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Previous page
here
Week
11
14/05/07 -
20/05/07
7 weeks over |
14th
May - Wahey! The scaffolding's gone!
15th May - This isn't a
loft extension, this is a soap opera!
| At about
3pm I got an email containing a copy of a letter that was due to
arrive today. The letter was.. well... bizarre.
It seemed to be
written by someone who was completely detached from this job.
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The first thing I thought of when
reading it was Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf, the Iraqi Minister
of Information:

"There is no problem
with this loft"
"We are almost there"
"There is only 1 day of work left"
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| I think the best way to show this is
to show the entire letter below on the left, along with my comments
on the right, but be warned... it's starting to get catty...
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Thank you for your e-mail dated 11
May 2007.
Firstly, I would like to make it clear that we were not being
clever with the scaffold not coming down. Please be assured we
want to get the job completed as soon as possible. Also, the
reason that I have not signed for the recorded delivery of your
e-mails is that I have not received them.
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That's the move your scaffolding
email (click)..
or is it the update?
Errr.... "we were not being clever with the scaffolding
not coming down" and "the reason that I have not signed
for the recorded delivery"... Well, that sounds like
a direct reply to my update of 11th May
Click. (I'll ignore the fact
that there is recorded delivery of post, not email and that
there is no recorded delivery of email.)
So this is interesting, so does this mean that the company
have found my blog? If they have, does that matter? Are they
trying to deny that they used the threat of leaving the
scaffolding up as blackmail? That's odd - particularly as he
left a recorded message on my machine and told me he was
recording it as well.
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I have spoken to the Managing
Director of the scaffold company who says that not taking it
down was an oversight on his part. They were called off the job
to attend an emergency and have not been back. He assures me,
however, that it is coming down today.
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Right, so about the "I will not
take the scaffolding down" voice message? Or have you had a
sudden change of heart and decided to take it down anyway,
without any communication or negotiation.
Hmmm.. so are you reading
this? |
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From the outset of this contract I
have to say that you have proved unreasonable in all dealings
and we were surprised we got the contract because you have not
treated us as such. |
Ignoring the fact the sentence is
poorly constructed, the only way I can interpret this is as a
personal insult. I don't agree that I've been unreasonable at
all, far from it. This diary of events shows that I tried to be
reasonable with my communications and time, setting deadlines
and allowing them to slip.
I really don't know what he means
by saying he was surprised he got the contract.
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You have repeatedly ignored my
calls and messages and just continued to send me e-mails. I
would like to make the following points:
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This is not true. I have ignored
just two calls of his, once on 17th April where he asked me to
have a conference call with him and his salesmen to discuss the
"3-4 weeks" sales time (click) and once on the 1st May where he
acknowledged he was off the job (click).
Oh, and he was more than happy to
receive confirmation of the order by
email....
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1. The contract states that lofts
take an average of five-six weeks to complete, however no
specific time is guaranteed. No completion date has been given
to you either verbally or in writing. |
The contract (I've had a look at
the document received by post) states 4-5 weeks, okay, so not
the 3-4 weeks quoted by the salesman, but if that isn't a
specific time then what is? His salesman came round to my house
and convinced me that they could do it in 3 - 4 weeks and did
this by explaining how (with no subcontractors, using specialist
teams, etc..). Yes no completion date was given, but the "4-5" weeks on the contract would pretty reasonably imply 5
weeks should be the maximum time.. and as we're on week 12 and
still going, one could argue that perhaps that salesman had made
promises that weren't intended to be delivered merely to get the
sale? No, no completion date was initially given to me, but
despite asking, and asking and asking (for example,
click), I
forced the issue and agreed one with the Project Manager and,
as agreed, put it in writing (click).
I also discussed it with the Managing Director personally at my house on 10th
April (click).
I then confirmed again, by recorded delivery on 16th April that
he had agreed to this date (click)
and his emailed reply on the 17th April (click)
confirms that he acknowledged this date and confirmed dates it
would be completed. This date slipped twice without any solid
reason. |
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Due to unforeseen occurrence,
i.e., the plumber leaving your job Tuesday morning due to family
emergency and not returning until Friday, things have taken
longer than you expected. As he did the 1st fix, it is sensible
for him to come back and do the 2nd fix. |
Umm, the plumber left on Wednesday
because he couldn't find the hot and cold feed, nor the radiator
pickup. The plumber that did the first fix did not come back to
do the second fix, someone else did.. and he was the chap who
left on Wednesday. The person who came on Friday was a different
plumber who found the hot/cold pickups and left (leaving the
remainder of the plumbing work undone). |
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However, the biggest delay was
that you claimed your insulation was not correct. We waited
approximately 5 days for the Building Surveyor to come to
re-check something he had already passed. I myself met with you
at 6.30am one Monday morning to look at the problem. While there
I found out the Inspector had photos and had passed the floor.
The only part of the floor not done at the time was the bathroom
as the plumber has requested it not be laid while he laid his
pipes. At this meeting you were showed the insulation and shown
you were wrong. Why are you now stating it is not there? |
Oh not the building inspector and
the fire protected floor AGAIN?!
This is precisely why I have been putting
things in writing, rather than phone calls that seem afterwards
to have not taken place. I put this point in writing to him on
4th May (click),
writing that a) the building inspector has not been round, b)
the insulation under the floorboards has not been signed off,
and c) his (intimidating) visit opened only a hole in across one
area that had "luckily" had a strip of insulation under it.
Let me explain with a picture:

What does he think I did, remove this horrible material that
has no value, take up the chicken wire, remove any evidence of
it ever being there, destroy the floorboards and pay these guys extra
labour just to be able to take this picture?? No, the fact is we
didn't look under there. I'm not a building inspector and
not qualified to know what to look for. He is, did and found
this. Anyway it would be
really pedantic to say that he never came at 6:30am on a Monday
as it was 7:30 on Tuesday (click). |
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2. You, with Frank, changed the
design of the windows on site, which i.e. subsequently ordered.
I have spoken to the Building Inspector who said it was a
passing comment only, and he was going to check if there was a
problem. If these need changing, it will be at your cost, as you
changed these from the ones on plan. |
Oh, now that is a low shot!
When
the salesman turned up, we said we wanted these window doors. He
showed us pictures of these types of doors so we selected, and
guess what? They're confirmed in writing on the contract. Quote
"One UPVC window 1100m x 1250mm will be fitted to the top of the
staircase, and a set of 4 panel French Doors with
Juliette balcony to the bedroom.". When the plans turned up on
the 6th March showing it as incorrect, we immediately brought
this to his attention (click)
and he agreed that there had been a disconnect between sales and
drawing and thought it was best to get the architect back in.
This was supposed to happen on the 8th, then the 9th, then
12th March before saying "it's okay, we'll just do it and it's
too late for the architect to come back in now".
So, basically we got the windows that the salesman sold, that
we wanted and that was confirmed in the order, but he's claiming
we changed them...! Eh? |
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3. The balcony has been installed
correctly and according to building regulations. The floor guard
is there for safety reasons. It has been added by the outside
Company that installed it as a safety measure due to concerns
many Councils have with the gap. I can confirm it is a Juliet
Balcony. |
Another strange area.
This letter came in on 15th May and here he refers to a point
in which he spoke to the building inspector on the 8th May (click)
so he knows perfectly well what the situation is. This is so
strange; I've told him I'm speaking directly to the building
inspector but he's coming back as if I'm really stupid.
The building inspector said the width was too big and it
needed to be shortened. Full stop. No compromise. Has to be done
to be compliant. I don't care if he confirms it's a doughnut
made from recycled Kryptonite, it's not compliant! |
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4. The bulkhead above the stairs
can be cut back and redone. However, again you changed this as
you requested it to be levelled off. I believe the height is
1.85m from the step which is normally quite sufficient to be
passed. |
He's getting confused
between the bulkhead of the new landing ceiling (which was awful
and I requested they make it reasonable) and bulkhead under the
new bathroom floor that does not provide sufficient head height.
This is the same as before - he spoke about this specific point
in his phone call with the building inspector on the 8th May
where he was told the height HAS to be 2.0 (or higher) and it's 1.85m. So why,
oh why oh why would he be telling me the height (which is 1.85) and it's normally sufficient to be passed?
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5. As regards you contractor, Pete,
he is giving you false information and running our staff down.
If he is so good, why did you not give him the contract? |
Well that's not much of an argument
is it? Why is he giving me false information? All he's done is: come
in, met with the building inspector, and performed the works that
the inspector has said he requires for compliance. He hasn't yet
got to finishing off the bits that weren't finished.
Why
didn't I give him the contract? Oh, that's an easy one...
because they said they could do it in 3 - 4 weeks and Pete said
10 - 12 weeks. They said their firm had
many craftsmen that had worked for them for years and were
specialist as they only did lofts. Multiple people hitting it
all at once in a quality, seamless team.
Yeah, I feel a mug now! |
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6. When we turned up to complete
the job (snagging and soffits, fascia and guttering) you,
without any conversation, refused to let us do it and said you
were finishing the job yourself. Again, typical of your
unreasonable behaviour.
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I left a message saying no more
and his reply was to have a lady (secretary?) call me, and then send some
workmen round in the morning. He only reacted directly to it when I followed that message up
in writing.. and that was in the form of a blackmailing message.
I did note the "to complete the job" and "snagging"
words as
completing the job was quite a considerable task (note I've had
2 guys on it for 3 weeks now), and that he hadn't contacted me,
nor had he independently inspected the work to get a snagging
list!
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I have taken advice and respect
your wishes in order to show my reasonableness. The scaffold is
being removed today. |
Strange how he decides to suddenly
change his mind, particularly after his voicemail "I won't
remove it"
I wonder if a) he's had a change of heart, b)
realised that the letters mean that I am serious about removing
it myself or c) has seen this blog and realises it's about him?
Hmmm... I'm still veering towards c), but then what about
the points above that ignore the fact I have so many pictures
documenting the real state and poor quality work? I just don't
know.
Is reasonableness a word? |
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I would like a site meeting with
you or via correspondence, to bring this matter to a close.
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Sorry, don't get this bit; he
wants a meeting with me, or he wants correspondence? Isn't it
one or the other? |
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Please be assured I will be
seeking final payment from you through whatever means necessary. |
"through
whatever means necessary"? That sounds like another
threat to me.
I've so far incurred 3 times the original time of contract and
over £3,000 of additional work to put right the poor workmanship
(as required by the building control inspector, not by an
opinionated builder) and there's still a fair bit to do - I
haven't even got a floor!
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I look forward to hearing from you
shortly. |
I have to wonder if there's really
any point replying, but I suppose there is a necessity to do so
in some form.
I don't want to
jeopardise anything in my reply so will have a chat with someone
who knows first. |
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Basically I had a good laugh at this. The building inspector's
coming round tomorrow so I'll let him have a copy (for reference,
his files, mates down the pub, whatever).
Something else is that the letter
arrived in the cheapest envelope with handwriting on it that looked
like it was a child's and hadn't spelt "London" correctly. The
letter was printed on the cheapest paper so that it was smudgy and
nasty. Quite different to the sales contract then.
I'm still puzzled with what to make
of it. On one hand I think he's seen the blog and on the other,
how could he? I'm fairly sure he didn't write it though - the MD's
struck me as an intelligent man who's very much in control and this just
doesn't sound like him. Perhaps the general gist of it was dictated (fast) to someone
else who didn't pay attention at school?
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Beautiful!
So, how about some pictures from today? |
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Firstly,
the rest of the main loft has now been insulated
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The pipe
work coming down from the ceiling into the main house has had extra
holes made. It was looking pretty awful before
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| Removing
the bathroom floor to make it compliant with the fire protection
regulations. Note the mess underneath... |
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Cleared
and prepared with wire
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What a
state! Hardly the position I expected to be on week 12...
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Building control inspector is visiting tomorrow to sign off this
work. Then the floorboards will go down.
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And one final thing. I did a little digging today and found out he
has 5 directorships recorded. Looking at some of those companies,
this one has had a name change recently and one other active company
he has specialise in .... lofts! Wow, who'd have thought he'd have
two companies, running two accounts, two sets of assets and probably
employing the same subcontractors. Also of note is that the website
has much of the same wording and the mobile number on the site is
that of the salesman for this company.
The bit I really like on the site is "[company
name] do not send unsupervised
contractors into your home. We only use our own qualified
craftsmen. Many of our craftsmen have been with us for many years.
We employ our own Qualified Carpenters, Plumbers, Bricklayers,
Plasterers, Tilers, Painters & Decorators"
Sounds great... but it's all just
talk isn't it?
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Basically chaps I don't think this is going anywhere.
If I take him to court and win, I
don't think the company won't honour the CCJ but will fold with no
assets just before as the customer's existing contracts are
transferred (probably unknowingly) to another company. If this
company's name does become public (through court action)... then
they'll change.
I have a feeling this guy, with his
swimming pool, stables and flashy car has done this before and will
do it again. He's clever and knows what he's doing.. and the law
offers him too much protection.
On a brighter, depressing (!) note,
maybe they're all the same. I found out today from my neighbour that his
brother had a loft extension with the specialist company that we
nearly did. They did 8 lofts in the road parallel to ours, all happy
customers. Doing this guy's, they ran into a finished / not finished
dispute and... left the scaffolding up!
So, my advice at the moment if
you're thinking - do it yourself. Architect, QS, the works.
"Specialist" to me implies specialist in knowing where to cut the
corners.
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Be sure to tune in tomorrow for the next
tedious instalment of Pikey's bloody loft extension! (Hey - at
least the writing's better than Eastenders!!)
16th May - Parry -
repost!
I spoke to
my solicitor and his advice... let it go.
It will a) add chapters to the soap opera, and b) he will phoenix
and I'll never actually get the money.
Said I should respond along the
following lines:
- address each point & explain
why it's b*llox
- tell him I've spent £3,000 so
far putting right his sh*t
- say if he wants to issue
proceedings then go ahead, in which case I will counter claim
for the £3,000, otherwise bugger off.
Sounds like good advice and I'm
going to go with it.
A copy of the letter's below: |
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16th May 2007
Dear [removed],
Thank you for your letter dated 14th
May.
I was most surprised by its contents since
these points had been addressed in previous (written)
communications, however to address them formally I will
elaborate:
1. Scaffolding
On 30th April, I left a message,
and put in writing that I was terminating our contract as there
was still much work to be done. On 1st May you left a
voice mail threatening that you would not be taking down the
scaffolding. On the 10th of May scaffolders came and
removed the boarding from the access panels at the front and the
rear and removed all safety rails. They did not return.
I was left with no option to respond to this
threat advising I would be removing it and I merely ensured you
knew I would be exercising my right to remove your property from
my land.
2. Ignoring your calls
Mr [removed] I have not refused to
communicate with you and have only not returned calls when asked
2 times. Once on 17th April where you wanted me to
have a conference call with your employee to tell me he never
sold “3-4 weeks” and another on 1st May when you had
the communication that I had terminated the contract.
I have used email as a communication tool
more than I am happy with, but I thought it necessary due to the
contents of voice conversations being forgotten. Email is a
perfectly reasonable tool to use to pass information between us
and confirm various details. For example, I confirmed to proceed
with the contract on email in February.
3. Time
Time is and always has been of the essence.
Your salesman used the promise of “3-4 weeks” delivery as a
major sales point, and even went on to advise how you could
manage this with your “no-subcontractor” policy and how you had
teams of craftsmen who, it was made to sound, would swarm onto
the job to get it done quicker than any others.
Your website says, and still does, “4-5
weeks”. The contract that I have states “4-5 weeks”. Even if
you think it should be 5-6 weeks, the job is on week 12 and
there’s still more to go.
I am surprised that you state no guaranteed
completion date was given, as it was. Firstly, even if I
misheard “3-4” (which I did not), the “4-5 weeks” printed
clearly implies that 5 weeks from the start (5th
March) the work would be finished. Secondly, I asked for
repeatedly for dates from both Jason and yourself. After no
action I agreed a fair and reasonable date to complete all the
works (20th April) and put this in writing. I also
discussed this with you on your visit to my house on 10th
April. When you had done nothing after a further week, I wrote
to you and advised I would be sticking to this deadline. You
replied in writing that it would all be done that week
(providing a schedule) and said it might slip by a day.
Since that point, it slipped by 3 days, and
then another 2 finally to find that actually there were about 3
weeks left.
4. Plumbing
Your comments about the plumber are
misinformed. The plumber who came for 1st fix did not
return. Another plumber returned who (despite the family
emergency that I know about) could not find the hot/cold feeds
nor the radiator pickups. A 3rd plumber attended on
that Friday, but he merely connected up the hot/cold feed and
then left.
Whilst on the plumbing subject you should
know that this 3rd plumber cut and threw away 2 large
sections of carpet, left floorboards lifted out, and left a
considerable amount of rubble around the area he routed the
pipes. In addition, the main and secondary radiator pipes leaked
when pressure tested, the shower waste pipe ran uphill and the
towel rail was installed with the bottom on the floor.
5. The fireproof insulation on the floor
I am aware that the building inspector has
spoken to you about this on the 8th May, so yet again
I am surprised.
Firstly, it’s the building inspector’s
opinion that matters, not mine. However, when you attended on 10th
April, intimidating me over an additional cost of £400 of
floorboards if you removed all, you cut a hole in one section of
one floorboard that happened to be one of the few with
insulation beneath.
When the inspector attended he insisted that
4 random boards were completely lifted. This revealed that there
was only 3 areas that had been done – 1 near the double doors
and 2 strips near the veluxes. The inspector subsequently
insisted that every floorboard was removed so he could inspect
all.
As you can see from this picture showing 50%
of the structure’s floor, removing the floorboards showed a
great deal of insulation missing.

Incidentally, removing the floorboards has
also uncovered other areas of deficiency in the side supports
that has had to be corrected.
6. Windows/doors
The most important thing is we have the
windows that we want, and the building inspector has allowed
them to remain. However your statement saying that I spoke to
Jason and changed these doors to windows which were on the
drawing is bizarre.
The
day we saw the plans we highlighted the error and were told that
the architect would return on March 8th, 9th
and 12th, but never did. You will also note that the
contract states what we asked for (and what we’ve got)
"One
UPVC window 1100m x 1250mm will be fitted to the top of the
staircase, and a set of 4 panel French Doors with Juliette
balcony to the bedroom.".
7. The balcony
The building inspector has ruled the balcony
is not compliant and had to be changed or modified.
This has now been done.
8. The bulkhead
The new landing bulkhead is what I wanted
amending to look “reasonable”. The bulkhead on the new bathroom
floor is what the inspector is referring to.
As he explained to you during your
conversation with him on the 8th May, it needs to be
2.0 and 1.85 will not suffice.
This has now been done.
9. My new contractors
You ask why I didn’t give the contract to
Pete? That’s because he said he would take 10 – 12 weeks and your
salesman 3-4.
The 2 main reasons I singled your firm out
from the others and decided to go with your company are the
speed and the lack of subcontractors used (confirmed in writing
on your website)
Finally
To conclude, when I advised the contract was
terminated I had an estimate of 2 weeks remaining work, however
the new contractors have uncovered more corners cut and work
that needed re-doing. The state of the job on the 30th
April was quite disgusting and even now, 3 weeks on there is
still more to do.
Acknowledging there is a £2,000 balance on
the account, so far I have spent £3,000 in a) correcting the
work that was done incorrectly, and b) completing the work that
was not done. These are not opinions of a rival builder, these
are requirements from the building control inspector, and are
itemised and documented, with photographs. The work is not yet
finished and this bill will rise.
I note the threatening nature of your recent
communications, and your instance to obtain payment by whatever
means necessary. If you wish to issue proceedings, then I
am able to accept service of your legal papers. Otherwise there should
be no further communication from this point.
Sincerely
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I also left a copy out for the building
control inspector due tomorrow.
That's it for tonight as I've been on
the sauce!!
17th May - Nope wasn't
me!
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The building inspector came round, signed off the various items and
picked up the copy of the 14th May letter from the loft company (click)
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Being particularly vexed at the "building
inspector has signed it off" line, he called the company
and spoke to the MD.
A rather bizarre conversation ensued
in which the MD said that the floor was signed off and he would
provide dates of when the inspector came round to sign the floor off
by the end of the day (which never materialised).
Amongst other things, he suggested
that the client had guys working in the house at the same time as
his and whoever messed various things up (ie. the floor) weren't
guys working for him. Being told that they were there whilst he (the
building inspector) and the project manager was and that the guys
were clearly working for the project manager brought us to the
rather convenient dead end of pointing out the project manager's not
working for the firm any more so we can't ask him.
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Right, so whilst I was paying him a shed-load of money and when the
contract wasn't in dispute, I was employing other workers to be in
the house and mess things up?

Incredible. Just incredible....
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Some pics:
A picture
of the stairs (someone asked to see)
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The water
pipes
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Bathroom
floor insulation
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Front 40%
of the loft floor with insulation
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Been
inspected by the inspector and the new floor goes back down
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All
doors in the house now have closers.
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- Floor and trimmings fully down by
tomorrow.
- Bathroom completed next week
- Electrical fixes ('cos it wasn't
done properly) towards the end of next week.
Then to choose a colour scheme. I'd
better get in there first before she goes all Laura Ashley on me :)
18th May - A floor that
doesn't creak, flex or move
Stig... happy now? :)

Finally things appear to be on the right
path and I can see an end.
Shame about the air con though... seems
that every day there's a "something" to challenge me.
Week 12
21/05/07 -
27/05/07
8 weeks over |
21st May - Getting
boring now :)
22nd May
| The pipes
the loft company embedded in the wall are leaking.
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Some of the floor down and the heated
floor is wired and in (only on the small bit one's feet will go!)
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26th May - The floor is
down and the shower is in
The shower
is finally in. To keep the glass safe, it's been living in my lounge
and dining room for the last 2 months, to to have it out and
actually installed is a good thing.
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All the floor has been completed, the
electric heating installed and it's all dry. Very nice.
Unfortunately we're wondering about the toilet and sink that we
chose. Looked good at the time, but now, perhaps a little too
trendy? We've been looking at magazines to try and find colours that
will make it look less... "odd" :)
Note the position of the toilet on the
floor is where it will actually stay. If it's pushed any further
back you couldn't use it (unless you were 3 foot tall!). To the rear
of it we will be building a box which will have a door and shelves
for towels "and stuff".
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| I'm
happy with the result. It's a high quality enclosure and
really looks and feels it. A few years ago we bought a whole
bathroom from B&Q for £270.. and it showed (getting ripped
out 6 months later!). Never again - quality components really make a
difference :)

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The back of the shower is an 'Aquaboard',
a laminated, waterproof board that'll look the same as the day it
goes in for ever. Tiles are very nice, but eventually the grout gets
a bit dirty and it loses it's sparkle. This stuff, which we have in
another bathroom is excellent. Also, installed properly it's
leakproof.

The shower itself is a high quality
brass one, so shouldn't break! It gets its power from a high
capacity Worcester Bosh combination condenser boiler downstairs
(recently installed). We previously had a cylinder boiler system
with a pump, but the pump kept breaking, her ladyship would have a
knack of empting the water and it never properly heated the house.
Going for a quality product means the whole house can be heated and
it can run 2 showers simultaneously. Well... theoretically, anyway!
It can certainly run one shower extremely well and with some more
taps on appears to cope. It's a lot to ask from a single boiler, but
we really wanted the space back from the cylinder and you can't put
a pump on a combi feed.
The other thing is the new boiler hugs trees. Something like 70%
more efficient than the one it replaced.
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This is a
shot of the flooring, which is just SO MUCH BETTER than the
completely cut up, wobbly, creaky mess that was there before.
Makes me wonder why they put the floor on first. Surely
it should only be permanently fixed once everything underneath has
been done???
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After many calls, the air conditioning
company's technician called me back. He's going to pop round to see
how he might get up there, which is fine but I said that I don't see
the point of re-filling this unit up with gas when there's clearly a
fault. I want a new unit... He's having a look and then will
call the office to see what we can do.
I think there'll be some compromise
here and I'm prepared to go to: they send a new unit, I pay for
scaffolding, they put the replacement one in, the old unit goes back
to them.
We'll see.
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To quote the MD of the outed loft
company.... "almost there" :)
Week
13 28/05/07 -
03/06/07
9 weeks over |
| So you're
probably wondering why nothing's happened, well I've lost my
builder. Progress has been
slow due to the attendance has been pretty poor, but after 5 days of
no attendance (and not answering his phone) I went round to his
house to ask what's going on.
The answer was
he's on another job, a neighbour's kitchen, "be finished in another
week" he said.
Nice that he told us rather than
just disappear isn't it....
In the meantime we popped a few
coats of paint around the place. Keeps the plaster dust at bay!
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Week
14
04/06/07 -
10/06/07
10 weeks over |
7th June - An update at
last!
The
building inspector came round yesterday and signed everything off
apart from the toilet (as it wasn't fully operational). Once this is
done and tested, he'll issue the cert.
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It's
looking quite nice - not cramped or pokey
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Behind the toilet will be a cupboard
for storage. The nasty stuff will be hidden in it's own box.
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Looks
nice.

|
This is odd. As well as having door
closers on EVERY door in the house, this glass panel door from the
hallway area to the utility room & kitchen had to be changed to a
fire door.
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Week
15
11/06/07 -
17/06/07
11 weeks over |
11th June
 |
The stairwell landing lights being moved
to a reasonable position.
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|
Bathroom's
looking better with skirting board in and cupboard built. Also the
toilet now flushes and all the plumbing has been completed.
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As people
have asked:
The shower unit is not a five jet but a four or a one jet (as
we were told by the salesman). In the four body jet
mode it's just about powerful enough to be usable....
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.. in the one jet mode for the head, it's quite powerful enough!
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Page 7
here
Wanna get in touch?
contact@myloftextension.co.uk
www.myloftextension.co.uk
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