Sunday 26 June 2016

Walls and Floor. Nothing important then.

After having a few weeks away, we got back to discover the builders had made good progress.  You'll recall that the state of play when we left on May 27 was no walls, no floor, basically, not much apart from a few expensive but unattractive concrete edges.

I got back after two weeks away to find a helpfully large message in the hall (on our shower box!) instructing me not to use one of the toilets and to brush my teeth in the kitchen sink.  A sure fire clue the plumber had been in.


Here are some of the other developments:

I should probably have already highlighted this rather expensive feature of the new flat; a new structural beam, which handily replaces about four or five piles, some of which were a bit borer infested anyway so it's no great loss.
$3000 worth of beam

Bedroom view.  We have walls and floor! (Exposed sewer stack in foreground).


A rather nifty alcove which will one day be where the TV is kept, but for now is a builder's niche

The mess of bathroom pipework is buried under some concrete, shame I couldn't show the process but insulation was laid under the concrete first.
 Here's the current view from the garden; we have a door, weatherboards and we have window frames, but no windows yet. Starting to look like somewhere you might want to live.
The door has now gone in.  This was an internet special - door was sourced from another villa about 2km away.  
 
Kitchen all lined up and the old fireplace has gone, ready to be fitted with shelves.
One of the big expenses of this piece of work was realigning the plumbing.  Our plumbing was previously very easy to access (precisely for the same reasons we're building a flat, because we had a massive atrium under the house!), but it could not be left as it was as it was all over the place and in places it would have left headroom of under 2m.  So the plumber has concentrated the plumbing in two separate stacks.
Below is one of the stacks, which comes from the ensuite upstairs.  All of the pipes (shower, toilet, basin) concentrate into this one sewer stack which will be hidden in the bedroom wall long term.

here's some of the new plumbing.  They had to move the pipework around so that it's mostly in the ceiling cavity.


Ugly canopies

Here is one of my least favourite aspects of the project; canopies.  These are a fire safety requirement to prevent fire from downstairs windows affecting the upstairs but to say they are an ugly addition to the house is an understatement.  Apparently they will need to be installed on all the downstairs windows.  Boo.













Apart from the progress inside the flat we have had to work on a few other things.One of our party fences was pretty ropey and as part of our contract we got the builders to rebuild it.  Not a small job as it also contained a bit of retaining work.  Interestingly, we've probably gained around 3 square metres of (unusable) land from this job as the fence was on around a 45 degree lean to our side! On the plus side we can now walk down the side of our house with ease.
New fence.  Cost shared with the neighbour. 
Other things we've been working on:

- Bathroom fittings - I've now got all the bathroom fittings from our friendly bathroom guy.  He gets everything from China.  He tells me that chrome finishes are only made in China now, because less developed countries don't have the technology and more developed countries won't do it because it is so polluting.  Apparently, China won't open any more factories but has evidently decided the town which our stuff comes from is a sacrificial lamb.  It has to have all its drinking water piped in as it is so polluted.  Not sure what to think about this.  I guess I'll do more research into chrome plating before I buy my next bathroom.

- Kitchen.  Just working our way through options with budget retailers.

- Lighting.  Everything is LEDs now.  Quite a change since we did the kitchen about 4 years ago.  Then we asked about LEDs and were told that the technology wasn't developed.  We have bought a few fittings already.  We will have downlights for main lighting and just a few spotlights in places where required.

- Flooring.  I have a great aversion to vinyl flooring (I'm a snob) and so we are investigating other options, although we may well end up with tiles.

- Weatherboards. I've filled the nail holes for these and once I've sanded them back I can paint the external weatherboards which have been replaced (we took the painting out of the contract to save money).  But you can see from the pictures there are still a few weatherboards to be replaced so I won't paint until they're all in place.

4 comments:

  1. jo, will you insulate the sewage stacks (to help with noise from upstairs ablutions)?

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    1. Update for you - that's a yes, I asked the builders. Hopefully I'll have some photos in the next blog :-)

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    2. cool, I just know it's an issue as we have some internal pipework

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  2. Good question. The sewage stacks are boxed in, and I know that you're not allowed to be able to hear running water from the upstairs dwelling, but I've never actually asked whether they have to put insulation in to achieve this. They are boxing this week so I will ask the builders if they're going to insulate - would have thought it would be a good idea whether or not they need to...

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