Buildings
Last update: 31 January 2005
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Impossible is a word reserved for those with no imagination.
Here you will find out about how I built the workshop, the house and other buildings.
Click images to enlarge
approx. 1998
Next I nailed a board across the the top, and started filling in the corners with more logs, nailing through the board on top, and toe-nailing at the bottom. Once I had about 3 - 4 logs at each side of the corners, I nailed on a permanent timber, and continued filling in. The logs are on average 6-8" diameter, and are placed alternating top/tail. A 3" x 4" timber runs on the inside of the building about 18" above the ground (visible at the back), notched and nailed into every other log. This gives the building extra bracing, ties the logs together, and provides a ledge for the joists to suspend the floor well above the ground.
To reduce the humidity from ground evaporation, I covered the soil under the floor with polythene. The gaps between the logs are only filled from the floor level up to allow through ventilation under the floor. The top plank was reinforced with round timbers before the roof went on. 1998
1998
The spoil forms a berm behind the building. I made a retaining wall with car tires in the fashion of an Earthship, and piled earth bags on top to increase the shelter wall. Note the posts of the shed extended down with a short post tied to it, which I had to do wilst digging carefully around it.
The pit was dug just bigger than the footprint of house (11' x 11'), and later enlarged. It is about 2' deep at lower end, and 3' at the top, as the ground slopes a bit. The pit is now between 2-4 feet larger than the house on three sides, and a bit more on the lower end, which now has a porch area. Digging the pit was one of the biggest jobs, as the hard clay ground is very stony, and there were several tree stumps with a network of large roots to remove. I had to whittle away at it with a brick hammer and a small shovel. 2001
2001
To save on stone I back-filled only a thin vertical layer with it, enough to drain water downward. At the bottom of the trench I layd stone the full width, a perforated pipe, and surrounded it with more stone. Above that the stone layer is only about 3-4" wide. Several sections of shuttering were moved along as I filled the trench, working from the center outward.
The trench is about 3 feet away from the pit, and was an afterthought, as the water table rises to the surface after prolonged rain, and although it would not fill the pit because there is a drain downhill, it did mean a thin layer of running water passing through the pit.
The building is raised on nine low block piers, simply a concrete block lying on the ground, and shimmed up on the lower end, as the pit floor is slightly sloped to aid drainage. There is a layer of plastic dpc on top of the blocks, and the pit floor is covered in polythene to stop excessive evaporation dampness under the building.
2002
The mini digger also enlarged the drain-off trench which I dug previously by hand, on a rainy day, as the water level was rising inside the pit..... But that is another story.... 2002
The pit is more-or-less covered over all round and does not allow rain to enter, but is not totally isolated from the elements, which causes condensation problems on the inside of the glass, and the space is difficult to use, due to its small size and sloping walls. 2002
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