9 February 2014
Scaffolding finally down at Hickling straw-bale house
Scaffolding finally came down 11th December revealing the duvet-like lime rendered straw bale walls, stainless steel cills span the depth of the bales and render, and straight lines of stainless steel cills contrast with wavy wall. Lots of pics below:
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17 October 2013
4th UK Passivhaus Conference
The 4th UK Passivhaus conference on tuesday at Milton Keynes, fantastic range of speakers and wonderfully knowledgable gathering of people in audience and up at the front! Nervous moments for me doing the welcome speech, but soon forgotten in the sheer pleasure of hearing about so much which has happened since last year. I loved hearing Dieter Hertz describing the full range of buildings they are working on, the beautiful museum in Ravensburg, the proposed lawcourts in Bavaria. I enjoyed Fionn Stevenson's reminder of the importance of robust design, and her focus on people as they are in all their complexity is dead right in my view (praps she'll come round to PH in the end...). It was also great to hear Justin Bere and Marion Baeli giving really detailed feedback on specific projects, and I was sorry to miss all the talks going on in the other room.
I was pleased that we asked the final panel what they had liked most, Thomas O'Leary had inspired all, and training must now be a big focus for PHT
Finally the most welcome visitor of all - Passivhaus baby Amy - when I looked up from my seat on the platform and saw her sitting in the front row I knew Passivhaus has a great future!
Fran Bradshaw
Fran Bradshaw
Marion Baeli with Amy and Andy Simmonds AECB chief executive
Hickling Strawbale House October Progress
Monday was
the air test with Paul Jennings, on completion of external render with windows
and doors fitted and sealed. We were pleased/ relieved to get under 1 air
change an hour. We did some obvious leaks and got about 0.9, now only obvious
one is a door which needs adjusting, Paul thinks we must be looking at
disaggregated leakage through the straw and through the roof. So would expect
to improve as clay work and warmcell and finishing goes on.
Just to explain, as people have asked me why we are going for airtight layer on the outside, that using the inside plaster layer would have been really hard to achieve, because of the primary frame, especially the long horizontal beams. We're hoping to get the internal plaster down behind it to cover the straw, but achieving a good airtight surface is unlikely. Also there would be a lot of internal penetrations and with big timber sections with shakes, you can't really guarantee an airtight seal.
The problem with airtight layer outside is that moisture from inside could condense in the straw where the air leakage points are, like at eaves for instance. We think that because the whole construction, walls and roof, is moisture permeable all the way thru, this shouldn't be a problem, and the MVHR will also reduce moisture in the internal environment. But we have fitted the AECB Hygrotrac monitors in the straw so that we can properly observe the performance, and will be using an Intello membrane internally in the bathroom ceiling.
Before that we were finishing the strawbale work. The compression of each section took the longest time, but it is so impressive how firm the straw walls are when compressed. Paul did an airtest for Strawworks, before the render started, to see how the straw was performing. It wasn't the figure results which told us anything, as the plastered tapes at eaves and around windows and doors were not in place, but following the smoke, showed how dense and airtight the straw is when it is well compacted.
rendering ready for metal cill
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first floor strawbale work complete and windows in
contega tape to base of straw - joint with foamglas
sedge for the ridge
finishing the straw
first coat render
An open
afternoon in the village brought about 50 visitors at the end of September, an
AECB east anglia group visit brought our most well informed visitors of course!
and last weekend the local history group visited, now we are looking forward to
joining them.
12 August 2013
Strawbale building, hickling, norfolk, passiv house
A special thank you to all the people who have come to help over the last few weeks, great progress!
1 roof rafters in place
2 dormer cheeks craned in
3 foamglass upstand
4 straw arrives - summer wheat
5 so far
6 fire boarding, taped
7 dressing bales
8 'the pursuader' a very useful piece of equipment
9 Paul Jennings explains!
10 moisture monitors in place
11 monitor with fixed probes
12 compression with car jacks
13 Twisting the hazel stakes in to pin the straw bales together
14 thatcher's fixings and reed thatch
15 thatcher setting out verge
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Timber
10 July 2013
Honorary Doctorate
Fran Bradshaw was awarded an honorary doctorate at University of Westminster last week. The ceremony took place at the graduation of students of the School of Built Environment, at the Festival Hall.
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Hickling, Norfolk, Timber Frame House
A 25 tonne capacity crane
lifted the Douglas Fir timber beams from the lorry onto the site.
All the joints and details were designed and cut by “The Timber Frame Company” who are based in somerset. The individual panels and joints were assembled in their workshop, tested and then taken apart to make sure that everything fitted perfectly. More information is available at:
http://www.thetimberframe.co.uk/
Once the individual beams had been delivered, panels and frames where assembled on the ground and then lifted with the crane onto the site. The joints are traditional with mortice and tenon joints and pegged together with oak pegs.
First Frame in place on day one of the timber frame build
The timber frame build has taken place at an impressive pace, while people seem very laid back. Very experienced TFC carpenters have smoothed the way without any onsite alterations needed, whilst achieving a high accuracy to the original plans.
25 June 2013
The Eco-Hub on the cover of Green Building Magazine
In-depth article - 5 pages! - with illustrations and explanations by Junko and Fran.
Thanks, AECB and Green Building!
Labels:
new-build,
regeneration,
straw-bale,
sustainability
4 June 2013
inner city bale out
. . . And another great article on the Tottenham straw bale, this time in the Riba Journal's June issue
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