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Monday, 25 March 2013

First Hemp Render Test

We did a test patch of render so that it will have plenty of time to dry, before we have to choose the sand we use for the render and whether we need to add any coloured oxide. For our first test we used the Australian Hemp Masonry Company bagged lime based render mix, we chose this for the ease of using a bagged product which would be consistent through each mix and because we like the fine hemp fibres in the render, so you can still see that it is a hemp house. To this we added  water and sand. Made up 1/20th of a 9kg bag, so ended up adding just over a kilo of sand. We used Sydney sand. AHMC recommended the use of river sand, however the locally available river sand in the Shoalhaven area is a dark grey. This was all right for the wall mix but is not what we want for the colour of our render. I was told by the landscaping and hardware store that the Sydney sand was what was used for rendering, that of course referred to cement rendering. The bulk Sydney sand I had seen was a light yellow, but when a bag of sand was purchased it was browner than expected.

Mixing the render in a bucket
Because we were mixing a small amount we just mixed it by hand in a bucket. We chose to do a test patch behind where the kitchen cupboards will go. The hemp fibre made the mix stiffer and less plastic than a cement render. Using a hawk and float it seemed to stick to the wall quite well, although pressing the render into the wall gave that arm muscles a good work out. The wall had to be damped down before the render went on. This was a bit tricky without a sprayer and we have subsequently bought form Aldi an 8L pressure sprayer, hopefully we can damp down the internal walls with this, so we do not have to use a hose inside the house.

I have read elsewhere hemp lime render being described as like "tuna and mayonnaise", the fibres in the render certainly made it different to work with than I had expected. With cement render, it is usually put on and left for about two hours before it is floated again. We did this with the hemp render, but two hours was probably too long. The stiffer mix was too hard to push out anything but the smallest lumps. At Steve Allan's workshop he had suggested rubbing the hemp plaster mix back with a rubber glove, when it was partially set to bring the hemp fibres to the surface. He was using a different render mix, that had large hemp fibres and no sand. We tried this out, but using the AHMC render mix this brought out too much of the fibre and I prefer just a floated finish.

Test patch of render
Render rubbed more at top of the patch than bottom
 Our rendering was a bit lumpy, but with some depth guides and a bit more practise I think we can get an acceptable finish. I would still like to get some lime rendering lessons if I can find someone willing and able to teach us. We will not be able to tell the colour until it is dry, but I have sourced some yellow river sand a bit further away, but if it gives us a better colour without having to add oxide it will be worth a couple of trips with the trailer. We will try this sand next time we are on site.

Meanwhile work on the ceiling continued. We returned the broken panel lifter, the problem was very obvious and they exchanged it for a new one. The paint job on the new panel lifter is a bit patchy but the mechanics seem fine. We put ti to use finishing the second bedroom in which the last ceiling panel had to fit into a recessed section over the door that had walls on three sides. This was tricky, but after cutting a little off two of the edges it fitted acceptably well.

Ceiling in second bedroom
Work then progressed to the last of the bedroom ceilings. Following the line of the eave rafters a ceiling board would have ended just short of the built in robe. The robe was also 10cm narrower than it should have been, another mistake by the framing company, but too difficult to fix now that the frame is all up. The solution was to add some extra blocking behind the ply ceiling boards so that the end board lines up with where the ceiling abuts the robe wall. The brick pattern was continued for the ceiling in the largest bedroom even though this meant that every second row had two small boards on each end. The alternative of one big straight line down the middle of the room would have looked odd and shown up any slight difference in the spacing of the boards.

Ceiling in largest bedroom

Tuesday, 12 March 2013

Lock up and plywood ceiling installation

The excitement that we are at lock up is tempered by the knowledge that this means we are about half way through the building process. On Thursday the boys from Rylock came down from Sydney with the double glazed units for the three panel sliding doors, as the doors were too heavy to be installed with the glass in them. Unlike the windows the glaziers were on time, they put the glass in and checked all the locks and opening mechanisms on the windows and by lunchtime we were at lockup.

Glazing in progress
After lunch the 9mm BB grade Austral Ply Hoop Pine plywood arrived from Huskisson Plywood.  The ceiling in the back bedroom had the sheep's wool insulation installed and the joints between the boards painted black ready for the ply to be put up. We cut them to size and painted the edges of the ply sheets black. Where the ceiling abutted the hemp wall I routed a 9mm wide by 5mm deep channel 10 mm in from the edge and painted this channel black, this was so that when we put the 10mm of render on the walls it will come to the edge of the black channel and look like the expressed joints between the sheets, but we will have a fixed edge to render up to.

We lifted the sheets up using a panel lifter purchased from e-bay, we had to get the 16 foot lifter so that we could use it to reach the high ceiling in the main room, but the larger lifter proved a little awkward in the smaller rooms. We did not want large screw holes in the ceiling, that would be obvious even if covered with putty, so we put the ply sheets up with glue and brads using a fix out nailer. My research showed that for a timber to timber joint Bostick Ultraset SF, which is a flooring glue, would be suitable. We bought the glue in sausages and applied it with a sausage gun in a zig zag pattern to the the joists on the inside of the sheets. We put brads in at 150 centres around the edge of each sheet and at 300 centres across the rafters passing through the centres of the sheets. The sausage gun was a breeze to use compared to my stiff old caulking gun, but the flooring glue was not meant for ceilings and was a little runny and if put on too thickly or insufficiently pushed on to the joists it dripped off. The suggestion that I put it on with a 3mm v notch spreader was impossible on a ceiling and abandoned in favour of a simple zig zag pattern. The fix out nailer was fast and east to use and a great way to attach a ceiling. The holes it left were very small, but the brads held the ceiling while the glue went off.

First piece of ply held up by the panel lifter
Applying the glue with the sausage gun
Experience showed that it was best to test each ply sheet to ensure that it fit before putting the glue on, this was after one piece had to be recut after we had put the glue on the rafters and found it did not fit in. We used 9mm spaces to try to get even gaps between the sheets. In reality some of the gaps varied a little, but a 9mm gap was wide enough to hide small variations.

First ceiling done with express joints
The first ceiling done we moved onto the next room, following the same process of blocking out between the rafters where the ply joints would be, painting the blocking and rafters behind the joints black with Resene No VOC paint, putting in the sheep's wool insulation, adding a few staples where the batts did not want to stay between the joists, measuring and cutting the sheets, which was more difficult as some of the cross rafters were not straight and painting the edges of the sheets black. We left the sheets of ply unfinished hoping that the hemp walls will prevent any mould forming on the ply, which appeared to be the only problem with leaving them unfinished.

Stapling in some of the insulation
The first sheet of ply we put up in the second room did not seem to fit. Thinking we had made the hemp walls crooked I got out my angle grinder and trimmed a little off the top corner of the wall only to discover that I had cut the sheet crooked by 10mm. The only good thing was that we discovered that the walls are really strong, but could be cut using a masonry disk on an angle grinder. After this things seemed to be going better until disaster struck. Putting up the last panel for the day the cable in the panel lifter broke and the 3/4 of a sheet of ply fell down. Thankfully we were not hurt and the sheet of ply was not damaged but the panel lifter was beyond help, the broken cable being somewhere in the mechanism that could not be seen. Before I bought the panel lifter I had checked out reviews of the panel lifters on e-bay and most people were happy with them, so I was hugely disappointed that ours broke on its second day of use. Lets hope we can get a replacement.

Since we had glue on the ceiling we then tried to put up the ply sheet by hand, it was heavier and harder than expected. The sloped ceilings made it very hard to push the ply up to the higher side and trying to get the 9mm gap right and hold the ply sheet at the same proved impossible. I thought we had got it in the right place and started putting the brads in only to find out it was way out on the other side where neither of us could see. With about half the brads put in we had to remove the sheet. It was hard work putting the ply sheet down, some of the brads pulled through the sheet while a few were pulled out in the sheet. Thankfully the sheet did not break and we wiped as much of the glue as possible off the back of the sheet and off the rafters, so we could try and put the sheet up again once we have a working panel lifter.

Ceiling in the second room, up to our unexpected stop
Broken cable on the panel lifter


Tuesday, 5 March 2013

Windows Installed

A mini tornado lashed parts of the south coast the previous weekend and upon our arrival at Culburra we were greeted with a big Eucalypt branch on our back gate and garage.
Fallen branch
We had arranged for our windows to be delivered Friday, with an estimated time for arrival of 1.30pm. It was raining Friday morning and a 7am call from Rylock gave us the opportunity to cancel the window delivery. I took a gamble that the rain would stop and had the windows delivered.

We spent the morning covering up the polished concrete floor. While we had been away from the site, Henry and Adrian from the Dayman Group came in and gave the concrete floor a further grind and applied a water based acrylic finish. The finish was more reflective than we expected, so it is a good thing we only chose the satin finish. We did not want to damage the finished floor and so covered it with black plastic and some sheets of OSB to protect it while we did the internal linings and rendering.
Polished concrete floor
Close up of the aggregate in the floor
I was expecting a call advising that the windows were leaving Sydney as I had arranged for Rodney, my window installer to be on site at 1.30pm to unload the windows. I had to delay them about 1 hour after I called up Rylock at 11.45 to see where the windows were only to find out they were to leave Sydney in about 1/2 an hour. Then with news that the truck left Sydney at 1pm. I arranged for Rodney to be on site at 3.30pm, as the trip from Sydney is about 2 1/2 hours. Rodney arrived on time, but no windows. We waited, made phone calls and waited some more and at 5.15pm the windows turned up. Rodney, Joe and Tom worked until 6.15pm on Friday night unloading the windows. The window installers plan to start installing the windows on Friday afternoon was not to be.

Unloading the windows
Sliding door stacked in the house ready for installation
Rod and Joe started early Saturday morning and by late on Saturday all the windows and sliding doors were in. The integral hardwood timber reveal in the Rylock windows made it easy to install the windows in the hemp walls, as they could be screwed to the timber frame in the centre of the walls through the reveal. The installers used plastic shims in different millimetre thicknesses to level the windows. The doors were a little trickier as they were set down in the concrete which was not always perfectly level. The doors ended up having the tracks a few millimetres above the concrete, but this will work out well as it is not big enough to trip over but enough to stop the dust and dirt falling straight into the sliding door tracks.

Sliding doors fill the big empty holes
Windows make the building look more like a house
The windows are a mid grey colour called Windspray, however in the photos the windows still have protective black tape on them from the factory. The windows have about a 20mm gap all around, which was required to be left to install them. We will probably fill this before we finish the walls with 10mm of lime render. The window installers recommended creating a small groove between the render and the windows and filling with Sikaflex to prevent cracking at the joint as the Aluminium windows will expand and contract with changes in temperature.  They also recommended filling the small gap on the inside between the polished concrete slab and the sliding doors with black silicone sealant so that it does not show up against the floor.

Upper windows match sliding doors
Diagonal windows in hallway
Double horizontal windows in the bathroom
While the windows were being installed we started on the ceiling. The ceiling will be made of plywood with the joints between the sheets expressed with a 9mm shadow line. The long end of the sheets goes across the joists and the joints are all on the joists, but in the opposite direction I had to add timber noggin behind each of the joints. I offset the joints and painted the timber behind them black using Resent VOC free paint. This gave a nice matt black finish. We then started installing the sheep's wool insulation.

Rafters and noggins behind joints painted black
Insulation being installed