Oxley Woods Living

Life in an Oxley Woods eco house

 
 

Posts Tagged ‘windows’

 

If a picture paints a thousand words…

July 3, 2009

Then our new Flickr page is worth over a million and counting. Certainly saves having to come up with that amount of text!

If you fancy seeing holes drilled in walls, walls being peeled off inside and out, horrible looking water running all over panels and even the odd photo of just every day living when the builders aren’t around, then check out our new Flickr photo page, link in the main menu above, as well as just here: Oxley Woods Photos.


Getting wet in middle bedroom

OSB and studs revealed

Water messy test

Orange sky at Oxley Woods


As well as being an insight into what’s been going on in and around our Oxley Woods eco house over the course of the year and more we’ve been here (organised into monthly photo sets) this may be interesting to anyone looking at architecture, design and house building as I imagine there’s lots of stuff you won’t find in any brochure or official documents.

Things are looking brighter, hotter, dryer

June 30, 2009

It looks like we may actually be getting somewhere with regards to our year old problem of water ingress. More tests have been carried out this week and it actually feels like we’re getting somewhere. It’s been a slow, slow, painful process and horrible to live through, but it seems like we’re heading in the right direction.

It seems, after all this time, the problem lies within our windows and doors. If it’s a construction, design or materials problem we may never really understand in full, because we’ve no doubt been suffering more than most. What is certain it is the windows (and at least one door) for sure, and it would seem as a result of tests today, nowhere else.

Good news is, it looks like we’re on a way to a resolution, and then we’ll have our house put back together properly, and then perhaps the rest of our snags and problems will be resolved, and then perhaps we can just get on with living! Certainly hope so.

On another positive note it looks like our small lot of veggies are going from strength to strength. The potatoes has surprised me by doing really well (we planted them too late according “the rules”) and the tomatoes are looking pretty good, some of the corn is beginning to look really strong (some not so) and “my” blueberries are getting bigger and bigger.

Pretty good day really.

Live and let dye at Oxley Park

June 25, 2009

After being seriously messed about by Wood Newton earlier in the week, and another decent meeting with the George Wimpey site manager on Tuesday another full day of disruption followed yesterday (Wednesday) as more water testing was underway on our eco house.

I could ramble on for ages about how unhappy we are with the attitude of Aiden from Wood Newton, how rude he was to Abi because she actually wanted to be in on their conversations about OUR property (stomping about saying “I can’t work like this”… and worse), and how little time they spent actually spraying the house with water in various locations. For example, ten minutes on one window, so I asked if they thought that was enough to really simulate a decent amount of rainfall “How long do you want us to spray it for then” came the reply from PR guru Aiden.

Anyway, the long and the short of it is that only one thing was established, it seems that water is coming in through the reveals and into and through the window frame in the full length window in the living/dining room. This to us seems to be an inherent and rather stupid oversight and design flaw leaving no room for the slightest deviation in manufacture, and also not suitable for weather, because in the words of Aiden when it gets hot and cold it will expand and can open up new gaps.

The rest of the testing focused on the front of the property and not one of the known points of water ingress, some witnessed as recently as Friday last week revealed themselves. This is part of the problem, one day there’s a leak in one location, the next, due perhaps to weather changes or the water Gremlins living inside the walls, the leaks have moved somewhere else. This doesn’t help the Wood Newton and George Wimpey guys finding the various faults and flaws, but it also is no help to us having our home continually pulled apart and tested on.

The only thing that did appear was two NEW water patches on the kitchen ceiling. These are in a location towards the front of the property where we have never before witnessed any water ingress, tide marks, or moisture. Unfortunately these appeared relatively late in the day at 15:30 after about 115 minutes of spraying the windows on the top floor. Weirdly, the moisture metre and finger tests in the holes drilled in our walls revealed NO dampness anywhere near the windows on the second or first floor or anywhere leading the water marks on the ceiling. Water is somehow penetrating the walls and working into the property. But still, nobody knows how.

The plan is that first thing this morning (usually meaning 8:30, but there’s no sign yet of anyone gathering outside, and it’s five to nine) they will begin again with spraying ONLY the first floor of the property with water injected with dye. This will continue as long as feasible to see if the water marks re-appear. If and when they do appear, they will track them back using holes, the moisture metre, a small probing camera etc. to attempt to find the root cause of at least these leaks.

So far it would appear we have faulty windows, inherently faulty windows in several locations, which were fitted using an inherently faulty method (now “fixed” with flash banding using Resistit) in addition to other, unknown faults leading to this further water ingress.

Mixed start to the week

June 16, 2009

Bit of a hit and miss, good and bad start to the week for us and our Oxley Woods eco house.

On the good side we had the guys around Yesterday to fix the damaged ducting behind our medicine cabinet which has meant the extraction part of our eco hat has never been properly working since July last year. They re-routed the pipe and tied it back at the same time so it wouldn’t be damaged when replacing the cabinet. So glad to get that sorted.

We also had a Nuaire rep come around to re-commission the eco hat after the pipes/ducting had been connected properly. Unfortunately it wasn’t smelling so badly as usual (hardly at all) and he could not find anything (again) causing the whiff. So it looks like our eco hat is now “as good as it gets” in terms of water warming, ventilation and filtration. But it still smells.

On the downside this morning, following some rain yesterday afternoon and then again during the night, we have more signs of water ingress. We called in the site manager as soon as possible, and he had a look around. There is/was a small, additional water stain above our bedroom one at the rear of the house, and more disheartening it was also damp around our full length window on the exposed side elevation.

The site manager is finding it, in his own words “baffling” and is going to talk to John Green from Wood Newton. To be honest, as you might have gathered or expect at this stage, we don’t have much faith in any “final solution”.

Just another day in our Oxley Park eco house

June 12, 2009

Today work commenced at about 11:30 on the house, starting with correcting a mistake we noticed last night were an external baton was put in the wrong place, which meant the Tresda couldn’t be properly attached until it was sorted.

Following this, and just completed, the workmen from Wood Newton went up to inspect the window frame and surround in bedroom two at the front of the property, were it appears water may have been entering from any number of locations and has affected the paint and plaster on the inside.

On inspection, and to no great surprise, according to the guys from Wood Newton the problem probably lies with the shoddy repairs we’ve had carried out (twice) on the window frame, which by design are not good enough to keep water out. That, and the fact the frames appear to be separating and coming apart at the joins. Fantastic. The frames have all been filled and repainted quite poorly, but due to weather (?!) the filling and paint is cracking and coming away from the windows and this is, according to the Wood Newton guys, most likely how the water is passing through the frames, and tracking across to the various points it it showing inside the property. That and the fact the frames are themselves separating at the joins in the corners.

They are now moving onto bedroom four, at the side of the house, were we saw a great deal of water coming through at the weekend, to carry out the same basic inspection.

Yesterday we learned a few things and didn’t really have our faith restored in the properties, their design, their construction, or George Wimpey’s (or Wood Newton’s) ability to properly sort things out. The “solution” for the front of the house were had water coming through above the kitchen window in two locations on two walls and ceilings (it is a corner window) was to remove a load of shoddy filler that we’ve been unhappy about since it was put in during December 2008 and then to cover the lower section of house between the ground and first floor windows (including the balcony facade) with Tyvek, stuck in place with their own self adhesive tape, then put the batons in place over the top of the tyvek. The logic behind this is that all rain will go over the waterproof Tyvek Supro material and drop/run away from the property as it should be doing by design anyway. But isn’t.

During the repairs several holes were cut into the house (cores) to check the paper based insulation. Basically the holes were cut through the green Panelvent outer “skin” and sticking in a finger the check the paper is still “fluffy” as it should be. Somewhat to our relief, it appeared to be OK. These holes were then patched over with the Tyvek tape.

To us this does feel like they’re just putting plasters over wounds they can’t heal. Instead of discovering why the buildings let in water, and at so many locations, and actually fixing the “core” issues, they appear to just make every effort to divert the water away from problem areas, even if they’re not 100% certain where the problem areas really are. As an example the water is coming through above the windows. Above the windows has been “fully waterproofed” using apparently very high quality materials (Resistit E SK). Now, no matter where that water is coming from, it shouldn’t be getting through a highly tested, 50 year guaranteed, relatively wide band of flashing material. Nobody could answer why or how this was happening, just that they believed that applying Tyvek to the front of the house would stop the water getting around to those places in the first place and stop the flow of water. Not very reassuring.

As usual we’ve got a tonne of photographs but I’ve not yet had time to view or edit those to share on here.