Home improvements - time the house had some TLC!

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JhnBssll

JhnBssll

Veteran
Location
Suffolk
I've not done much to the extension for a while for various reasons, 10" of snow being one of them, but today I have finally made a bit of progress 😊 Our phone line had a fault which required an openreach engineer to come out - he found the problem quite quickly, some knackered old copper cable, and during the course of fixing it we took the opportunity to route the cable in through the new wall as I had intended to do. Once he had left I fitted the cable covers I had purchased, one small job ticked off the list :smile:

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Next job to tick off was the soffit and fascia on the end wall, it was the last bit that needed finishing so I was happy to spend a few hours getting it done...

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Next time I'm mixing mortar I'll stick some under those end tiles, same on the other end. I need to finish the flashing too but I'm putting that job off as I don't want to climb on the roof - I'm rather hoping my friend can do that bit for me when he's here to knock through :shy:

With it getting dark I moved inside and whipped the old door off it's hinges then started removing the frame. This is as far as I got today, tomorrow I'll carry on sawing through the bolts and cutting the mastic out until the frame is free - I had planned to use a bit more brute force and ignorance but a neighbour has asked if they can have the old door for their daughters garage so I've had to change my approach :laugh:

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Once the frame is out I need to strip some more plaster along with some of the ceiling to uncover the joists in prep for a visit from the structural engineer to finish off the steel design :okay: It'll then be a week or so wait for it to be made and delivered, at which point my friend will spend a weekend propping, smashing and installing it for me ^_^
 

Gunk

Guru
Location
Oxford
So what are you gaining John? Are you squeezing in a downstairs loo?
 
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JhnBssll

JhnBssll

Veteran
Location
Suffolk
So what are you gaining John? Are you squeezing in a downstairs loo?

We currently have a hall that takes up almost a quarter of the ground floor, and no downstairs loo. This little extension will allow us to partition the corner of that hall off to create a decent size downstairs loo and a small entrance hall. I'll then knock the remainder of the old hallway through, increasing the size of the open plan lounge/diner 👍 By adding these 3 square meters we'll be getting at least 6 square meters more usable space :smile:
 
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JhnBssll

JhnBssll

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Location
Suffolk
I've just fired an email off to the structural engineer to arrange the survey :okay: I managed to get the door frame out intact today, it was a bit of a wrestle but we got there in the end :laugh: I have a sneaking suspicion it wasn't installed professionally - I realised towards the end that someone had put fixing bolts straight down through the damp proof membrane :rolleyes: Once I had managed to get those free and remove the frame I realised they'd actually cut the membrane out entirely for the full width of the door frame :wacko: The mind boggles...

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Anyway, once that was out of the way I chopped some ceiling out and exposed the joists and knocked a bit of plaster off in a few places, then cleared away the bulk of the debris. Despite the internal doors all being closed we'll now be dusting the entire house for a few days :okay::laugh:

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Hicky

Guru
Any work done in the house.....dust arrrgghh.
I've been following this thread for a while and the brickwork is superb for a none brickie, I can't wait to see it finished.:okay:
 
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JhnBssll

JhnBssll

Veteran
Location
Suffolk
Any work done in the house.....dust arrrgghh.
I've been following this thread for a while and the brickwork is superb for a none brickie, I can't wait to see it finished.:okay:

Thanks :okay: It's coming together slowly, I've got the structural engineer coming over this evening so that's another step forwards 😊 Hopefully I'll have a date for the knock through within the next day or two 😊
 
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JhnBssll

JhnBssll

Veteran
Location
Suffolk
So the survey is done and the steel will now be manufactured :becool: Delivery will be a few weeks then we're just waiting for a gap in my friends diary for the installation :becool: The structural engineer is going to attempt to size the beams down from 4x8" to 4x7" if the numbers allow to try and counter the fact that steel price has apparently risen 18% since he last quoted me :laugh: That suits me fine though as the joists are 7" so this would allow the ceiling to be flush all the way through without losing any height (which was my initial request) ^_^ We're also having a 100mm square steel post set in to the wall down in to the footings on one side so there will be no pier poking out in to the room when it's all done - it's costing a bit more but I think it will be worthwhile when done 😊 I've saved a lot by doing the bulk of work myself so didn't make sense to go with the cheap option here.

Pleased with progress, need to save up some pennies to finish the driveway and think about buying some materials to start the internal partitions now 😄
 
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JhnBssll

JhnBssll

Veteran
Location
Suffolk
Minor update, hopefully a bigger one in the near future :okay: The steel arrived last week and we're pencilled in to install it and knock through on Monday and Tuesday next week, all being well ^_^ Once thats done I can crack on with the internal work and whip some stud walls up :becool: Exciting times!
 
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JhnBssll

JhnBssll

Veteran
Location
Suffolk
I've been stripping out the cables from the wall thats coming down in a few days today and have found some classic DIY blunders :laugh: First this bit of cable routing - I'm not convinced this is exactly what they mean when they talk about straight horizontal or vertical cable runs :whistle:

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Still, I guess the bonus of running the cable like that is it means you can drill a hole directly above the switch without having to worry about hitting a cable... If only they'd done the same on the other side of the door, where I found this beauty under the top layer of plaster... :wacko:

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Not quite understanding how the electrics worked at all with a hole drilled through two cables I investigated further to see if it was a glancing blow and had missed the conductors...

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Nope :laugh: Straight through both copper cores :laugh: I traced them back and found that through shear dumb luck these are both switched live conductors and, presumably, both were off when they drilled the hole and plugged it :laugh: Unbelievable really... Presumably the same skilled tradesman had added the extra cable to this wall box and pushed the grommet out, damaging the insulation against the sharp metal edge :wacko:

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I wonder how much of my house is built like this :whistle: Oh well, I've ripped out all the dodgy stuff and made good so it's all working again but with no cables in the way of progress 😊 We're going to have to make do with a fancy floating light switch for a week or two 😄

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Next job is to pull more of the floor up around the base of the wall once I've had a bit of a tidy :okay:
 

irw

Quadricyclist
Location
Liverpool, UK
Still, I guess the bonus of running the cable like that is it means you can drill a hole directly above the switch without having to worry about hitting a cable... If only they'd done the same on the other side of the door, where I found this beauty under the top layer of plaster... :wacko:

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Not quite understanding how the electrics worked at all with a hole drilled through two cables I investigated further to see if it was a glancing blow and had missed the conductors...

Oh dear! Was there a touchable screw associated with that rawl plug then?
 
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JhnBssll

JhnBssll

Veteran
Location
Suffolk
A successful day of demolition today :okay: I did very little of the work which made a nice change :laugh: The front of the house is currently sitting on acro's and the wall beneath is now a pile of rubble in the garden :laugh: We've just bolted the two beams together so first thing tomorrow we'll lift them in to place and prop them, then install the pad stone on one side and post on the other. The post will need to have concrete cast around its base, then its just a case of waiting for it to go off before the props come back out 😎

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JhnBssll

JhnBssll

Veteran
Location
Suffolk
I had my friend over again this morning to finish off installing the steelwork - he's done a cracking job, really pleased with the outcome.

We finished yesterday with the old wall out and the two beams bolted together ready to lift in to place. We started this morning where we left off, by slowly hulking the 140kg of steel up above head height with the use of a couple of trestles and some weetabix :laugh: With the beams up flush with the floor joists and the mortar bed above it nicely squished on both leaves of the wall the brick padstone was built up to support it - note the neat brickwork, suggesting rightly that it may not be my handiwork :laugh:

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We then turned our attention to the other end, where a steel post will transfer the load down to the original foundations - we had to dig out the brickwork to get down to concreteand make an opening large enough for the 100mm2 post base to fit down in to it, then cast and pour concrete around the fixing bolts. In a day or so I'll nip them up to make sure everything is solid but I honestly can't see it going anywhere in a hurry now it's in and bolted together :laugh:

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I've still got a decent amount of rubble to clear up :laugh: Also the post isn't yet tied in to the existing blockwork - I'll nibble it out in 4 or 5 spots then have some tek self drilling bolts to screw in to the post before back filling with a resin anchor. Once thats done I'll have to finish the floor and blockwork before getting the building inspector back in to check out the progress :okay: You never know, we might have a downstairs loo this year at this rate :whistle:
 
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JhnBssll

JhnBssll

Veteran
Location
Suffolk
The props came out this afternoon :okay: Hope to do a bit of work over the weekend, see if I can start speeding things up again now the structural hurdles have been cleared 😊

The building inspector popped in yesterday afternoon and signed the steelwork off, his next visit will be to inspect the new drains once I've got them in 😊

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