Archives for posts with tag: Building from scratch in South Africa.

The work-from-home office has been running quite successfully from the cottage for the past two weeks.  There were the usual teething problems, internet hiccups etc but the technical glitches are being gradually ironed out.  The interior spaces still need some tweaking and the builders are still installing guttering, but in general, it’s working out pretty much as planned.

To put a stop to dirt and grit being tramped onto the lovely wooden floors, we needed to do something about the access quickly and I asked a friend of mine who runs a small gardening business to give me some help.  I had a good idea of what the end result should look like and this morning Marion arrived with her little team of workmen and got straight to work.  She also recommended someone to install the sprinkler system for that small area, which will run off a separate control panel from the main house.  He came along too and by the end of today we had not only a very promising garden but also a functional watering system.   After all the delays, excuses and mistakes we’ve become accustomed to hearing over the past year, this almost seems too good to be true.

Cottage Garden from the East.

Cottage Garden from the East.

The picture above is taken from the cottage carport on the east side.  The strip of red in the background is the gate from the street to the main house.  It still needs to be painted white.  The terra-cotta pots on the veranda came from our old home.  They have been ‘stored’ in a corner of the site since the end of February and have somehow survived the dust and general chaos.  In fact the cymbidium has a spray of buds and looks likely to flower soon.

In the middle of the white, boundary wall on the left, you might notice a ‘box’ with two black dots; that is a burglar alarm beam.  Seemed like a sensible place for it a few months ago but now I will need to be careful not to allow anything to grow tall enough to interfere with the beam.

This small patch of garden is on the south side of the cottage so we’ve chosen plants that don’t need a lot of sun, including azaleas and clivia.  We’ve also planted several baby ‘tickey’ creepers along the wall.  They’re slow-growing but will ‘soften’ the walls nicely once they’re established.  To avoid any need of a lawn mower, we’ve put down pavers interspersed with ground cover.  Hopefully all the bits of bare ground will be covered soon.

Cottage Garden from the West side.

Cottage Garden from the West side.

And while we’re talking about gardens and watering systems, I thought I’d include a photo of the water tanks which have been installed – not without some difficulty – in the ‘bunker’ behind the pool.

One of two water storage tanks.

One of two water storage tanks.

This water tank is directly in front of a second, identical one.  Each tank holds 4500 litres of water much of which will come directly off our roof during the rainy summer season.  With our municipal water supply having been quite erratic over the past few years, it seems like a good idea to have other options in place.

Throwing concrete slab on 'underground' room.

The ‘bunker’ while still under construction and before the start of the pool.

Looking at the photo above again, it is clear that a lot has happened since it was taken, but progress does still seem to be painfully slow at this stage.  Hopefully the garden will be more cooperative!

 

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.

Above the Ground at last!

Above the Ground at last!

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.

South view of house.  Taken from upstairs cottage window.

South view of house. Taken from upstairs cottage window.

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:

Stacking doors delivered

Stacking doors delivered

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.

View across stairwell from the pyjama lounge.

View across stairwell from the pyjama lounge.

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.

Throwing concrete slab on 'underground' room.

Throwing concrete slab on ‘underground’ room.

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.

Framework for Bay Window going in at last.

Framework for Bay Window going in at last.

Part of Bay Window Frame waiting to be installed.

Part of Bay Window Frame waiting to be installed.

We’re putting pressure on the contractor to get the cottage finished by mid-February.

The ground has been filled in to the right level for the cottage carport.

The ground has been filled in to the right level for the cottage carport.

Cottage veranda taking shape.

Cottage veranda taking shape.

Parkhurst Cottage Garden 2

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.

Internal door installed upstairs in cottage.

Internal door installed upstairs in cottage.

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…

 

 

Spires in the small town of Wellington, viewed across vineyards.

Spires in the small town of Wellington, viewed across vineyards.

Last Monday, the 27th of October, I took a break from flying around Parkhurst on my broomstick and went wandering around the vineyards of Wellington in the Western Cape instead.  Along with a group of 10 friends, we did, not for the first time, the Wellington Wine Walk (wwwwinewalk.co.za) which involves three full days of walking and three nights staying at different wine farms.

Wide Open Spaces

Wide Open Spaces

This time we walked 16kilometres on the first day and 12 on day two and three.  The walking is punctuated with several stops on different estates, tasting wines, having lunch and generally getting some idea of life down in that part of the world.

Lunch stop

Lunch stop

It could not be more different from life in Johannesburg and it offered a complete break from all things building-related.

Far From the Madding Crowds.

Far From the Madding Crowds.

A day or two before I left for the Cape, I popped in at the house to check on progress following my previous  not-too-happy visit and found quite a lot of activity.  It seems that the occasional broomstick dive-bombing exercise can be quite effective…

Stair window and front door frames were in place.

Stair window and front door frames were in place.

Living room door frames in place.

Living room door frames in place.

 

Ceiling of cottage veranda with street boundary wall behind.

Ceiling of cottage veranda with street boundary wall behind.

Rhinoliting started in the cottage. And paint samples on the walls.

Rhinoliting started in the cottage. And paint samples on the walls.

Painting undercoat on the garage walls.

Painting undercoat on the garage walls.

The wall bordering on the park  taking shape.

The wall bordering on the park taking shape.

Production Line

Production Line

Bird's Eye View from upstairs balcony.

Bird’s Eye View from upstairs balcony.

Up to now, I haven’t really tried to explain what is supposed to happen in the front garden which is what the chaos above is eventually supposed to be.  And the main reason for that is that I’m not sure where to begin…  Firstly, there is going to be a swimming pool somewhere in this space.  It is designed to run parallel to the park wall.  A vast quantity of ‘filler’ has to be delivered to the site to bring the level of the front garden up to just two shallow steps lower than the finished house.  In effect, the pool has already been dug.  The filler will be packed in around it.

On the left of the pool, close to the gate that will open onto the park, there will be an underground room, housing – among other things – a generator and a couple of water tanks.  For those of you reading this in First World Countries, this might come as a bit of a surprise but having back-up electricity and a supply of stored water is becoming almost a necessity in Johannesburg and seeing we’re building from scratch, we decided to factor that in.  Power outages are increasingly common and every now and then we turn on a tap to nothing more than a burp of fresh air.  This usually happens without warning and with no  information forthcoming as to how long it will be before services are restored.  I never thought that having a swimming pool in one’s garden would prove to be useful in such a variety of ways…

And so it is that landscaping the front garden is not as simple as one might have thought and at this stage, quite a lot of energy and time is being expended there.  But having put up with no fewer than 3 power outages in the last 3 days, I think the effort will eventually prove to have been worth it.

Here are some catch-up photographs from the past couple of weeks.  Most were taken yesterday – Midwinter’s Day – under blazing blue Highveld skies, typical of this time of year.

Rafters against the winter sky.

Rafters against the winter sky.

You need a head for heights.

You need a head for heights.

 

Sure footed roofers.

Sure-footed roofers.

The photo above was taken from the second bedroom – on the east of the house – looking towards the main bedroom which is on the west.  You can seen straight through the openings of what will be two sash windows, opposite each other in the main bedroom; one facing east onto the upstairs balcony and the other facing west.

Rafters over the main bedroom.

Rafters over the main bedroom.

In the photo above you can see the east facing sash window from inside the main bedroom and part of the north facing window.  The rafters in all three bedrooms will be exposed.

House and guest suite over garage, taken from the driveway.

House and guest suite over garage, taken from the driveway.

 

Bernard and Nigel - current site manager - in discussion with an electrician.

Bernard and Nigel – current site manager – in discussion with an electrician.

Below is a picture taken from the cottage.  It shows the plastered steps leading up to the door of the guest suite above the garage.  The doorway opening under the steps leads into a washroom for casual workmen.

Steps (plastered) up to guest suite.

Steps (plastered) up to guest suite.

Looking through the door into the guest suite.

Looking through the door into the guest suite.

And below is a view of the north-facing front of the house, as seen from the park.  At last, it is beginning to actually look like a house…

 

View from the park.

View from the park.

 

A few weeks ago, on a breezy Autumn morning, we took ourselves far beyond our comfort zone once again.  This time we were in search of Vasco Henriques, a company known for its concrete fireplace surrounds and we took Bernard along with us for the ride.  It was quite a long way out of Jhb; halfway to Pretoria and near Lanseria Airport.

Below is the advert that had caught my attention in this month’s Conde Nast House & Garden magazine:

Fountain ad

Ad in Glossy Magazine

I’m not sure what I was expecting; some sort of showroom, perhaps?  That wasn’t what I found.  After a few wrong turns we eventually found ourselves at an unassuming gateway at the start of a winding, overgrown driveway.  It didn’t look very promising but as we rounded the corner at the end, we arrived in a flourishing Highveld concrete garden. Sometimes finding the unexpected can be fascinating.

concrete Garden on a breezy Autumn day.

Concrete Garden on a breezy Autumn day.

Casual Display Style

Casual Display Style

It was a Sunday but they seem to have a 7 day working week.  It was a little unusual in that there didn’t appear to be any sort of office or reception area and we were welcomed by Christina who seemed to be in charge, not only of the whole operation, but of a group of workmen as well.  The magazine advertisement which was behind this excursion bore little resemblance to what we found.  Perhaps it all looks different on a week day…  Having said that, Christina was extremely helpful and appeared to know all there is to know about fireplaces and fountains.

Christina. Very knowledgeable about all 'things concrete'.

Christina. Very knowledgeable about all ‘things concrete’.

There were many different options and after a while it became quite confusing.  Although we left feeling we knew exactly what we would eventually order, I have a strong suspicion I might have to make another expedition out there just to be sure.

Everywhere we looked there seemed to be something else to see.  The company does not confine itself to fireplace surrounds.  There was a vast selection of fountain pieces – both wall mounted or central features – and every conceivable kind of garden statuary.

Way too Ornate for us.

Way too Ornate for us.

 

Better but too big.

Better but too big.

 

Maybe ok with a wider mantle.

Maybe ok with a wider mantle.

 

Perhaps something in between this and the previous one?

Perhaps something in between this and the previous one?

A walk further onto the property took us into a concrete jungle:

Concrete Jungle

Concrete Jungle

And along one path we found a treasure trove of every sort of small garden ornament one could ever wish for:

Treasure Trove

Treasure Trove

And then we discovered the fountains….

One of a collection of fountains.

One of a collection of fountains.

Another...

Another…

And another.  I like the bullnose concrete surrounds.

And another. I like the bullnose concrete surrounds.

So far, I have two water features planned for the new garden; both on the south side of the house.  But because I love the sound of water in a garden and the fact that flowing water attracts a variety of birds, I suspect there will be at least one additional pond or trough on the northern side.

A selection of lion - and other - fountain heads.

A selection of lion – and other – fountain heads.

Bernard was very taken with the lions:

Bernard with lion giving an idea of its size.

Bernard with lion giving an idea of its size.

Lion close-up

Lion close-up

Altogether it proved to be a very interesting morning.  I love finding surprising places like that.  It would have been just that much more satisfying if there had been a good coffee shop. Having driven all the way out to the ‘countryside’  – which is a euphemism for ‘veld’ – it would have been nice to have had a place to sit and enjoy the somewhat quirky surroundings, make notes and possibly even some final decisions over coffee.

As it was, negotiating the bumpy road out again, we spotted one last fireplace surround which just happened to come closest to what we were looking for…

Close to what we're looking for.

Close to what we’re looking for.

The proportions on this one seem better suited to our space.  Not entirely sure about the square feet.  Seems we’ll have to go back for another look.

I have been collecting photographs of water features for quite a while.  Here are a few of my favourites:

Small Water Feature

Small Water Feature

Outside the library, on the south side, there is a small, curved wall providing some screening from the driveway.  It is quite close to the French doors leading out of the library.  I plan to have a small water feature set into that wall.  Something like the one above, but the trough will need to be smaller.  And it won’t have a silver ball.

Trough with 3 Spouts.

Trough with 3 Spouts.

This one (above) copied from an article in the Garden & Home magazine, caught my attention because it is more or less the same size as the water feature we are going to install against the north-facing retaining wall below the cottage.  I like the stone cladding but not the more ornate overlay.

This is my favourite.

This is my favourite.

There is still a way to go before we get to water features but the plumbing connections are ready and waiting.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Great site meeting today with lots of progress made in a week.

Brick Delivery

Brick Delivery

This is quite a popular slogan for businesses in South Africa. Looking at the truck this morning, I wondered whether you use this expression elsewhere in the world? It’s used for all sorts of things here when there is perceived to be plenty of something; ie” There was food for Africa at the picnic” – There was more than enough.   But I don’t mean to get sidetracked into a language lesson.  It works quite well here; we have ‘Sprinklers for Africa’,  ‘Flowers for Africa’ etc etc.

Unloading.

Unloading.

Work on the cottage is progressing quite well.  Below is a picture showing the start of the staircase which will to the left of the entrance.  A compact guest toilet and basin will be going under the stairs.

 

Work has started on the cottage staircase.

Work has started on the cottage staircase.

 

Eric, our engineer, seen through a front cottage window.

Eric, our engineer, seen through a front cottage window.

 

Looking South from the cottage through the French doors and window openings.

Looking South from the cottage through the French doors and window openings.

The cottage will essentially face the street although there will be windows on the northern side to let in sunlight.  The road is quite busy, especially in the morning and late afternoon. Although there will be a narrow veranda and then a wall between the cottage and the pavement, we’re starting to consider double-glazing the south-facing windows.

Below is a picture of the house taken from the ‘garden’.  Today was the first time in a while that I’ve been able to get down to the garden level, over piles of rubble and bricks.  The slab above the veranda has still to be thrown and until that happens, the brickwork on the main bedroom can’t start.

View of the house from the garden.

View of the house from the garden.

 

A different angle showing start of 2nd bedroom.

A different angle showing start of 2nd bedroom.

 

Window openings in 2nd bedroom.

Window openings in 2nd bedroom.

 

Looking up at the French Doors from the 2nd bedroom.

Looking up at the French Doors from the 2nd bedroom.

(The second bedroom is the room our children are likely to use when they visit from London and probably other visitors too. “Downsizing”, with both our children living in their own homes abroad, means that we will no longer have two clearly demarcated bedrooms, one for each child.  This will be very different from our present home.  Whenever either has come home in the last 14 years, they have naturally returned to their childhood bedrooms.)

This morning, looking at the depth and length of the space that will have to be filled in between the retaining walls and the cottage, we took a sudden decision to build a storeroom into it instead.  Bernard thinks it’s a very good idea and Eric, the engineer seems to think is makes very good sense.  More space to store garden equipment that would otherwise have  had to be in the garage.  The photo below shows the wall into which a door will be knocked.

We have decided to put a door in the retaining wall on the right.

We have decided to put a door in the retaining wall on the right.

 

Part of this space - between the cottage and the double retaining walls - will be made into a garden storeroom.

Part of this space – between the cottage and the double retaining walls – will be made into a garden storeroom.

I am not a fan of windowless, cellar-type rooms so the door will have to have to be slatted or will have to include a window.

 

The bathroom for the main bedroom has started to take shape:

The start of the main en-suite bathroom. The low, oblong window will be next to the bath.

The start of the main en-suite bathroom. The low, oblong window will be next to the bath.

These windows face west and won’t be seen other than from the path leading down to the garden on the west side of the house.  (Which is why I accepted the oblong one which would otherwise have looked odd in relation to all the other windows.)

Two Heads are Better than One. (I hope!)

Two Heads are Better than One. (I hope!)

These two guys are studying the plans intently at the top of the conveyor belt which is positioned through south-facing window of the main bathroom.  It is not a floor-length window; it’s temporarily this deep to allow access now.

 

Welcome Distraction

Welcome Distraction

Every now and then when I’m on the site I get distracted by flashes of vivid pink; the roses in the neighbour’s courtyard.  If you can see past the ubiquitous electric fencing, they make a welcome change from the rubble and brickwork on our side.

Glimpse of a Garden.

Glimpse of a Garden.

Eventually, a pathway will run down between our house and this garden wall.  It will provide us with access from the driveway to the garden in front of the house.  The wall itself has been put on a back burner for now as our neighbour has not been open to discussion on the subject.   The yellow part of the wall on the left is paintwork still remaining from the kitchen of the original house, which was built right up to the boundary.  One day this walkway will be covered with jasmine and climbing roses…  Watch this space.

Trellis-covered garden path.

Trellis-covered garden path.

The photo above (from Garden & Home magazine, June 2013) shows a narrow walkway between a house and garden wall, similar to what we will have.  Eventually, the rubble-strewn strip we have at present, will hopefully look something like this.

'Birdsong'

‘Birdsong’

My daughter arrived home from London this morning on a short visit and came along to the site meeting with me this morning.  Anyone who has a daughter will appreciate that this was an important event.  Firstly, although London has been her base for the past 5 or more years, our present house where we’ve lived for the past 20 years, will always be the one she thinks of as ‘home’ and so to see it being slowly ‘dismantled’ as I steadily sift through cupboards and shelves and make plans to fit into a much smaller space is probably unsettling for her.

Home for the last 20 years.

Home for the last 20 years.

She visited the site before the previous house was demolished and I think she – along with many other friends and relations – struggled rather to envisage how we were ever going to create a new, welcoming home there.

 

The Original Street Frontage.

The Original Street Frontage.

But today, with the upstairs walls going up and some of the rooms actually starting to take shape, I think she was reassured.

Mark (our contractor) explaining the dimensions of the patio.

 

The conveyor belt in position.

The conveyor belt in position.

The conveyor belt is now in position and was in action today.  It is being used to carry building materials up to the first floor.  In the photograph above you can also see the openings for two north-facing windows in what will be the living room of the cottage.  Above the garage is a window that has somehow made a completely unplanned appearance and no explanation was forthcoming this morning…  It will have to be bricked in.  While we have made a change to the window schedule for both the cottage and the guest-suite, this opening does not fit with either the original plan or the new one so someone was a little confused.  We have had very few errors of this sort though and nothing that couldn’t be easily fixed.

Today's View to the North.

Today’s View to the North.

 

Bernard and Rupert discussing the changes to the guest-suite windows.

Bernard and Rupert discussing the changes to the guest-suite windows.

Standing Upstairs and Looking South towards the Street.

Standing Upstairs and Looking South towards the Street.

The weather seems to have stabilised and it’s great to see measurable progress from week to week.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Some of you might have noticed that this blog has been a little quiet lately.  Following a Highveld storm two weeks ago, I have been deprived of the internet at home until today when a particularly determined technician managed to restore the connection – and my sanity – at last.

But just because I’ve been kept away from cyberspace has not meant that more earthbound projects have come to a halt and right now I’m focusing on kitchens.  Bernard has sent a plan of the kitchen to a ‘kitchen consultant’ along with a list of pre-requisites from me.  While I wait to see what her suggestions are, I am enjoying trawling through hundreds of beautiful kitchens on Houzz.  Here are some of my favourites so far:

This looks like a practical way to store utensils.

Since I usually come off second best in the battle to extract baking trays and muffin tins from my pot drawer, this storage option really appeals to me.  It should also put paid to the cacophony of a discordant percussion band that accompanies my efforts to extract the tray I need – always the one somehow at the bottom of the pile.

Perhaps it’s the light from the beautiful windows in the two kitchens below, but I absolutely love them.  I am leaning towards white cupboards again and will be having a wooden floor.  There will also be a bay window on the northern side of the kitchen.  At the moment the plan is to have a two-seater sofa in the window rather than a built-in seat but this could still change.  Movable furniture is more versatile and although I love the look of window seats, sofas are more comfortable.

Great pantry but won’t have the space for something this generous.  Love the ladder.  What is it about ladders?

And finally, a bit of whimsy.  Very sensible to have the pet food bowls lifted off the floor but a pity about the ceiling.

I look forward to getting some feedback on the general ‘look’ of these kitchens.  Any suggestions and ideas would be very welcome.

Arriving back in Johannesburg after a full month away in Cape Town is always something of a shock.  We drove back, covering the 1200 kilometres two days and breaking the journey at one of our favourite Karoo farm stops.  One of the benefits of the long road trip is the opportunity to change up a gear from the more laid-back (and much better organised) Cape, to the frenetic, unpredictable energy of Gauteng.  But despite all those hours on the road, exiting the motorway and finding oneself back on Oxford Road in Forest Town still pulls one up short.  The traffic lights are malfunctioning and the challenge of trying to avoid all the potholes brings one back quickly to the reality of Johannesburg.  This time we drove in under looming, threatening thunder clouds which lent a disconcerting sense of impending doom to the afternoon and one of my first thoughts was ‘Why on earth are we building another house here?’

But you’ve got to live in Johannesburg to love it.  It has its own unique and stealthy charm and within a day of getting back, I’m happy once again to be here and this year is no different.  By Tuesday morning we were ready to inspect our building site and to check on any progress that may have been made in the builders’ first week back at work.

This is a quick photograph update for interested faraway family and friends:

Surveying the Situation...  After a month away.

Surveying the Situation… After a month away.

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Standing on the downstairs patio, looking west.

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Taken from the laundry, looking through the scullery into the kitchen.

IMG-20140121-00521-1

Taken through the ‘front door’ looking north over the Treetops – which is a word that comes to mind whenever I think about the new house and which might become its name.

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Seven of the nine builders who were on site yesterday.

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Taken from the kitchen looking out through what will be an informal seating area and a bay window.

The walls are now just higher than ground-floor ceiling height and overhanging branches from the neighbours’ properties will have to be drastically cut back soon.  Watch this space…

South African Builders’ annual holidays start tomorrow and with the persistent heavy rain we’re experiencing in Johannesburg, it’s really not a bad thing. This has been an unsettled week all round. We’ve all felt the impact of Mandela’s death and even though there have been no official holidays, there’s been a kind of ‘slowing down’ all over the country as we all pause to consider our loss.

So it feels like a good time to stop and I thought I’d pop down to the site this morning to wish the workmen Happy Christmas and Happy Holidays. I took several litres of coca cola and an enormous box of biscuits for them to have with their tea and having felt that my welcome on arrival was slightly circumspect, I left with Xmas greetings ringing in my ears. Perhaps they thought I was going to bemoan the slower-than-expected progress and ask why they couldn’t work in the holidays…

I was surprised at how much more brickwork there was since my last visit, given the uncooperative weather….

Back (south) wall of the library.

Back (south) wall of the library.

East wall of kitchen and living room going up.  The bin is standing in the entrance hall.

East wall of kitchen and living room going up. The bin is standing in the entrance hall.

And was also surprised to see that a board detailing the contractor, architect and engineer had finally gone up.

An official board at last.

An official board at last.

Hopefully mid-January will see us getting off to a positive start under sunnier skies.