We started laying in the various water pipes in and around the hot water tank. It is quite a tight space to route all the pipes like for example the Mains Water pipe across into and up the corner to the roof ready to go outside to the header tank, as well as the rain tank pipe to the same place. Then other pipes have to come down from the roof to connect to the hot tank and beyond to sinks and cisterns. It is quite a jigsaw of pipes!
Blog
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Garden Room Floor!
Yesterday we finished the last piece of work needed to be done on the floor in the Garden Room. The central section where the Earth Tubes comes up out of the ground, is channelled under the false floor and we decided to change, slightly, the arrangement of the panels. Instead of 4 square panels, we sliced them in half and joined one long strip together and permanently screw it down. The other strip is where the Earth Tubes are accessible so we replaced this strip with two 8feet long pieces and glue the two together. This will be our removable covers to allow maintenance of the Earth tubes.
The last job was to install the 50mm thick PU foam to insulate the Garden Room against any effect of the air being drawn from outside and down to the Earth tubes. The outside air temperature may be at a higher or lower level and could affect the comfort zone.
Today we smoothed the whole floor to remove any major differences in the levels of the boards. Not all the pieces we put down could be Tongue&Grooved so with the variability of the thickness of the OSB sheets, we had to plane and surf-form the edges to reduce the sharpness, in readiness for the installation of the laminate floor tiles. We will hire a large industrial belt sander to clean the surface of any remaining unwanted artefacts! Then we will wash it and start the laying process in a few days time.
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Garden Room Paint Everywhere!
Our Garden Room, over the last three days, have been painted with various layers of white emulsion. The bottom (first) coat was using a cheap B&Q matt emulsion as the primer. Then yesterday and today the ceiling had two coats of Absolute White from Dulux and the walls had one coat of Dulux Brilliant Matt White. Tomorrow these walls will have their final Dulux Vinyl Silk Brilliant White coat.
The WC had a slightly different treatment. First of all, we applied a fine surface paste supplied by Fermacell, designed to fill in the micro pits in the surface of the Fermacell boards. We then gently rubbed down the surfaces using 300grit sandpaper which gave us a smooth finish. Then we painted the same B&Q white emulsion but using a pad instead of a roller for a smoother finish. Again the surface was gently sanded to produce a nicely smooth finish. Yesterday and today we put on two coats of a special Dulux DiamondHard Moisture Resistance White emulsion which offers a much tougher surface, up to 10 times harder than standard emulsion. We will put on one more coat tomorrow.
The ceiling has come out very well indeed. Our second attempt at putting up the ceiling using Fermacell panels but this time, we tongue and grooved the edges to align the joints and it worked!
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New Floor is Laid
The Sun Corridor now has a new floor!
In order to make as much of the space useable as possible for each of our rooms, we brought up the level of the floor. The only compromise we decided on is a gentle slope down towards the front door to minimise the step up when anyone comes in via the front door.
It was a fairly simple construction of 4 lines of CLS timber (38mm x 63mm) supported by little legs every metre.
Then 8 sheets of 18mm OSB boards laid on top. The gap inside was filled up with recycled glass wool bits and pieces to provide a little insulation.
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Preparations of our Temporary Living Quarters
we had to change our priorities just a little bit and started the preparations for making our temporary living quarters. We cleared all the remaining bits and pieces from the Sun Corridor which was baking hot today! We also dismantled the large old shelf down the bottom of the storage shed, and finally cut three doorways into the wall between the Sun Corridor and the storage shed.
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Clean Up!
We spent the morning cleaning the whole garage, vacuuming all the floors, walls and windows. We are getting ready for the painting task.
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Garden Room – All Holes Are Filled, at Last!
The Garden Room is at last, has all its holes, cracks, joints, corners and dents filled in with filler. We have been using two different sort of filler, we decided to try professional Polyfilla and discovered that it stays soft much longer and it is also much easier to rub down afterwards. The other filler is a much cheaper bulk filler from the Fermacell people. Their filler is much much harder and it sets in next to no time (well 30 to 45 minutes!) compared with 4 hours for Polyfilla! The Polyfilla is more than twice as expensive but it offers much easier work of filling in and rubbing the staple holes!
All the corners are rounded off and the walls to the ceiling and light channels are also rounded off, by using a 15mm plastic pipe as the “curve” to draw along the wet filler. It has come out very nicely!
We also put up the cistern for the WC toilet as the final pieces of the Fermacell needed to go up and rounded off. The rectangular box is mounted high up the wall, is a permanent structure with a little lid for servicing. The flush push button works or at least the pump (air) causes the valve to lift up and hopefully release the future water that will be in the cistern! We hope! And all the pipes are concealed inside the wall so no going back! Gulp!
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Garden Room – Half Way Filler’ed
We are making progress! We are more than half way completed with the filling operations. All the staple holes are now filled, most of the boundaries have rounded corners and all the doorway trimmings are filled. Half the rubbing is also completed! The major task to do is the bulk filling in the space alongside the metal uprights and just a couple of boundaries to smooth off.
Then rub rub rub!
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Garden Room – The Filling Operation
All the pieces of Fermacell is now up everywhere, all the walls, trimmings around each doorways and windows plus all the corners of the Garden Room as well as extra pieces to terminate all the Utility Rail channel.
Now it is time to fill all the little staple holes, which we have started now, then the joints between sheets along with the gaps left over in the slots where our metal upright bracket were screwed onto the walls, and finally putting enough filler in all the corners, whether it is wall to ceiling or wall to wall etc, a smooth small curve to soften the hard edges. There is quite a lot to do in this segment of work so it will take a few days to complete and rub down to a nice and smooth finish!
We are getting close to the time where the Garden Room can be realised .. .. as a kitchen! That is the short term use of this room to enable us to move out of the little tumbling down old cottage, and during the Summer, we knock it down! Flat!
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Back Edge is Done
Our temporary fixing of the rubber material has proved troublesome during rain showers, we have had too many little leaks coming down the back wall and spilling into the air holes for the rafters. We decided to put up and fix down the 45 degree sloped flange along the back edge of the roof and then mount a wide 180mm (just over 7inches) Oak plank the facia hanging down from the roof.
The rain will now gush off to the sides of the roof for now and not straight off the middle of the roof and trickle down the back wall!
As soon as we get another series of good dry days and warm too then we will be back on the roof to finish it off properly, preparing and gluing the rubber material down all over the roof.
It is the first time we have used our supply of Oak Planks, we pulled out 4 pieces of 6 feet lengths and 1 x 8 foot length which were all very similar in width. We sanded one face and the edges to take off the worse of the rough sawn surfaces and put them up untreated and in their full thickness of over an inch! Nice and solid!









