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New Build in Botus


BotusBuild

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Hello fellow self-builders!

Having lived in the South East (nr Reading) for over 30 years in various cookie-cutter boxes of varying quality, after a 2 year hunt we have found a building plot on which we are going to build what we intend to be our "forever house". We are currently in the purchase of the land stage, so fingers are still crossed as we wait for all the legal and financial stuff to conclude, hopefully next month.

The plot comes with OPP for an eco-designed house (architects were ARCO2 in Bodmin) which we intend to make minor tweaks to as we apply for DPP and Building Regs approval to proceed.

Our intention is to perform as much of the labouring ourselves, both being practical minded, in order to be able to spend more on the materials. Personally, when younger, I helped my parents build a major extension to one property and renovate two others, I have renovated and rebuilt two classic cars, and undertaken re-wiring and re-plumbing in our current property - I'm reasonably confident in doing the work. On the Quality/Time/Cost triad, Time is the one that will be most variable :-)

I'll probably be using these forums to seek input on the steps and order of tasks for project planning purposes (if anyone has a good starting template I would be very interested!), to discuss various material choices (e.g. raft v strip foundation, ICF v timber frame etc.), and delve into the variety of construction experience that exists here, so on the basis that there are no stupid questions ..... :-)

Cheers

Stuart

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Welcome, this forum has given me sooo much quality information from people that have actually done their build, much better than theory. I am a retired builder but have learnt so much in the last few years, ask away and looking forward to hearing your plans.

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15 minutes ago, JSHarris said:

Might be in the South West, as the only Botus I know is Botus Fleming (went out with a girl from there around 45 years ago now...).

 

I must admit, I wondered where it was too...unusual place name.  Architects in Bodmin, so looks like you’re right.

 

7 hours ago, BotusBuild said:

The plot comes with OPP for an eco-designed house (architects were ARCO2 in Bodmin)

 

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5 hours ago, JSHarris said:

Might be in the South West, as the only Botus I know is Botus Fleming (went out with a girl from there around 45 years ago now...).

 

Given that the architect is from Bodmin, that may be a true statement.

 

I love the idea of the " Quality/Time/Cost triad" - a comparison with bloodthirsty gangsters seems quite appropriate.

 

F

Edited by Ferdinand
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  • 4 months later...

We finally completed the land purchase on April 12th, and to confirm, yes, it is Botus Fleming just North of Saltash in Cornwall (the South West!) ?

 

The main delay was due to irregularities between the site defined in the approved plans and the plans that were on the Title Transfer, and also the sellers solicitor being a stickler (much to the sellers discomfort!). But as Time is my variable ... ? we promptly went on a two week holiday to celebrate our silver wedding anniversary, and now the planning changes and building reg signoff is the next task.

 

Now switching to other forums ?

Stuart

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45 minutes ago, BotusBuild said:

Botus Fleming

Can smell Devon from there.

Do you have a definition of Eco, or sustainable, or low energy?

 

(reply to old post)

On 18/12/2018 at 14:56, Onoff said:

How's Reading South East?

Same way that Swindon is South West, only 230 miles from me.

Edited by SteamyTea
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1 minute ago, BotusBuild said:

solar PV, solar thermal etc..

Have a look at our Ed's sums on this:

https://edavies.me.uk/2012/11/pv-dhw/

The prices may need updating, but the physics is good.

 

Insulation is an odd one down here, we have relatively stable temperatures.  The one to look at is airtightness and heat recovery.  Start designing it in from the start.

One of the big issues is solar gain.  When the sun does come out, even in winter, it can quite quickly warm a place up.  That extra input is hard to hold onto as the wind soon takes the energy away again.

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1 hour ago, BotusBuild said:

@SteamyTea, my personal aim is to make the house as well insulated as I can without going all "PassivHaus", and using other technologies (solar PV, solar thermal etc..) to aim to reduce utility bills to sub-£400 per annum.

 

Is the £400 including or excluding water and sewerage..?

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44 minutes ago, PeterW said:

Is the £400 including or excluding

Or meter rental for that matter.

Water is very expensive in the SW.  Actually sewage is.  Look at reducing rainwater runoff, you get charged for this.

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Not too hard to get energy bills down to zero.  We're running at around minus £500 a year for all bills except Council Tax and insurance. 

 

Annual house running cost, including Council Tax, insurance, water, sewage treatment, electricity, window cleaning and garden maintenance comes to about £1,600, most of that being Council Tax (Council Tax is current about £2100 here).  That includes most of the "fuel" for my car, too.

 

 

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3 hours ago, JSHarris said:

Not too hard to get energy bills down to zero.  We're running at around minus £500 a year for all bills except Council Tax and insurance. 

 

Annual house running cost, including Council Tax, insurance, water, sewage treatment, electricity, window cleaning and garden maintenance comes to about £1,600, most of that being Council Tax (Council Tax is current about £2100 here).  That includes most of the "fuel" for my car, too.

 

 

Out of interest, how much do you get from FiT payments?

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50 minutes ago, NSS said:

Out of interest, how much do you get from FiT payments?

 

The combination of FiT and export generation to the grid (we export around 50% of all the energy we generate, now) gives an income of around £1000 p.a.  Unfortunately, we missed the really high FiT payments, so we get less per kWh than the retail price, but it's still useful.

 

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10 minutes ago, JSHarris said:

 

The combination of FiT and export generation to the grid (we export around 50% of all the energy we generate, now) gives an income of around £1000 p.a.  Unfortunately, we missed the really high FiT payments, so we get less per kWh than the retail price, but it's still useful.

 

That's still almost 4 times what we get for ours, and anyone building exactly the same house as yours now would of course get nothing.

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Just now, NSS said:

That's still almost 4 times what we get for ours, and anyone building exactly the same house as yours now would of course get nothing.

 

Not sure that's true, as the plan is to pay for export at the mean wholesale price, I believe.  Certainly that was being discussed a couple of months ago, though as usual it seems that our government is way behind the curve.

 

We had a system in place like this for microgeneration before the FiT was introduced, so that microgenerators could be paid for their contribution to the grid at a fair price.  The fair price was around the mean daytime wholesale price, which today would be around 4.5p/kWh, which is what we get paid for export.

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