The internal walls and ceiling cement panels are completely off in the Old Place! It is all piled into one location ready for the skip when it comes.
It looks like that it will fill a large 8 cubic yard skip completely!
Phase 2 is the massive clearance of our site.
The internal walls and ceiling cement panels are completely off in the Old Place! It is all piled into one location ready for the skip when it comes.
It looks like that it will fill a large 8 cubic yard skip completely!
The last couple of days have seen the internal walls, ceilings, doors and windows wooden battens and framework being stripped off!
Also the bathroom wall is now dismantled, and all the cement panels off both the walls and ceiling in that room as a whole, is now stripped off too! you can now see the underside of the roof and the outside heather edge boarding!
It is a very dirty job, but we are wearing a complete high grade one-piece protection suit, a FG2 graded masks, and hard hat with visor pulled down! Our boots have steel sole plates too! it feels like one is entering a crime scene for forensic examination! Smile!
Here are a few more days of timelapse movies for your delectation…
The week’s work of bashing and ripping off the pebble dashed rendering has finished at last!
The ground, the paved footpath, all the way round the Old Place has a pile of sand, cement and little pebbles, about a foot high! This will be scraped up later using the mini digger and deposited into a skip or two. Also there is a large pile of folded flattened soft iron metal mesh! Maybe get some money for the scrap metal value!
All that is left is all the battens decorating the feather edge boarding walls, which will be taken off and burnt. A lot of them are full of nails and some are rotten too!
It is quite interesting to discover what is underneath, as the pictures can show, but also some clues to why the big window (the Lounge) is a different style to all the other windows.
I don’t know what day number it is anymore! Half a day there and half a day here!
Anyway all the roof tiles are now off the Old Place! It is bald!
We have made a pile of them near the Loke, all wrapped in plastic to keep the dust in. Soon all the interior wall panels (which are also thin cement boards) will join the tiles. Then the whole lot will be taken away for disposal in the proper and correct manner.
The rain over the weekend was very useful in washing down the roof of any remaining dust, dirt, moss etc.!
Nothing much done on Saturday as Shaun was feeling ill all day (very unusual)… So Stephen just fixed a saftey rope from one end of the ridge to the other.
On Sunday Shaun made good progress and stripped a third of the roof.
Monday Shaun continued the good work (but the computer recording the images was not working properly and only recorded the last part of the day).
Day 2 sees the tiles come flying off with increasing speed.
The technique is improving but it is time now to make a neat pile for the rubbish so we can treat it properly.
The tiles are well fixed, using copper attachments in the third hole and two more normal iron nails for the main fixings. The roof isn’t showing any signs of rottenness, quite solid!
The chimney is in very good condition without any wearing or mortar failing! They knew how to do a proper job in those days!
Today we started the demolition of the Old Place!
The tiles on the roof starting from the top, working the way down, are being removed, one by one. No rushing!
The initial cautious probing and teasing up of the tiles at the beginning of the gable end of the roof, then the job speeded up as the confidence grew.
There will be safety lines tied up over the roof ridge and around the chimney to insure against slips etc. Also wearing full dust masks and face shield too!
The shed has been successfully moved to its new location.
We have bloated it up by adding two more 4feet wide (8feeet high) panels to the side walls to extend it from 2.2metres to 4.6metres. The other dimension remains the same at 3.6metres wide.
This change in size gave us a major boost in storage capacity for both our Oak planks, long offcuts and many items with are not needed in the short to medium term (like the gardening equipment).
We made a new roof and tried out for the first time, a homemade ridge beam constructed using two 63mm by 38mm CLS timber lengths, sandwiched with two layers of 11mm OSB boards 400mm high. The resultant beam is 3.6metres long, 60mm thick and 400mm high. It was glued and screwed together. We mounted it up on top of the walls in the middle and constructed the roof using 63mm CLS timber rafters covered with 11mm OSB complete (8by4) sheets, 3 down each side of the ridge beam. Walking on the roof did not deflect the ridge beam at all, and jumping up and down (over 100kg body weight!) only gave a slight deflection of a millimetre or so!!
The roof is now covered in fresh roofing felt, glued down with that black bitumen horrible stuff! A line gutters runs on both side and is collected into a water butt, through a filter box made of scotch brites, pebbles and stainless steel mesh!
600mm deep Shelves have been installed on three sides of the shed, at 2feet apart and a 10 shelf rack also constructed to hold long flat items.
The shed is quite loaded up now! !