I’ve been away in England for a while but more of that another time. I arrived home a few days ago to find the summer storms had taken up their annual noisy, volatile residence in our Johannesburg skies, bringing with them their intermittent thunderous downpours that can turn our streets into rivers in minutes. And also bringing with them that time-worn builder’s excuse of ‘weather delays.’
By this stage, we’ve heard just about every other possible excuse for what seems to be one of the slowest building projects ever and my response to the ‘weather’ one is to discount it as there is an endless list of things to be done inside out of the way of rain and lightning. We are, however, now on a helter-skelter slide to the South African Builders’ Holidays which start next Friday the 12th and which continue until the 12th of January.
We resigned ourselves months ago to not being in the new house before Xmas and are concentrating now on simply getting it to as secure a condition as possible before everyone disappears to The Bush, The Coast, or, as with most of the labourers, to other parts of the African continent. The contractor is making a big deal out of security. Personally, I think he is exaggerating the risks but then he does have experience in these things so I’m trying not to say too much.
I rather suspect that his reluctance to have the plumbing completed before the 12th of December has more to do with simply running out of time than of the risk that the copper piping might be ripped from the walls in the dead of night over the Xmas holidays… Once again, for those of you in First World Countries, this might seem unlikely, but the theft of copper piping has become quite a major issue here.
My husband has turned into quite an impressive project manager over the past two months and along with Bernard is drawing up weekly schedules for the site manager to follow. We never expected to have to get so involved in micro-managing things but it seems to be working. Fred, over there in Sydney, we do rather wish you were here to take this on!
In an effort to convince myself that we have made some progress during the year, I looked back over this blog to find what things looked like last December and found the photo below on a post written on December 2nd, 2013.
Well, we’ve come quite a long way since then but so we should have seeing as it is a full year tomorrow since this photograph was taken and it’s not as though we’re building a particularly big or complicated house. But, looking on the positive side of things, although very slow, Bernard is very happy with the quality of the workmanship so far. So, for the sake of reassurance, the photo below, taken from an upstairs window of the cottage, shows what things looked like yesterday.
So by the end of next week, all the exterior doors must be in and locked and all the windows must be glazed. The opening onto the park must be secured and the gates onto the street must be bolted and that’s about all we can hope for at this stage.
Below are a few photos showing some interior progress:
These doors are waiting to be installed across the front of the veranda. They’ll hopefully make it a completely weatherproof space in both winter and summer.
Finishing off rhinoliting in the stairwell requires a head for heights. For those of you overseas who might have another term for rhinoliting, it is the art of applying a 3mm plaster finish to walls and ceilings using gypsum plaster, especially manufactured as a combined basecoat and finishing plaster for internal application onto brickwork. It gives an exceptionally smooth finish and there is a certain degree of skill required to apply it.
On Friday the workmen were busy throwing the slab on the ‘underground’ room (L-shaped structure on the left of the photo) that is to house the pool pump, water tanks and generator. With the number of power cuts we’re experiencing at the moment, we’re looking forward to having an alternative power supply.
We’re putting pressure on the contractor to get the cottage finished by mid-February.
In the photo above, you can see the edge of the veranda relative to the street boundary wall. Both photographs are taken from East to West. I’m planning on growing climbers on the wall and doing paving interspersed with ground cover between the veranda edge and the wall. I’m very happy with the way the veranda roof has worked out.
All the internal doors, throughout the house, guest suite and cottage are like the one above and will be painted white.
The cottage is going to start life as office space for 4 people. And since those 4 people need to be out of their existing office space by mid-December and plan to work from our present home until the new space is ready, there is considerable pressure on everyone to turn this into an inhabitable building as soon as possible. Looking at it now, I think it’s going to take a while. Watch this space…
Goodness, that’s quite a long holiday that your builders take. We are now at a similar stage to you at this time last year, but I dearly hope and expect that we will be in our house one year from now. So I can understand your frustration. The “rhinoliting” has really lightened up your interior and it’s starting to look less like a building site and more like a home. I really like your stacking doors and especially your bay window frame. Unfortunately, stealing building supplies is also a problem in Australia. I recently read that one home builder had his entire supply of hard-wood flooring stollen from their locked-up building site.
Yes Jacqui – I hear your story of plight
Unfortunately this is very common in the building industry and most home builders have experience very similar frustrations
What needs to be remembered is the final product being the ultimate goal as you will be living there for many years to come
Have the ‘broomstick’ serviced over the Christmas break and start flying the skies again in January
Good luck and Merry Christmas!
Cheers
Fred