Oxley Woods Living

Life in an Oxley Woods eco house

 
 

Posts Tagged ‘eco house’

 

Should we have said “yes” to ITV?

September 3, 2009

Last October and November, people representing ITV got in touch.

They had seen and heard about our problems at Oxley Park and with the nature of this “prestige” and “award winning” development of eco homes, they were pretty keen to come and see us, and talk about featuring us on one of their “Problem Property”/”Homes from Hell” type programmes.

After a few email and telephone conversations we thought it all over and backed out of the situation.

Why?

Despite reassurances that people who feature on the show generally get a “good result” and positive response from their builder, we declined for a few main reasons.

Firstly, the “stigma” of appearing on the show, for the house, but also for the estate and development at large.

While more than happy to share our experiences online for current and potential owners of Oxley Woods eco homes on a blog, a blog that we believe reflects fairly our situation, life in the house, and experiences with Wood Newton and George Wimpey, this is a far cry from appearing on a TV show.

For a start, here we’re in control. We don’t want to sensationalise, we don’t want to exaggerate or play down the issues. We want to share our thoughts, our knowledge, and our views. We don’t want someone potentially twisting these words and experiences any which way that suits their editorial slant.

Secondly, while hundreds of people view this blog each month, finding it via google or simply being an interested neighbour (or employer of one of the companies concerned) that’s a far cry from thousands of people watching a short, possibly sensationalists piece on prime time ITV.

I can just imagine the “LEAKO HOMES” headlines and up-playing of the situation (if possible!) by the voice-over artist.

Another important part is the unusual nature of these houses. We honestly believed at the time that between them George Wimpey and Wood Newton had been trying, in their own, cumbersome and often painfully slow way, to get the main issue, our leaking windows and doors, sorted. They just don’t (or didn’t) know how.

This isn’t a case of “couple buy house, house is finished badly, builders apply standard fix, job done”. Or at least it doesn’t appear so. We would rather work with the builders than against them, we hope that through our patience and honesty, through all the problems and frustration and anger, that we’ll come to a proper solution that will help not only us, but our neighbours, present and future.

So why the question in the post title?

Because sometimes things just go so slow, so little seems to be being done, I wonder if a kick up the backside courtesy of an ITV production crew would have given the workforce and management the required stimulation.

But at what cost? Who knows. Which is why I sometimes wonder.

Frustration, frustration, frustration…

August 20, 2009

This week (some point this week) work was supposed to begin on a proper engineered solution to over a year’s worth of water ingress through and around our windows of our George Wimpey / Wood Newton Oxley Park eco homes.

That’s what everyone had told us anyway.

So, here we are, on Thursday afternoon, with no word from anyone. We asked one of the site managers in advance if we could find out what was going on… Nothing.

I called the “head” site manager yesterday afternoon (because apparently he was already dealing with it on Wednesday) and, you’ve guess it, nothing.

So here we are, during school holidays, waiting for major work to be carried out on our house, and nobody seems to either know what’s going on, or want to keep us informed. Pathetic.

Meanwhile, a house down the road had a sign appear in their window earlier this week. “WARNING” it reads, before going on to say they have been experiencing leaks, for a year, that George Wimpey and Wood Newton apparently cannot fix. Sounds all too painfully familiar.

Earlier this week some new windows appeared on site (not ours, obviously) and we went to have a look when the site office was shut. The design is the FOURTH window design now used on site. It seems like complete stabs in the dark from Wood Newton. But, worryingly for us, the windows now see the return of the “cill lip”, which is the route cause of a great deal of our, and other people’s problems.

We are, as you may imagine, completely fed up of nothing happening, and more so being kept in the dark. We’re unable to plan any time away or even know when we should or should not be at home, because the information from George Wimpey and Wood Newton, when it comes, is proving to be almost entirely unreliable.

WTF?! Seriously, WTF?!

July 24, 2009

Thought for a while about the “headline” for this post, then went back to the original. Because that is EXACTLY what I’m feeling right now.

To cut an increasingly long story short, Wood Newton and George Wimpey plan to solve our issues by replacing all windows and doors. A VERY big job. But we all hope (and it can only be hope, not believe, not feel sure) this will be the end to the water ingress we’ve been suffering for over a year.

We, understandably, want some clarification before such huge work is undertaken on our “new” eco house. We have asked several questions, and raised several issues, which we, quite fairly, wanted clarified before work starts. You may say we have no right to ask why certain things have been done to our property, why certain things will be done to our property, and why certain parts of a report we received from John Green of Wood Newton made no sense to us, or the George Wimpey site manager, whatsoever. But we feel we do have a right to know.

Today, only a week after submitting a list of bullet pointed issues and questions (so to be fair, in very good time by George Wimpey and Wood Newton standards) we have received a reply. Of sorts. And it is that which has us reeling.

For a start, the vast majority of points and questions have, perhaps unsurprisingly, been completely ignored.

Secondly, it adds to the confusion we’re feeling by somewhat contradicting the earlier report it is a response to.

PLUS, it states that the work Wood Newton and George Wimpey carried out in July and August of 2008 following our initial water ingress problems was PURELY COSMETIC and not at all related to water ingress. Which means they did NOTHING about our water ingress on a number of windows (only unsuccessfully dealing with one window and one door by applying Tyvek) before stripping cladding and applying resistit tape as banding around our Windows a full three months (and more) after we initially had problems. While at the same time cosmetically wrecking our windows as they carried out needless, stressful, and untidy “cosmetic work” several times over on the remainder of our windows, telling US this was in an attempt to solve the water ingress. Which takes us back to the heading really…

WTF?! Seriously George Wimpey and Wood Newton, WTF have you been doing to us and our property?!

How finished are your windows?

July 24, 2009

Something we’ve just noticed, which is of little consequence given our current situation, but if you have bought an eco house on the Oxley Woods development, or are considering one, you may want to check your window frames.

Do yours look like our kitchen, unfinished with visible screws?

Kitchen window


Or perhaps like one of our bedrooms, filled but not finished?

First floor window


Or maybe like our lounge, finished, painted, and just about tidied up?

First floor front window


Hit and miss? Oh, I’d say so.

Wattson energy monitor

July 19, 2009

On Friday we bought ourselves a shiny new WATTSON home energy monitor from our local Maplin.

The device is one of many available that do pretty much the same job. Check your energy consumption via a clip placed on the live wire near your electricity metre, which is sent wirelessly to a display unit (portable and “wireless”, as long as the built in battery is charged up), so you can keep tabs on your energy consumption.

This particular unit costs close to £100, whether or not it will pay for itself in energy consumption reduction is yet to be seen, but it’s already making a bit of a difference, and proving some interesting, if not entirely insightful (at this stage) readings.

One of the first missions had to be childishly running around switching off every plug about the house to get the reading to zero. This proved harder than we imagined… It took some time to realise that we hadn’t switched off the smoke/fire alarm circuit, which was constantly demanding about 48 watts.

Anyway, nothing much to report on this at the moment, apart from I was surprised how little power (relatively) a tv, sky box and amp combination consume, how much the eco-hat appears to be eating up (around 80 or so Watts on “normal” (not boost) operation) and just how much our Kenwood Eco Kettle consumes, around 2,700 Watts. Although the kettle is rapid boil and has a handy measure on the side, so it’s never on for longer than required!

The nice thing about the Wattson is it gives you a constant readout in either numbers, colours, or both. This includes a not entirely useful readout of how much a years worth of your current power consumption would cost at the current rate.

The best part is when you plug it into your Mac or PC and start logging data, we’ve only got two days worth, but it’s interesting and at the moment quite fun (hope the novelty doesn’t wear off too fast) to see how demand for power changes throughout the day. You can also share this data on the DIY KYOTO website with other Wattson / Holmes users.

Anyway, the longer we have this up and running the more useful things it may give me to say about energy consumption and ideas for reducing it. So far, my best advice is avoid reboiling the kettle whenever possible!

Here’s the Holmes readout covering our initial “play time” and beyond:

Wattson and Holmes