Oxley Woods Living

Life in an Oxley Woods eco house

 
 

Posts Tagged ‘Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners’

 

Meetings that never happen and a house stripped and redressed

November 3, 2008

Due to the problems we have been experiencing since early July with rain water coming into our Oxley Woods eco home, it was decided by someone at Wimpey that a meeting should be held with several important people present. We’re not entirely sure who was supposed to be at these meetings with us, but the list included as many people as a CAD designer from Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, one or more directors/managers from Wood Newton, and senior manager(s) from George Wimpey.

The meeting was originally organised for Tuesday the 14th October. We were told that the workmen would be in early to strip the house, and then people would come and discuss possible problems and solutions with us and each other. This was cancelled the day before, and rescheduled for a week later, apparently because some of those due to attend could not make it.

Tuesday 21st October came (and I called the day before to confirm it was still on) and first thing in the morning the all too familiar sound of the cherry picker making it’s way over signalled the start of the panel stripping process.

Unfortunately, the meeting didn’t happen then either. In fact it was apparently never due to happen then, but the following morning. So again we waited for the meeting. We said that one of us would have to take our Son to school and would appreciate it being held after about half past nine, so we could both be there.

So, Wednesday came, and first thing there was a gathering of people outside the house, staring at the property and bringing out some materials to work on the house with. I set off for school and back as soon as possible, only to find that the only member of management who did arrive, John Green from Wood Newton, had left, despite being asked to stay by one of the team on site from George Wimpey, as requested by myself. He had other things to do it seemed.

Nobody from Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners or management from George Wimpey attended. So quite why the previous meeting had been postponed we do not know.

John did speak to my wife in my absence and seemed to be confident he had the solution to the leaks , and he assured her the work would be done in a day.

The fix basically involved stripping off all the Trespa panels (already undertaken for the examination of the house) some of the batons around the glazing, and other areas, and applying some sort of sticky breathable waterproof tape made by Tyvek to the house, using some dark, sticky resin applied to the breathable panels on the house.

We were concerned by the amount of tide marks on the side of the house. These, we are told, are perfectly normal and to be expected as the panels are themselves waterproof and are designed to breath, so water should be able to get behind the trespa and then just run down them and off into the French drain below. The horizontal tide marks seemed more of a concern, and it was these areas, as well as around all the glazing, that efforts (and the waterproof tape) would be focused.

All batons were them treated to a bit of mastic for good measure, not that the water should get in behind those anyway, and then the trespa panels re-applied. The work should be invisible behind the panels, and, finally, waterproof.

We were also assured that while the house was leaking, apparently far worse than any other house on site (although we get the impression we’re not alone in experiencing some rain water coming through), it WAS built to spec. This raised the concern that the house isn’t faulty by construction, but by design. Which would mean in turn that every other house on the Oxley Woods development has the potential to suffer the same problems. The reason, we’re told, we’ve had so much suffering is our relatively exposed positioning compared to other properties. This could be a blessing in disguise, as getting wet, and (we hope) getting fixed could be better than getting damp, and never even realising it.

The work that John from Wood Newton had assured would be carried out in a single day did, not surprisingly given the scale of the task, take the workers through until Saturday afternoon before they had the side of the house back together. The front and back of the house will also need to be checked and taped where deemed necessary.

The work was noisy, and very disruptive, we had a hell of a week. Our eight month old daughter suffered through disrupted sleep and we all suffered as a result. Having the workmen come in an extra day on Saturday to put the house together was a surprise (we found out Friday evening they’d be in), and it was good to see them working to get it done, but it caused further disruption and upset.

When all was completed, we were not happy with some of the panel fit, and some panels have been damaged in the process with small chips and scratches. But it does look much neater, and feels like a more complete solution than taping and covering a few patches as before.

The photographs below show various stages of the work, we have literally hundreds more, all on my Flickr page if you’re really that interested to see.

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?

It isn’t all doom and gloom at Oxley Woods

November 2, 2008

While the discovery another damp area, and finally witnessing first hand a leak we’d seen the effects of last night were certainly depressing, it hasn’t been all doom and gloom around these parts lately.

Recently the temperature has really dropped, and we have had the heating on now for limited times, we’re experimenting with using the heating as little as possible, no point living in a high insulated eco house if you heat it up like an oven. Might have to get some slippers though, the rooms that are yet to have any floor fitted get chilly underfoot for sure.

Anyway, it’s been Halloween and we’ve had some snow, so I thought I’d share some photos of the season to lift the mood a little. Among them is a shot of the skylight, which is just fantastic, wouldn’t want to be without one now we’ve got one! Also for Halloween we ran a load of LED christmas lights around the French drain to uplight the house in a “spooky” way. It reflected really nicely off the silver Trespa panels, and we’re seriously considering doing something similar on a full time basis when we replace the standard light-house powered outside light the house came with!

Also shown is a photo of our lawn, which is the one and only good thing to come from our seemingly never ending list of problems at the home. As a goodwill gesture, George Wimpey arrange for the lawn to be turfed (they come with just mud as standard) and they also laid a patio around the rear of the house, and fitted a gate so we can get to the back garden without traipsing through the house. Very much appreciated, certainly saved me a lot of work!

The leaks came back!

October 29, 2008

Following on from our series of leaks and fixes, during the weekend following the final painting and filling over the “repair hatch” that was cut in our wall for leak detection work, it turned out that all was not well.

As we sat in the living room on the evening of the 4th of October, my wife said those fateful words.. “Is that water?!”.  Of course not I thought, and said, but unfortunately, on closer inspection, it was indeed water coming out of the wall and running down the side of our full length window! Disaster! Again!

Anyway, the following morning we inspected the new water damage, to find water marks and stains above and down the side of the Juliet window, and also below the power socket where water marks had appeared before.  All the previous repair and repatching work, and all the disruption that brought with it, felt and seemed as if were all for nothing.  We STILL had a leaky eco home!

So here we were, three months after first discovering leaks at our new eco home, several days of disruptions and multiple repair attempts later, and water was literally dripping down our walls and pooling on the skirting board.  Not good, not good at all.

The problem with windows…

October 22, 2008

The problem with windows and our Oxley Woods eco home, is that they don’t appear to be water tight by design.  Which, as I’m sure you can appreciate, isn’t ideal.

After only owning the property for a couple of weeks, we had some rather nasty looking water marks on various walls, mostly concentrated above and around windows, although not exclusively so.

We have been informed that the design has been modified/changed as a result of this discovery, and all previously built houses are being treated retrospectively, so that’s a positive thing.  Our main issue, believe it or not, wasn’t really with the water leak, but the fact that even now our windows still, to us (and the managers on site agree) look repaired, and certainly nowhere near as good as new.

This all goes back to early July, but the sequence of events has gone something like this…

Clear mastic applied to the sills.  Clearly not right, so dug out (some chipping/scratching occurred when this was carried out), and black mastic applied in it’s place.  This was not applied neatly, or painted over well, looked pretty terrible so eventually a painter/decorator was called in to do it.  Eventually builder’s caulk was used instead of any type of mastic, and the job was better (not great), BUT, as this was applied in hot weather (and also over previous repairs), we had terrible problems with bubbling and peeling….

Last week the painter came back, we believed to removed the old, scruffy, cracked caulking, take back down the paintwork to smooth it, and paint it over again.  Unfortunately, only a few hours on the job later, and the work is not up to scratch at all, and the caulking and previous repairs have largely just been “gone over” again.

 So, frustratingly, we’re awaiting the return of the decorator(s) to spend a decent amount of time taking back all the layers of below par repairs, to start afresh.  Our frustration is compounded when we see the neighbouring house has had the caulking done and the job is very neat and tidy, blows ours away, and that we had a chipped rear door frame painted to a very high standard.  So we know it CAN be done, it’s just not being done for us.

Hopefully we’re going to get there, and the next time it will be taken seriously, and the job will be done properly.  It’s a shame it took several bodges before we actually had a painted in to do the painting, and even then it’s been in poor conditions, and to a substandard level.  Fingers crossed for the next time (and for decent enough weather to allow the repairs!).

These pictures illustrate some of the states of repair the windows have been in, up until October 17th.  We’ve taken loads more as you can imagine, but wont bore you with them all here!