Specification:
Strips
600 wide by 200mm deep
Celcon Foundation Blocks no cavity
Slab
200mm well compacted type 1 gardcore (no sand or weak mix)
dpm (sheets)
100mm insulation
150mm r/c slab with UFH inside
5-10mm thin screed finish
Friday, June 06, 2008
Thursday, June 05, 2008
Building Junctions - SANAA museum in New York
I have a problem junction to solve with the neighbours garage. Here is how SANAA did it in NY. Photo by jedisalf from here
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
Cranes

Another world.
The one above from Caledonian Lifting Services
Bernard Hunter do a mini crane at 986.40 per day.
Sunday, June 01, 2008
Daikokubashira - a big black pillar
大黒柱
Japanese is just so logical. The main column of the house in old Minka is called Daikokubashira literally big (大) black (黒) pillar (柱).
2 A structrual post *hashira 柱, in vernacular houses, *minka 民家, which was considered to be an embodiment of *Daikoku 大黒, one of the seven gods of good fortune *shichifukujin 七福神. Daikoku had come to be associated with the kitchen and hearth and was regarded as a tutelary deity of the house. The post was located in a variety of places in the house: a) most commonly at the interface between the earth floored area *doma 土間, and the living rooms kyoshitsubu 居室部, approximately at the center of the building's cross-section. This location marked the boundary between the public front half of the house,hare 晴, and the private domestically-orientated zone toward the rear, ke 褻; b) on the upper side *kamite 上手 of the large room(s), *hiroma 広間 adjacent to the earth-floored area. In the case of houses with a 4 room cross plan ta-no-jigata 田の字型, the daikokubashira marked the center of the plan where the arms of the cross interesected.
source JAANUS

A not so good example as there are 2! My picture from the Edo Open Air Architecture Museum in Tokyo.

source

An example from JAANUS
Our Daikokubashira is being picked up on Tuesday. I visited Scottish Wood a few weeks ago to discuss cladding for my house but also to see a fallen oak log that might work for the house.
Japanese is just so logical. The main column of the house in old Minka is called Daikokubashira literally big (大) black (黒) pillar (柱).
2 A structrual post *hashira 柱, in vernacular houses, *minka 民家, which was considered to be an embodiment of *Daikoku 大黒, one of the seven gods of good fortune *shichifukujin 七福神. Daikoku had come to be associated with the kitchen and hearth and was regarded as a tutelary deity of the house. The post was located in a variety of places in the house: a) most commonly at the interface between the earth floored area *doma 土間, and the living rooms kyoshitsubu 居室部, approximately at the center of the building's cross-section. This location marked the boundary between the public front half of the house,hare 晴, and the private domestically-orientated zone toward the rear, ke 褻; b) on the upper side *kamite 上手 of the large room(s), *hiroma 広間 adjacent to the earth-floored area. In the case of houses with a 4 room cross plan ta-no-jigata 田の字型, the daikokubashira marked the center of the plan where the arms of the cross interesected.
source JAANUS

A not so good example as there are 2! My picture from the Edo Open Air Architecture Museum in Tokyo.

source

An example from JAANUS
Our Daikokubashira is being picked up on Tuesday. I visited Scottish Wood a few weeks ago to discuss cladding for my house but also to see a fallen oak log that might work for the house.
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
The Kotatasu

A kotatsu is a table with a heater underneath that can provide direct heat when you are seated at it. Sadly they ahve become extraordinarly ugly in modern Japan but there are some nice old ones and some nice new ones - mostly in sushi resturants. We will have two in our house. One as the main dining table (rebar pictured below) and one outside for the chilly scottish summers!
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Monday, May 12, 2008
Sunday, May 04, 2008
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Dodgy cladding detail
The use of clout nails to stop the cladding pulling off the wall in high winds looks terrible at low level especially where in damages teh wood and creates a broken area for water ingress, although shown here is very sheltered.
The Birdlife centre in North Berwick by Simpson and Brown
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Thursday, April 10, 2008
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)





























