Monday, 23 December 2019

One month on....

Although we are just about at Xmas Eve only, this will be the last post of 2019. As previously indicated we have not moved in, despite a huge shove and a push from Sheila to motivate all concerned...well perhaps to leave it to her...
Sheila writes

November and December turned out to be a couple of roller-coaster months. Progress on the house has been at a pace, even though the plastering took longer than planned. We’d been promised four guys would be doing the work, then only two ever seemed on the job at any one time. Maybe the builder meant there would be four doing the work but never at the same time! 

In early November we had notification from ESB Networks that after completing their initial inspection to reconnect our house to the main grid they had to upgrade the wiring and three telegraph posts. In order to run a heat pump to power the underfloor heating, we needed to have a power rating of 16KVA’s rather than the 12KVA’that the site previously had. We also received a bill for just over €1,200 for this work.  

Getting electricity to the house was/is mission-critical because the concrete floor and newly plastered walls need heating to dry out. Only after the heating has been on for at least two weeks can the walls be painted, stair installed, floor tiles laid, kitchen installed, and carpets laid. The electrician also does not want to complete the 2nd fix unless the heating is about to be turned on because he is worried that the damp walls will corrode the fittings – he is probably right. 

Early December had us on the phone to everyone lining them up to come the week of 6th January. Tiler on Monday 6th, Tuesday 7th and Wednesday 8th, staircase installed on Thursday 9th and kitchen installation beginning on Monday 13th. 

All of this to happen by working on the key event that the electricity would be reconnected week of 9th December and the heat pump installed and turned on by Thursday 19th December. This would allow two weeks of heating in the house ready for the 6th of January. In order to complete their work, the ESB had to gain permission from each of the landowners to access the poles. There are two landowners, our direct neighbours and a neighbour with a field across the road. Our direct neighbours said no problem whilst the neighbour opposite said yes but…. the ESB can only gain access when the field is dry. In truth, the farmer might as well have said no. We will need a sustained period of no rain for fields in Ballyferriter to dry out, a prospect that is unlikely for many months. 

OK, I thought, I’ll track down who the farmer (the ESB would not divulge their identity) and appeal to them directly. I’ll explain why we need the connection. The farmer lives quite close to the house, about 6 doors up from us on a small farm. The short version of the conversation was an adamant no and it would not be an exaggeration to say I was told to take a hike.  Under no circumstances would they let anyone in the field to carry out work. Did I not understand the land or farming? Did I not understand that trying to make a living out of that field is hard? I have no idea what it was like for farmers, and so on. Safe to say Christmas Cards will not be exchanged. 

Once I relay the story to the architect/project manager, he gets on the case to come up with some solution to power the underfloor heating without the heat pump. The issue is that the heat pump needs the upgraded electricity supply so was there a way around it.

He phones to say that what he is looking at is a mechanical heat recovery system and has asked a company in Kenmare to quote on the job. The company says they have time to put it in before Christmas. We await the quote and all the time I am googling what such systems are and their costs. 

Thursday morning and after back and forth conversations between everyone, it turns out that the only option now on the table is a Gas Boiler. He describes it as a gas boiler on wheels that heats a tank of water, with a pump that is connected to the underfloor heating manifolds.

We call the company installing the heating who have been fantastic. His initial reaction is “ah feck” what’s this? Ok leave it with me he says. He phones back an hour later with his solution which he is confident will work. His version is just the same but powered by electricity. All he needs is our electrician to put in a 6sq metre twin and earth cable in the utility room. And of course, the electricity to be connected - but it only needs the same level of power output that was connected to the house before we started the work. Can we get hold of the electrician, can we heck. Now I am googling twin and earth cables whilst trying to track down the electrician.  


The upshot of the week is that my google profile will be thrown into disarray with the variety of searches recently. 

In the middle of all this, we were given notice to move out of our rental house at the end of January. That’s fair enough because I had said to them when asking for an extension we’d probably be gone by the end of January. But as there are new tenants ready to move in, we cannot ask for another extension. 

Friday, December 13th was a momentous day in many ways. The UK committed itself to 5 years of a right-wing government led by a person who could not lie straight in bed if he tried.  But more importantly in our world, we met with the architect and builder to work through what is happening in the next 6 weeks in what was a really good and positive meeting with everyone agreeing on the tasks.  

Monday 16th and the electrician confirmed that the necessary work to get the essential certificate off to the ESB has been done.  And they confirmed the y would reconnect at the old level.

Monday 16th we took delivery of all the tiles for the floors. We also took delivery of the hot water cylinder plus the equipment to run the underfloor heating in the short term. The house has no stairs so today’s challenge is to get an 84kg cylinder upstairs to the utility room. Another round of panicking phone calls between the plumbers, builders and project manager means that on Tuesday morning 17th there are 5 lads on-site to lift it upstairs using a ladder! 

Tuesday 17th and a team from Cremur was on-site installing the system to get the underfloor heating working. All is going smoothly. I drop Peter off at the airport only to receive a phone call on my return from the plumber panicking over the wiring for his connection. Sorted by Denis about 8pm, gin and tonic time. 

Wednesday 18th I meet with a potential painter and decorator. He is set the challenge to do the initial job before 6th January which would be fine, we both agree if the little matter of Christmas and New Year were not in the way. He is originally from Neasden and we have the inevitable conversation of “how mad is it all over there, can you believe it...

Wednesday 18th and it’s more saga when the builder calls to say the ESB Network are ready to connect the house but cannot see that we have a supplier. I call Electric Ireland to establish if this is true and it is. Sheila had dropped the ball on this task and immediately sets about setting up electricity supply. Electric Ireland then need to tell ESB Networks that it’s all ok to go and they expect this to take about 24 hours = sigh. 

Thursday 19th ESB reconnect the house.  The plumbers install the temporary heating fix and we hope for at least two weeks of heat and dehumidification to ready the place for the decorator, the tiler and uncle Tom Cobbly in the new year. 

Wish us luck. 


Coda. Monday, December 23rd, site visit - its close to sauna time in the house as the underfloor heating drys our more than the dehumidifier can expel, goodness knows if this is good or bad.



Happy Christmas - Sheila

And Peter




Tuesday, 19 November 2019

Ten days on

If this building project was a sailboat and we were on the ocean, one might fairly say that we are in the doldrums. Nothing else has happened inside the house and we still don't have a date from the ESB (the electricity supply organisation that provides grid services) for when the house will be connected. This is why, other than the slow drying out of the plaster, nothing has happened inside the house.

The main contractors' chaps are working away on the site on a wide range of tasks, including getting all the drains connected to the main sewer, tidying up the site, prepping for the paths and drive and the like.

So, as this snap shows. We have water to the house and drains to carry it and all the assorted waste away from the house. If only we could get some electricity to the house we could get going on the plumbing, the tiling, the kitchen and the like. It looks extremely unlikely that we will be in by Christmas.


Bah, humbug

Saturday, 9 November 2019

At last the plastering is finished...

...and now we have to wait for it to dry out.
Still, the scaffolding has gone and we can now see just what sort of views we will have from the living room, or do I mean the salle de Sejour?
Main window overlooking Smerwick Harbour




Friday, 1 November 2019

Not yet plastered

After three days away from the site, we returned on Friday for a site meeting with builder and architect. It proved to be a somewhat disappointing meeting and day.
First of all the plastering is not finished and won't be until close of play next Tuesday - that is a full week later than planned.
But that pales by the news that our scheme to get the underfloor heating up and running has been scuppered by not being able to get the electricity supply reconnected. The worst-case scenario for that is it could be eleven weeks away. That is to say in the week of January 20th 2020. Work goes on to shorten that lead time but we have already had to put back the kitchen installation by two months to mid-Janaury.
The underfloor heating needs to run for at least a week before the tiling of the floors can be done.  The plaster needs to dry enough to paint before the floors go down as it is being done by spray painting. The second fix joinery, including the installation of the staircase, can't be done until the tiling is done. Nor can the installation of the kitchen.

The one positive note is that the scaffolding is down and we can now get a good sense of the geometry and volume of the build.



Saturday, 19 October 2019

Should have read "can't see" not "can see". Wishful thinking

Half plastered...

...almost.
Most of the downstairs is finished although, rather disappointingly, one wall that needs to be done before the staircase maker can measure is not done.
The slabbing out of upstairs is finished and the roof is probably less than a day's work away from being complete.
Here is a couple of views taken from the living room and looking into the (remodelled) first floor of the original house. This will be the kitchen/dining area. Can't see us cooking Xmas dinner here this year.
The gap on the left is where the stairs will rise. The kitchen units will be on the back wall and on the left, just beyond the stub of a wall and running up to where there are wooden planks leaning on the wall

The window on the right, nearest the viewer, is roughly where we will put the table on we get it from storage. The whole space has a rather odd geometry and will probably take while to get used to.

Saturday, 12 October 2019

Getting plastered

stairwell
More steps forward, the work of plastering and such like began on Wednesday (October 9). By the end of the week most of downstairs masonry/block walls were covered in the base coat and the plasterboard ceilings had been skimmed. Oddly the only area of blockwork not given its base coat is where the stairway rises.

This needs to get done so that the chap making the staircase can come along and measure in advance of scheduling its manufacture.

Upstairs just about all the walls have been "slabbed", just one to go but it is proving very fiddly. The unfinished section is part of the original structure and includes the part of the roof we broke into in order to resite the windows.

Below is a photo of the area at an earlier stage of the build/rebuild. It runs out that all the old walls lean in by about 50mm and so the plasterboard has to be set so as to correct this. This requires a lot of the adhesive/bonding material to pack the gap and is proving time-consuming.  They need to get finished so the plasterers can move upstairs.

wonky wall
We were told the plastering will take until October 25th, but at the rate they are working it might be sooner. If only the slabbers don't hold them up.

The roof still not finished and there is no excuse the builder can come up with - the last piece was delivered last Saturday and he has chosen not to progress the work.

Hopefully, the progress next week will be a bit more photogenic.

Sunday, 29 September 2019

Hopefully here is the downstairs video

Looks like the video did not go out in the email

so you should click on the link to the blog. Also, I think I just uploaded a video of upstairs?

A good week but..

Plenty of activity all week with the most obvious work being the installation of the plasterboard, - slabbing out, as they call it. But there have been a couple of key tings not achieved namely, not getting the electricity reconnected and not getting the roof finished.
We have not given up on electricity front as we want to get the underfloor heating working to speed up the drying out of the floor screed and subsequently the plastering.
This video should give you an idea of the progress of the slabbing on the ground floor.
I
It begins at the front door with a view along the hall. First right is the guest bedroom. The space with the ladder is where the staircase will go. Past that is the third bedroom and beyond that the main bedroom.
My sense is that we are quickly slipping to being two weeks behind the schedule.


Saturday, 21 September 2019

September 20th update

The week finishes on a positive note. The site meeting seems to have resolved all the outstanding issues and cleared away all potential barriers to progress. This required a bit of compromise all round and I am still anxious about the builder's acceptance of the architect inspired plan for channelling the rainwater off the pitch of the original structure that fronts to Slea Head Drive.
This is the roof in question
The roof has three dormer windows and so has two small roof areas on either side of the middle window. The builder wants to put gutter along each of them with a fall pipe running down to the ground for each of them. We (including the architect) are resisting this and the architect has specified an alternative that the builder considers new-fangled and unnecessary. I interpret this to mean it involves more work for him. The section of the roof in the photo is the only part of the roof(s) not fully tiled.

One thing is sure, the builder is keen to get rid of the scaffolding, as are we.

Next week could see the electricity reconnected and we can then move to get the heating system installed and commissioned. With the heat on we can hope for the floor screed and plaster to dry out that bit quicker. And with just ten weeks to go to the end of November any help in this direction would be handy. As observed yesterday, I reckon it has to be a least a week later than that, but we can live with that.


Thursday, 19 September 2019

Three weeks of progress

Underfloor heating manifold downstairs
Lots of activity since the last post, much of it hard to capture with a photograph.

The first fix plumbing is complete, including the underfloor heating pipework. The screed for the floor was poured and there is an ongoing discussion about how long it will take to dry sufficiently for tiling to take place.

The remaining external walls of the original structure has been wrapped in 100mm of insulation and sprayed with its acrylic finish. This is supposed to have a permanent colour that will not need repainting, just cleaning. I will believe that when I see it.

The same company is "blowing in" insulation to the cavity walls of the new build extension. This is 200mm of insulation. Combining this with triple glazed windows we should be quite cosy in the wild winters that are no doubt to come.

Kitchen dining area with insulation



Internal insulation is being inserted in the rafters of the roofs (rooves) and is nearly complete. They started this about two weeks ago and I am amazed at how long it is taking to complete. They tell me it is the fiddly bits that take the time.

Last Monday the kitchen company were able to survey the site to get precise measurements to prepare the technical drawings and put the kitchen into production. If things go to plan they will begin the installation on November 11th.

As I may have mentioned before, the height of the vertical walls, in the kitchen dining area, is lower than expected and this has meant a couple of modifications to the kitchen plan and the lighting plan. Still waiting to see the final estimate/sales order from the kitchen company to see if has made any difference to the expected cost.
Position for the consumer board

First fix electrics are all but complete but we need to get things to the position where the electricity can be reconnected so that when the heating system can be finished and commissioned - but then we need the plastering to be done before anything like second fix gets on the way - and the floor tiles need to go down...

So many opportunities for this to grind to a halt.

A glimpse of the "demand control ventilation system"




















An unexpected appearance in the utility/plant room is the "demand control ventilation" system venting tubes. This has been much talked about but the reality of it has not been clear until now. There are six pipes, one in the utility room, one in the kitchen, one in the upstairs toilet and, one to each of the three shower rooms. All arrive to a box that is hidden in the space to the left where the blue tubes disappear into the roof void. From the box is a 20cm exhaust that can be seen running across the top of the aperture that will be the door into the upstairs loo. 

Three-way site meeting at 2.30pm today (Thursday 19th September) to resolve an argument about gutters and drainpipes and to try and nail the critical path sequence to get everything lined up to complete by the end of November. I reckon the progress is a week behind but if we can hold it to that I will be happy.


Saturday, 24 August 2019

Saturday Update

The flat roof guys were back today and so I am hoping they will be finished. Inside the sub-floor insulation is laid on the first floor and in about a third of the ground floor. This needs to be finished so that the underfloor heating pipes can go down.

All getting very tight.







Here's a video compilation of the progress of the last couple of weeks.

Friday, 23 August 2019

August 23rd - first fixes

Today sees the completion of another two weeks of continuous work on the site. That is seven weeks so far.
Significant work has been made on the roofs (rooves?) but a couple of days heavy rain has prevented the completion of the flat roof which, in turn, has held up work on getting the slates on the main pitched roof areas. Three of the pitches drain on to the flat roof so it has to be finished before they start putting on the roof tiles.

The roof-lights are in the flat roof and that completes the building's fenestration.

A good portion of the electrical fist-fix is done and the heating and hot & cold water first fix is also done.
The heat pump location is by the back wall of the garage. The "Aquapump" is located in the garage. This requires a couple of buried insulated pipes bringing the hot and the cold water into the house. They has completed the work and filled in the trench before I got a chance to photograph it. 




This array of pipes, mostly for the underfloor heating, will be hidden under the flooring on the ground floor. The area in the photograph will be the coat cupboard near the staircase.

Today - Friday, August 21st promises to be dry and so fingers crossed that the flat roof guys get over and finish the job.











Tuesday, 13 August 2019

August 9th

Another five days of work on the site, that makes five since the resumption. Work continued of the roof(s) and, very key, the windows and front door were delivered and installed. This was completed by Thursday evening and so we set off for Westport on Friday morning - having checked that the workers were on the site that morning.

We won't be back in Ballyferrier until next Monday so we only can hope that work continues without us being there to chivvy them along. According to our understanding of the schedule, this week should see the first fix for the plumbing and more work on the roof.
Cheers

Fingers crossed
Frontage of the original house

New door in the wall of the extension, creating a new location for the "front door" 

Living room windows looking over Smerwick Harbour and Mount Brandon

The three "new" windows in the upstairs of the original structure. The old house had three windows of (more or less) this size but the were positioned about 60cm lower so you had to stoop to look out if standing. Moving the apertures through the roofline was the main cause of contention with the builder that caused close to a three-month delay.


Tuesday, 30 July 2019

A quick update

Tuesday, July 30th
Three workers on site today and I was able to access the 1st floor to discuss the position of two rooflights. I grabbed these three photos
Aperture now ready for the living room window




















Opening between the living room and the dining/kitchen now framed out




















The opening at the top of the stairs has also been framed out. This snap gives a good guide to what will greet you as you reach the top of the stairs - not bad eh?
























Obviously, the clutter should be gone and the floor swept.

Week four of the resumption

At least two workers were onsite every day last week and they always seemed to be doing something We had a site meeting with David (architect/project manager), Denis (the contractor) and Frank - the electrician. We finalised the electrical requirements and he is supposed to get on with the chasing out this week. w/b 29/7.
Had a not very satisfactory discussion about a revised completion date. We told Denis that what he proposed was unacceptable and if he wants to keep the job he needed to think again, and fast
No pictures this time as there is nothing much to show by way of change. So here is a photo of a tractor - guess what the parade was celebrating.

Friday, 19 July 2019

Week three of the resumption

Well, we have rafters on the roof of the extension.
Workers were on-site for three of the five days. One of those days was when the carpentry firm doing the roof was on-site and they achieved all this on the one day. Not sure what was being done by the others on the other two days. I am not too enthused by the work done over the last three weeks and am currently a bit pessimistic about a completion date.
On the positive side, it does look as the structure will be ready for the window installers in the week beginning August 5th.

Saturday, 13 July 2019

Before and now on July 13th

Not quite the same viewpoint

A second week of work

We are still keeping our expectations on build progress at a low level but we have seen work happening every day this past week. Importantly they have progressed the two key issues that have delayed things.

Here is the first - the creation of three window opening in the roof line at the front of the original house.
 .
The key to this was to create windows that you could look through while standing. The second picture gives a hint of the reason and result. You can just about make out the view of the Three Sisters through the scaffolding. Before the change you would have to be sitting down or crouching to get this view.

The second "roof problem" was the need to connect the new extension to the roof of the original building. Again this needed to be done to create a full height doorway from the kitchen area to the pantry and utility room.

The the first picture below shows the progress on this from the outside  and the second shows it from the inside.







Still plenty to do. The wall level of the original house needs to be built up to join the new flat roof. The aperture to the front right of the photo is where the new staircase will arrive into the dining / kitchen area. As you look into the picture three walls will go up. The first, furthest from the point of view will create the pantry. The second, moving towards the point of view will create the utility room that will be accessed via the pantry. The third wall will span the new extension from front to back - joining the new at the edge of the top of the stairs. The room created by this will be the upstairs WC. You can make out the apertures in the roof that are for three skylights, one on the pantry, one in the WC, and - the nearest one is over the staircase.

Last - now getting a sense of the form of the  house, first from the Dun Quin side


 Second from across the road. 

Cheers

Saturday, 6 July 2019

Have we made progress?

As reported by Sheila, we have had more than three months of nothing being done on the site. This week some activity returned, as evident by the erection of scaffolding.


What can't be seen is that they have taken the step that has delayed things for so long, that is, breaking into the roof line of the original structure to facilitate the connection of the new to the old as well as the enlargement of three windows in the kitchen / dining area.
What has also been completed is the demolition of the section of the side wall that creates the gap through from the new living room in the extension to the dining / kitchen area. Two more sections of wall have been demolished to create access from the kitchen to the pantry and utility room and to allow access to the dining area from the top of the re-sited staircase.

Three months ago the main contractor was adamant that doing this would cause serious problems with the original roof structure. It didn't.

Let's hope the resumption of work continues to next week.

Meanwhile...
If only I was a shepherd...

Tuesday, 18 June 2019

An update from Sheila

Time either passes very slowly or very quickly here in West Kerry. It also takes a long time to make things happens and for us that meant no work on site for 11 weeks which is both annoying and frustrating. 
And here it happens so easily. 

Week 1 Architect/Project Manager to our builder.  
The builder is given the instructions and drawings to knock into the roof on the old house in order to raise up the height of the windows. 
Week 2 Builder to Architect/Project Manager 
Builder is not happy carrying out the work as instructed as he believes the roof will collapse due to the condition of the rafters.  
Week 3 
We engage a structural engineer. The report when it finally arrives confirms that the roof is in good enough condition for the work to be carried out as per the drawings. The builder then produces a quote for this unexpected work which is way beyond what we were expecting. 
Week 4 
The builder proposes a new roof which would enable us to raise the roof level by one concrete block. This all sounds appealing to us and we ask for a quote. 
Week 5 
Quote for roof comes back and is in the opinion of our architect unacceptably high. 
Week 6  
The quote for the new roof is sanity checked by our quantity surveyor who agrees that it is way over the top. The builder is told to go back to the original instructions but is still concerned. 
Week 7 
Builder engages his own structural engineer 
Week 8 
Builders structural engineers confirms what our structural engineer said which is reassuring. A formal quote for this work is requested. 
Week 9 
Formal quote is received, and it is way beyond our expectations. Our QS reviews it and agrees. The builder is told to revise it and we await a new quote. 
Week 10  
A new quote is received. We meet with our architect/project manager and agree the strategy.  
Week 11 
Agreement is received in principle and work should recommence this week. Only now the scaffolder has gone on holidays and new company is needed!  
And that’s how weeks can pass by in West Kerry without any building work going on. 

The question now is will we be in the house for Christmas. When I say that I mean Christmas 2019... and if we are in can we cook a turkey. A turkey other than the builder 😊  Time will tell but at least work should restart fairly soon. 

Wednesday, 17 April 2019

April 17th report

This might be best read by clicking through the link to the blog itself.

After horrendous wind and rain on Monday, it looks like there will be no work on site this week. This snap, from the road, shows the house at a key stage.
The next step for the extension is to get the roof on. For the original structure, the next step is to break into the roof line to extend the first floor window apertures to their full size. This is the bit that the builder has been hesitant to do and we had to get a structural engineer in to certify that it was safe to do it.
The snap below is a view of the first floor of the original structure. On the right you can see the windows that need to be enlarged into the line of the roof.
The aperture on the left will be made into a doorway that will lead in to the new rear extension, in to a space we will use as a pantry and then on in to a utility / plant room. From this point of view, I am standing where we intend to put the dining table and the kitchen will be (largely) on the back wall.  For the snap below I now have my back to that back wall and looking to where I was standing for the snap above.
Now, on the left are the windows to be enlarged into the roof line. The aperture on the right will be expanded and this is, approximately, where the stairs will rise from the ground floor.
By the side of the blue sheeting you can see the start of demolishing part of the wall to create the connection between the old and the new - the way to the new living room.
A glimpse through the part demolished wall into the living room in prospect.
One final snap for this message. I am not sure why we did not realise this before, as it has been part of the plan from the start, but we have an unanticipated view.
This is the window in the back of the new living room, we didn't think through that we would have a view as good as this.  I think that this was partly because, in our mind's eye, the window was going to be higher up the wall and be more like a letterbox. As it is, we are delighted - hope the neighbours are as well.