The ground-works are well under way but just like the roof-work was, they are being slowed down by an incredible amount of rain. It took the best part of a miserably wet day to move a pile of earth from the back garden to the front of the bungalow because the little dumper was up to its axles in mud. On a dry day that probably would have taken about an hour. However, the footings for the strawbale wrap of the bungalow and for the conservatory are now in place, ready for me to start brickwork later next week on the small plinth walls that will support the bales. Lots of drains have gone in, as has the the 2700 liter rainwater harvesting tank.
Photo's of all the above to follow in subsequent posts - there are far too many photos amassed from the last month to cram into one blog. I'll put them up over the next few days. Today it's photos of the finishing of the loft and ceilings.
"bat slate": provides access through hole cut in tiles to loft space and bat roost
Top half of the solatube, pre-ceiling
Verges (the sloping end of the tiles at the gable end of the roof) mortared up by myself and Kit; some nice lead-work by Gary the Roof, using lead reclaimed from the chimney stacks I took out.
First glimpse after the scaffold came down. I lost my lovely Lisa Hammond mug to the scaffolders, I think one of them took a shine to it.
Month a half of work and from the front it looked like we'd just cleaned the roof!
Header tanks for rain water harvesting system installed (pump in ground tank feeds this tank, making the system powercut-proof). Also shows extra timber to support loft floor above insulation depth.
I put in extra timbers and used scraps of board to provide safe future loft access above the depth the insulation will come to
This exciting bag of gravel was waiting on the doorstep one morning for me to approve for use for cement-free foundations (more on those in coming blog-post)
Bits of Spring managing to happen, despite the awful weather
The good, the bad, and the very ugly. First attempt at plaster-boarding with the screwgun. I got better...
Yaay! Gas supply permanently disconnected. No more fossil fuel for us.
Plasterboard lifter - the lone ceiling fitter's friend, along with the electric auto-feed screw gun
The sloping ceiling and flying gable were a bugger to board out. I had help for this room, but that didn't stop us making a hash of it in a few places. Came good in the end though.
Screw strips for the screw-gun
I find this so pleasing: the lens at the end of the solatube, after I fitted the tube down into the new bathroom ceiling
It's even shinier on the inside. Solatub, rainwater header tank, and last patch of blue glow from the roof membrane