or 20 years. Will you have difficulty selling it? Presumably the local market is different to Inverness, but for a 230sqm house consider: Personally I would try to make the plan such that it could be turned into a pair of semis with ease (see how some barn conversions do it without feeling like a suburb), provision for full separate facilities downstairs for when you are in your dotage etc, or for use as a B&B (all double bedrooms etc), or as a let. Not because you will need it , but because that will give you plans B C and D with no downside if you do it now. Ferdinand
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Dealing with demolition materials
Ferdinand replied to Triassic's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Yes. The windows that came out of my cottage are now cold frame covers. Ferdinand -
Best time to buy stuff??
Ferdinand replied to TheMitchells's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
@TheMitchells I don't know about timing, but the two threads I started are. To me they seem to be quite random. 1 - Things you can use to get discounts which is pinned in the "Other" forum. 2 - Current offers, which is not pinned and floats back up when someone notices something and remembers: -
Wedding Rings At Work (NSFW)
Ferdinand replied to Construction Channel's topic in Project & Site Management
WHat did that? Heat, electricity, or mechanical? -
WHat about one of those trad rotary potato peelers driven off a drill?
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Insurance for vehicles on private land
Ferdinand replied to Temp's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
If the past is anything to go by, the DVLA might assume you have one and issue a preemptive ticket, at the wrong address, then blame you for not receiving it, then crush your car anyway. When SORN came in they issued then withdrew 1 million+ tickets over a 4 year period iirc, which was 20% plus. Would trailers and caravans be a model of the different principle where they create a record and yadda yadda yadda. IIRC trailers on the continent have their own separate existence and are identified by the bureaucracy. There was some concession required for Brits towing their non-individually-registered caravans to be able to tow within the EU. Ferdinand -
That is a *superb* idea.
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That is not much less than my Gaggia Classico cost on ebay. Twas advertised as "local pickup only" in Beverly, then it turned out he was willing to post it. Ferdinand
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Whats wrong with this; stone columns as soakaway?
Ferdinand replied to ToughButterCup's topic in Waste & Sewerage
FOr a Christmas Diversion jump to 5:44. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=SFXY8sM88q4- 12 replies
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Whats wrong with this; stone columns as soakaway?
Ferdinand replied to ToughButterCup's topic in Waste & Sewerage
Study some Victorian water cisterns. I have not seen a stone one but it should not a problem to have its feet in water. Our small Manor House had one which was like an underground room with an arched roof, under the kitchen garden. I assume it was drinking or washing water. Crystal clear. Or for light relief read how WInchester Cathedral had so much water around its foundations in 1906 that they had a professional diver working in a 4m deep trench for 6 years to underpin them. He was called William Walker. They now have a delicious exhibit in the slightly flooded crypt with a statue by Anthony Gormley. http://www.winchester-cathedral.org.uk/our-heritage/famous-people/william-walker-the-diver-who-saved-the-cathedral/ Ferdinand- 12 replies
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Aha. £550 per sqm estimate here. http://www.theenergycollective.com/david-k-thorpe/2376889/an-off-site-pre-fab-approach-to-passivhaus-deep-retrofit-2
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Can you give me an approximate cost range for this type of solution. Just an example of a type of house and a ballpark would be useful. Say a square 3 bed detached. Are we talking 40k, 60k, 100k etc? Cheers Ferdinand
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i don't think I can further help here since Megabad do not seem to recognise the concept of Debit Card.
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Finally started de-construction
Ferdinand replied to dogman's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Shades of Clarkson, But without the millions and the explosions. -
Batten down the hatches.....
Ferdinand replied to ProDave's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
I had actually never related "batten down the hatches" to "battens" ie pieces of wood fixed over. I had always treated it as a standalone verb. You live and learn... -
Whose idea was floating shelves?
Ferdinand replied to daiking's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
You should have had one of my recommended double sockets. That is an hour you will not be getting back. An entire episode of Star Trek you will not able to watch again. Your last words: "Holy Polos. Why can't I remember what happened to Uhura's leather boots (*) after the Battle of Xaction Prime?" * probably purchased off Ebay by Max Mosley for use at Klingon-love-tryst themed parties. -
To my eye that quote reinforces @Sensus' point because it reinforces independence of each application. But .. having read the doc, they are distinguishing between Policy (which is probably also code for Precedent) and site specific, and appear to treat Appeal results as determinants for their policy. Said policy is then applied to specific sites. So you are urbanising rural Lancashire singlehanded with a radically different out of step design, you naughty person :-) . THe parish church also looks remarkably different to the chocolate box cottages, so they had better demolish *that* and let the PC Meet in the phone box. Ferdinand
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Discount Offers of the Week
Ferdinand replied to Ferdinand's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Travelex have a currency flash sale from 11am to 1pm today. https://www.travelex.co.uk/ I have no idea what the terms are but perhaps expect a slightly lower spread. Ferdinand -
Off the wall, but I had a similar problem with the heavy banister rail installed by our predecessors who had clearly forgotten something (like studs in the wall) and ended up fixing it to the wall with plasterboard fittings. It came off within months. Spent nearly a day with a stud detector and drilling holes to find any woodwork in the entire wall, and only managed to graze a water pipe and find one piece of frame I ended up buying an oak plank for mounting the banisters, and some 10x10cm pieces of stainless steel sheet, bolting through with domed heads on the stair sides, and leaving the back as a talking point in my office. I like showing working. Can you install something the *other* side of the wall (bookcase, shelves, shallow cupboard, a wall-size mural or large canvas 3" off the face?) and fix it directly through the wall? A mural etc could be mounted on the bolts you have showing :-). IF it was me I would think about a false wall entirely in cork tiles or matt whiteboard for drawing pun or magnetic fixing of whatever. I used to ave one when I was a kid. That would give you a clean line on the stair side and the joiner could work on the other side. But this should probably be Plan B.
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Six new "flatpack house" factories to be set up in UK....
Ferdinand replied to ProDave's topic in Housing Politics
It reads both ways. 25k over next 5 years and 25k per year by 2022. Trade report http://www.constructionenquirer.com/2016/12/19/chinese-giant-to-build-six-uk-pre-fab-homes-factories/ . -
Is this the end of the lava lamp?
Ferdinand replied to MikeSharp01's topic in General Self Build & DIY Discussion
Afaik these never went away, ostensibly for trade. TLC sell them for one. For Lava Lamps you get can them from the original manufacturer Mathmos. http://www.mathmos.com/mathmos-replacement-bulbs.html Ferdinand
