From the monthly archives:

April 2008

Ooooh! Libraries!

by Suw on April 19, 2008

Kevin and I love books. We have just one sad little bookshelf here in our flat, which holds those books of mine that I cannot live without, and others that we have bought between us since we moved in together. The rest of my books are in boxes in my parents’ loft and Kevin’s are all in boxes in a 5ft x 10ft lock-up in Maryland, USA.

I think one thing that we’re both really looking forward to, one day when we buy a place somewhere, is getting all of our books together in one spot and unpacking them in our own little library. Indeed, I’ve always wanted to have a library, and Kev has to, so I think that it’ll be one thing that’s definitely included in the plans for our house, when we get round to drawing them up.

Library, by Stewart

Thank you, Stewart *

Turns out that we’re not alone in lusting after a library. An article in the Telegraph, Interiors: Rooms that lose none of their shelf life, (found via Shedworking) says that:

In the survey of 4,000 people, 15 per cent said they would like a library compared to 13 per cent wanting a gym, 9 per cent a music studio and just 8 per cent a home cinema.

That doesn’t really surprise me. Books are special things, they have a warmth and humanity lacking from many other physical objects. They have a smell that reminds me of childhood, and they are the instantiation of knowledge, discovery, and escape. Despite the invention of the ebook and ebook reader, I doubt that paper books will ever go away as a product, because collecting and displaying books is still, for some of us, a great joy.

Of course, you need some space to have a room designated specially as a library, but that doesn’t mean you can’t line the walls with books. My Aunty Stella, out in Sydney, Australia, discovered the last time that she moved house that she had 9 cubic metres of books. She discovered this because she packed them all into tea chests which are a metre tall, wide, and deep. She then discovered that a tea chest full of books is too heavy even for beefy Australian removals men to lift. When they weren’t in boxes, her books lined every spare wall in the house on shelves made of planks and bricks - a shelving technique I’ve used myself, but which requires one to have quite considerable faith in the strength of your floor.

If you don’t have enough space for a library, or to line your walls with shelves - we don’t, there are no spare walls in our flat at all - then you could always try the technique used by London couple, Leonie and Rhodri. In remodelling their top-floor flat, they converted their loft into a bedroom and put in a staircase that doubles as a library. (Lots more pictures in the Apartment Therapy gallery or on Gizmodo.)

Staircase library

Personally, I’d be scared of kicking the books, and of going arse over tit down such a steep staircase (it’s almost more ladder than stairs). Being left-handed and left-footed, I’d be likely to put the wrong foot on the wrong tread at the wrong time, and I hate to think what would happen next.

I’ve always had a bit of a thing for libraries that have an upper gallery, such as those you find in castles and stately homes. There’s something about having to go up a ladder, preferably a wrought iron one, to a little balcony in order to fetch down a book that appeals to the hopeless romantic in me. In such a library, the urge to cover remaining wall space in Jacquard tapestries and to have a carved limestone fireplace big enough to talk into would be almost too much to resist.

This gorgeous two-storey library just makes me drool uncontrollably. Kevin too.

Two storey library

Thank you, Champagne Chic

Can you imagine having such an amazingly beautiful library in your house? More to the point, can you imaging having the budget to have such an amazingly beautiful library in your house? Wow. I struggle a bit, but it gives me something to aspire to.

* This is so weird. Wherever possible I use Creative Commons licensed photographs from Flickr on my blogs, and I reckon that about 50% of the time, the images I use turn out to be from people I know. In this case, not only do I know (vaguely) Stewart Butterfield, he also happens to be one of the people who started Flickr. But the fact that his photo was the first one to shop up on a CC search on ‘home library’ is entirely co-incidental. Obviously I just know a lot of good photographers who use Flickr and CC licences!

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Ever thought about converting a chapel into a cosy little house? Or driven past a derelict barn and wished you could renovate it? Have you taken the plunge and bought a chicken shed that’s just oozing potential? And are you going to do something green with it?

Well, I had a call from a lovely chap called Greg Goff at Twofour Broadcast this morning who’s looking for an eco-rennovation project to film for a new series called House Wrecks to Riches. The team are currently filming a number of builds, including a warehouse, a windmill, a milking parlour and a lighthouse, and Greg is really keen to find a green project that they can add to their list.

The programme will follow a project from the very beginning, so you should have planning permission and be ready to rock and roll, but not have quite started yet. The production team will then come and have a look round the existing building and talk to you about what you’re going to do with it. They’ll then film through until the end of the year, which will hopefully be enough time for you to reach completion!

Your project doesn’t have to be huge, it just has to be green - and part of the interest will be in seeing how you interpret the idea of ‘environmentally friendly’. One thing I’ve learnt in the short time Kits and Mortar has been around is that ‘green’ definitely means different things to different people. The key thing is that green is at the centre of your build. That might mean a reed bed water filtration system, or straw bale building, or turf roofs, or using any other green technique or material.

It also doesn’t matter what you’re intending to do with the finished property, whether you move in to it as your primary family home, sell it on at a profit, or run it as a holiday let. The build can be almost anywhere - Twofour Broadcast are based in Plymouth, so most of England and Wales is within easy reach - and they are following projects on Anglesey, Essex and Cornwall

The programme is going to be presented by Gary McCausland from How to be a Property Developer and Zilpah Hartley from A Place in the Sun.

If you have such a build in mind, and you’re ready to take the plunge, get in touch directly with Greg Goff by email, or phone his direct line: 01752 727528.

There was one closing quote in the blurb Greg emailed me yesterday: “The UK needs 250,000 new homes built every year to keep up with demand. Each year we’re 100,000 short of the target… but there are 750,000 empty properties out there to be renovated.” Makes you think, doesn’t it?

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Blog Review: Best Green Blogs

by Suw on April 18, 2008

More of a meta-blog really, Best Green Blogs does pretty much what it says on the tin: It gathers green blogs all in one spot. You can search alphabetically, by country, or by category such as alternative energy or sustainable development. They’ve got a nice Green Blogger Map, although you’ll need to zoom out or manually scroll over to see Europe. Kits and Mortar is how proudly part of the Best Green Blogs, and I’m looking forward to making it onto the map!

There are so many links here that it’s going to be a long time before I’ve looked through them all. How Timothy Latz, who runs the site, finds the time, I do not know!

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Black Sheep House

by Suw on April 14, 2008

If you’ve ever been tempted to run away from it all and escape to the Highlands - and I will admit, I’m tempted every day - you’ll fall in love with Black Sheep House. (Via Shedworking and The Times.)

Black Sheep House

It used to be a ‘black house’, a single-room dwelling common in the Highland and islands right up until the Second World War. This particular black house was being used as a sheep shed until it was bought by Christine and Pete Hope, who decided to renovate it. It has two double bedrooms, a big living space, underfloor heating, and a Japanese soak tub (a small but deep bath with a seat in it). The views look fabulous views, and the turf roof and stone walls make it blend in beautifully with its surroundings.

Because the build went over-budget, costing £130k instead of £50k, the Hopes have turned it into a guest house, whilst they live in a nearby rented cottage. The cottage sleeps four and goes for between £600 and £1080 per week, which is a bargain if you ask me! I’m obviously not the only person who thinks that, as they’re solidly booked (at time of writing) until late August.

Travel to Black Sheep House could be a bit challenging, though. It’s near Tarbert on the Isle of Harris, which you can get to via ferry from Uig, on the Isle of Skye. That’d be a good 14 hours by car, so you’d probably want to fly.

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An Engineer’s Guide to Cats

by Suw on April 14, 2008

An important piece of research now on YouTube:

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Blog review: 127a Church Street

by Suw on April 13, 2008

I’m continuing my search for real, live blogs about self-building, but it’s hard to find ones that are still being updated. A Selfbuild Experience hasn’t been updated since September 2006, and Wicklow Self Build Project has just three posts, last one in October 2007. Self Build Ireland stopped in December 2007 after a three year run, and although Architect’s Self Build Eco House posted last month, it looks like it’s winding down given that they’ve now moved in.

I suspect the archives of these blogs will prove to contain some rich pickings in terms of information and ideas, so I will have to find the time to go through them at some point. But I still want to find more self-builders who are actively blogging.

One person to add to my RSS reader is Robert Bagnall, who writes 127a Church Street: Diary of a self-build. His blog started in April 2007, and it’s clear from reading the archives that the build is progressing apace. The house is up, the windows in, (even if some are wrong!), and he’s currently battling with awol electricians and plumbers who aren’t returning his call, so fingers cross the carpenter turns out to be more reliable!

Despite the fact that it seems he’s had a bit of a hard time herding all the relevant cats, Robert seems to have kept a sense of humour, and his blog is very readable. It also gives a real sense for the nitty gritty that every build has to deal with, from what it’s like dealing with local contractors and suppliers, to how much plumbers and their apprentices cost. (Plumber: £220 per day; plumber’s apprentice, an additional £40. Poor apprentice!).

Well worth a read!

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My composting needs

by Suw on April 12, 2008

When I was a kid, we had a compost heap. All fruit and vegetable waste, like potato peelings and apple cores, went on the compost heap, although meat scraps did not, as we didn’t want to attract rats. After a while, Dad would dig out the compost from the bottom of the heap and bung it on the garden. Easy!

We don’t have a garden, so our food waste goes into a small brown bucket, which is left out for collection each week. If we remember. The bucket is too small for our weekly needs - the bigger one that the council left us got stolen! - and it gets mouldy quickly. I hate it. I insist it’s kept outside, on the landing, and I make Kevin put it out each week.

Recently a group of German scientists have warned that these pre-compost food waste bins are a danger to our health, primarily because of airborne mould spores getting into people’s lungs:

Harald Morr, a leading pneumologist, who is also chairman of the German Lung Foundation, said studies showed that airborne mould spores from organic waste could lead to allergic reactions, asthma attacks, hayfever-like symptoms and itchy skin lesions.

“Even just opening the lid of a bin containing organic waste can cause mould spores to be stirred up which, if breathed in, can damage the lungs,” said Morr. “The more spores breathed in, the worse the repercussions on one’s health can be.”

The recycling system here in Islington is really awful. We have small- or medium-sized buckets which have to hold a week’s waste, or more if we forget to put the bucket out or the collectors decide not to bother (which seems to sometimes happen). It’s completely inadequate for our needs, and I shudder to think how many mould spores it produces.

In contrast, in Dorset my parents’ have got a large brown wheelie bin so they can use composting bin bags in their small bucket and when it is full they can put it outside into the large wheelie bin. This means that their bucket never gets too mucky and, because the waste is enclosed in a special bag, the wheelie bin never gets too mucky either.

But I’m not a fan of the wheelie bin approach either. When we finally get round to building, I would prefer to install a system where I can put all waste into some sort of sink unit, akin to a waste disposal unit, but instead of being chewed up and spat out into the sewerage system, it gets chewed up and spat into a composting system.

I would very much prefer not to have to ferry half-rotting food about, or have to keep going outside to put it in a big composting box. It would be much more civilised to be able to automate the composting system and treat all composting in a holistic manner. If you’re going to compost your poo and your kitchen waste, you may as well do it together if you can.

I’ve had a look online, but I haven’t seen any system that does this. I found small self-contained units that sit under the sink, but that’s not what I want. I’m wondering if such a system even exists. I think a lot more research is going to be needed, or I may have to design the thing myself. If you know of any systems that sound like they might be what I want, let me know via email or Twitter (just @kitsandmortar me)!

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links for 2008-04-12

by Suw on April 12, 2008

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New Del.icio.us feed

by Suw on April 11, 2008

I’ve just set up a new account on social bookmarking site Del.icio.us, specially for Kits and Mortar related links. The account is set to post any new bookmarks here as a blogpost at 10am each morning. I guess we’ll have to wait until tomorrow morning to see if I’ve set it up properly! But if you want to follow my bookmarks without visiting Del.icio.us or waiting for the 10am post, you can always subscribe to the Kits and Mortar RSS feed.

If you use Del.icio.us and want to send me a link then just tag it “for:KitsandMortar” and I’ll see it in my inbox, which I promise to check regularly!

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Blog review: Shedworking

by Suw on April 11, 2008

I’ve started my search for kindred blogs, and one of the first I have came across is the fabulous Shedworking, by Alex Johnson. Shedworking is a treasure trove of ideas and inspiration, with posts about micro-compact homes, a shed that looks like a Romany caravan, and a whole weeks’ worth of posts about treehouses.

Alex is clearly mining a very rich seam, as almost every post makes me go “Oooh!” There’s tons there that I want to spend more time investigating. I think you can expect a lot of inspiration “via Shedworking” here over the next few weeks! The blog is very busy too, with three to five posts a day - way more than I have time to write.

Alex also has a book, Shedworking - The Alternative Workplace Revolution, slated to come out in July and published by The Friday Project, although it’s unclear what effect their recent bankruptcy is going to have on whether the book comes out. I hope it does, because if the quality of the blog is anything to go by, the book would be a fab addition to my library. I’ll keep my fingers crossed.

UPDATE 13/4/08: Alex reports that Harper Collins have taken over The Friday Project, but have declined to publish the book. That’s a shame, but hopefully Alex can find another publisher soon.

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