Oxley Woods Living

Life in an Oxley Woods eco house

 
 

Posts Tagged ‘decoration’

 

Creases and pops in the walls

November 4, 2008

Due the way the houses at Oxley Woods are built, it seems there are a few “features” that are par for the course. These include creases in the walls, and nail/screw head “pops” coming through the paint work, on walls and also woodwork.

When we moved in, some of the heads were pretty severe and obvious, especially around the skylight on the top floor, by far the hottest part of the house during the so called summer months. We didn’t appreciate this was an issue, but our site manager (who really has been very patient and helpful, even when it seems the house and his workforce are going against him!) called for these to be skimmed and painted over, the results were fantastic, pops gone, and they haven’t come back.

Reading more into this (internet forums, so the accuracy in unclear) it seems we should not have any nail/screw heads popping or blowing at all, which is not good news, as the house has several of these in numerous rooms. Apparently we shouldn’t expect cracks from settling to be there when we take possession either, but there were plenty?

The “creases” in the wall are apparently a side effect of the way the walls are (not) plastered. To save time, cost, money and improve eco credentials (so we’re told) the walls are not fully plastered or dry lined. The boards are applied, and then the gaps and screws are feathered over lightly, which does mean there is a slight “bulge” at the join (could this also explain the “popping”?).

Anyway, for the most part this doesn’t show, but our large corner window in the kitchen floods light onto the wall beside it, and this has probably the largest bulge/crease/fold in the property. Once again, our reassuringly fastidious site manager was unhappy that this should look that way (we were too preoccupied with leaks and such to worry about cosmetics at the time) and he requested the skimmer, who is amazing to watch and has done some fantastic work elsewhere in the house, try to fill out the area to smooth things down, to them be cut back and painted by the painter.

This was delayed due to the hole cut in the facing wall to try and find the source of rain water entering the downstairs living area, not point making two trips, but when the work was carried out, unfortunately, despite a couple of goes, it looks probably worse than ever.

Today though comes the news that, with any luck, a dry lining expert will be around to voice his opinion on possible solutions. This will no doubt involve the wall being worked on and a lot of disruption again (this is our kitchen/dining area remember), but the untidy join is extremely irritating, especially when the sun casts shadows on the wall due to the bumpiness! Fingers crossed we get a resolution on this soon.

Flexible housing at Oxley Woods

November 3, 2008

Probably not quite what was intended when the term “flexible housing” was coined, but one thing that concerns us is a “weak” step on our lower flight of stairs.

We had a visit from Nuiare some time ago to work on our temperamental eco hat, and one of the guys, who isn’t small by any means, said that we had a crack in one of our stairs, and it moved under foot. Sure enough, the step (which stood out from all others by having filler at the back of the step, against the riser for the next step) was moving and also had a small crack actually going across the board.

We, of course, reported this to the team on site at Oxley Woods and they came around to take a look and sort it out. The fix was, as you may have guessed if you’ve followed this blog at all, to use flexible filler to sort it out. We had to avoid using that stair for as long as possible.

At the time I was sceptical how filler could work on something that has to take a humans weight as they carry themselves up and down the stairs, and it appears I was right to. Recently the stair, now painted over, when “crack” and again is moving quite freely and looks terrible. It doesn’t feel right that a stair should have this much movement, especially when every other stair on two flights feels very much solid and secure.

Take a look at the photos below to see what you make of it, the paint covers the crack in the actual deck/step, but the separation between stair and riser at the back illustrates the kind of movement that’s there, and that’s just me walking up the step, not bouncing, jumping, or applying extra force.

We have been assured it’s safe, but it doesn’t feel safe, doesn’t seem good quality, looks terrible, and I’m sure the back should be secured by more than flexible filler?

Wall decals, our experience

October 16, 2008

One of our main motivations when it comes to (slowly) decorating the house is to make it a fun and welcoming place to live, visit, and grow up in. We’ve two small children, and certainly have no aversion to trying things out that perhaps others wouldn’t.

One thing we’ve both been keen on is the idea of vinyl wall graphics. Basically stickers for your wall. These are becoming ever more popular, maybe not so much so across the UK, but certainly it would appear in mainland Europe and USA. We’ve seen many designs we like, and decided on a few we thought would be cool in the house.

So we first ordered some relatively cheap, but we thought quite fun, decals from Elly Nelly, a simple row of people, in dark blue. They now reside on a wall in our ground floor hallway, forming a disorderly queue for the ground floor bathroom/utility room.

The fitting of the vinyl decals was very straightforward, the instructions were clear and easy, and with a little care and time they were quickly in place, and so far have stuck firm.

After this minor success, we decided to bite the bullet and buy the “big one” we’d been lusting after for a little while, the “Moon Kite” from Blik. First of all we bought some paint from Dulux, it was one of their made to order colours, deep, dark blue, very rich. It looks cool, but application was a pain, it was thick as glue, but because it was dark took four coats to look anything like decent! Glad it was a relatively small wall!

The graphic took what felt like an age to apply, mostly because the tree has branches that shoot off in all directions, and peeling the backing away was a real challenge. But we’re very pleased with the results, and we’ve had a hell of a lot of positive feedback from visitors to how good it looks, most asking “how is it done, is it stencil?”.

If you’re considering using vinyl decals to brighten up or change the mood of your walls, then we couldn’t recommend them highly enough. The service from Elly Nelly was superb, and Blik were also very helpful. Their UK agent however was a little slow, and not so helpful as Blik themselves, but beggars cant be choosers, the product itself is top-notch.

Cheap, cheerful, and very white..

October 16, 2008

We’ve painted the stairs!

After much deliberation over what exactly to so with the stairs in our home, we decided that we couldn’t shift the idea of painting them from our minds, so it was at least worth a shot.

Reading up about painting stairs on the internet, we discovered that everyone seems to have a different opinion on not only how to do it, but even if you should do it.  ”It’s too noisy”, “It’s too slippy”, “It’s too complicated”, “It’ll look worn really fast” seemed to be the general concensus, so we decided to go for it.  After all, the plain on stairs were not too noisy on their own, so painting them wont make much difference!

So, with that in mind, I wandered into the local B&Q and bought a 2.5 litre tin of white floor paint.  After carefully arranging with the wife and kids some good times to work on the stairs, I first sanded them all down using a little Black & Decker mouse with 80 grit sanding pads, then set about filling in imperfections etc with some standard “pine” coloured wood filler.  This took ages, and was a very, very messy job.

Anyway, once this had been done, the following weekend I set about painting the stairs, in actual fact it took two weekends, and between four and five coats before I was happy with the finish (not to mention another 2.5 litres of paint), and some areas I feel will still need more.  But the reaction from every visitor (and we get a lot, thanks to other issues!) has been positive, and we really, really like it.  The look at night on the top flight is quite eery at times with the moon shining in through the skylight above, and downstairs isn’t as pitch black and hazardous as it was when it was wood.

I’m certain it will need topping up here and there as time goes on, but it’ll be easy to touch it up and give it a quick sand and repaint when required.  It looks great, and reminds Abi of the “Imagine” video, which is cool with me.

Now we just need to save and decide what to do on the landings?!