Thursday 20 December 2007

Progress with tyres



Over the past week or so we have been diligently filling the tyres with 10mm chippings, the majority of the filling happened during two days on site with large groups of students working in teams to shovel and compact the stones. I required the assistance of another college staff member (Mike Prosser) to supervise these larger groups. we are now almost ready for the straw walls to go up.

You can also see in the background of this picture that we now have a site office and canteen so that we can establish the required welfare facilities on site. Untill now we have been sharing the occombe farm buildings to satisfy the CDM regulations. We can now be self sufficient on site without interfering with farm operations.

Filling tyres with stone


We are now in the position to fill all of the tyres as we now have enough to complete the foundations. The method we employed to ensure the tyres are full with chippings is to lever the inner edge of the tire with a pick axe and ram the chippings in with a blunt object (stick). We will let the chippings settle for a couple of weeks (over the christmas period) and then we will settle them more using a plate compactor topping up the tyres as required.

Wednesday 12 December 2007

Things take shape



Here's a lovely drawing that our architect, Mark Ledgard at Stratton & Holborow has done, to show a little better what the building will look like.


Car tyres are now arriving from our friends at ATS in all the towns hereabouts, who have been collecting the right size tyres for our foundations. We have around 130 of the 180 we need and the students have been setting them out on site. It doesn't look very rural at the moment!

Other highlights - we have commissioned local Devon woodsman Brian Williamson to prepare the 570 pointed hazel stakes we will use to pin the straw bales together, and he's started work already on this, delivery expected early January when we will start on the walls. Here's a picture of Brian's apprentice, Ruth, at work in the woods cutting the hazel rods.

Today a class of College students have had a straw-bale building course on site under Nick's tuition, as a dry run prior to the real build, and have also started fabricating the wall plate out of timber. This sits between the tyres and the straw and is used to anchor everything together.


A static caravan has been manoevred onto site today. Donated by Hoburne Holiday Park in Paignton, the caravan will act as the site office for the next few months, giving the students much-needed shelter and R&R facilities during the doubtless wet Devon winter that's to come.

Monday 26 November 2007


Students from the college carried out some new (to them) methods of working on site. One of these being the use of a power barrow. After some intensive training from the digger driver they were all given the opportunity to use the equipment to fill the foundations with crusher run stone. This was then spread and compacted in 150mm layers. It was good to see the students keen to get stuck in so that within the first week of operation on site the foundations were dug, lined with a geotextile material and filled to the correct level. The next stage of the job will be to locate the tires into position fill and compact them and prepare for the timber wall base plate. This stage will be carried out with the aid of the carpentry students.

South Devon College students compacting stone in the foundations.

Friday 23 November 2007

Tyres start to be laid out

The tyres have been donated by local branch of ATS. We are using two sizes 175/65 R14 and 185/65 R14. There will be two rows stacked one on top of the other.

Wednesday 14 November 2007

Foundations continued.



Here you can see the the 2 trenches that cross the centre of the building.












Nick Cleasby project leader for South Devon College holds one of the steel rods that will pass up through the foundations, tyres and wooden base plate.

Tuesday 13 November 2007

Foundations begun.


Stone going in to foundations.

Tuesday 6 November 2007

Dominic Acland, Tuesday 6 November 07

We held our first "contract control" meeting today with the architectural team - Mark Ledgard and Jenny Parsons from Stratton & Holborow, Exeter - and Nick Cleasby, the Project Manager from South Devon College. "We" is me, Director of the Trust, and Justin Cox, Deputy Director and also Farm Manager. Julian Carnell, the Trust's Education Manager and the other key member of the team, couldn't make it along today.




The building site as the first layers are stripped off












The meeting lasted three hours as we went into every detail of the design to ensure we are clear about what's coming up. To bring you up to speed, so far we have cleared a level platform for the building, measuring around 10m x 10m square and Nick, with his students, has marked out the foundations according to the plans supplied by Jenny. Nick has recently been on a straw-bale building course run by the Dorset Centre for Rural Skills so, as the rest of us are straw-bale virgins, we listen to what he has to say with great respect.

We are using rammed stone foundations, around 1.2m deep and will need 34.2 cubic metres of stone. Then on top of the foundations will sit two courses of used car tyres filled with crushed stone to act as a damp-proof course and lift the bales off the ground. Stainless steel bars and plates set in the foundations, will anchor the wall-plate into the ground, to keep the building from flying off in a strong wind.

Next came the debate about what the tyres measure. The local ATS outlet is going to collect them for us and they are 185/65 R14s. We wrestle with it for a while until Justin gets up and goes out into the car park to crouch behind people's cars measuring their tyres. Lucky to escape without arrest he returns to tell us the average for an R14 is 570mm. So Jenny will factor that into her design and that will determine the exact dimensions for the foundations. As the digger is arriving on Monday to start to dig the foundations, and Nick needs to mark them out (again!) before Monday, she'll have to be quick. Nick has been to visit our bales, which have been made and are sitting in a barn in nearby Marldon, and Jenny is worried that they are slightly shorter than she had allowed. Nick is quite relaxed about it all though - he's been on the course and claims that the bales can easily be cut to size to fit whatever the main dimensions are.He is even rash enough to say that once we have got the ring-plate in over the tyres, the bale walls will go up in a matter of two days. We shall see.

Things are really going to start happening next week as the foundations should be completed by the end of the week. Then we hope to install the car tyres by early December, followed by the ring-plate, which is a timber base for the straw bales, to be pre-fabricated at the College and assembled on site. A Christmas break will give us all time to draw breath, before we get the straw bale walls up in January.

On the media front Mark Gilmartin, the Trust's IT expert, is setting up a time-lapse camera so we can make one of those speeded-up films of the whole build, and meanwhile the College's media department are going to make a documentary of the whole project. We'll post some of the pictures on this blog as we go, hope you find it interesting!

Introduction

THE NEW OCCOMBE FARMING AND FOOD EDUCATION CENTRE
OPENING JUNE 2008

Why do we need a new centre?
When Occombe was opened in March 2006, we had to make compromises to fit everything in. Our vision is of a business with a heart, that is successful both educationally and commercially – and Occombe is well on the way to achieving this vision. But we need more space to do it in. At the moment, when school groups come to Occombe, we have to close half of the café, and the rest of the time the café shares the education space. For groups wanting to use the bakery, we can only hold around 15 children at a time, and we have to work amongst large-scale commercial production equipment. And holding adult education classes is really difficult too. Despite these problems, we are fully booked with school groups and we know the demand is there for us to expand.















A green building.
True to our mission to demonstrate techniques that will allow society to function without needless damage to the environment, we want the new building to have as small a carbon footprint as possible.
  • no cement will be used in it
  • the building will sit on used car tyres as a damp-proof course
  • the walls will be of straw bales, plastered with lime mortar
  • the roof and floor boarding will be made of larch harvested from our own woodlands here in Torbay
The new centre will form a single classroom, housing a learning kitchen big enough to teach a class of 30, plus the computer suite and IT facilities that are currently in the café.













A learning project.

We are very proud to be working with the Construction Department at South Devon College on this project. The department is a Centre of Vocational Excellence and it will use the construction of this building as the first “Construction in the Community” project the College has ever undertaken. The College has won funding from the Learning and Skills Council to provide tuition and project management so that students will build the new centre and learn sustainable construction skills in the process.

We aim to start work on the foundations in November and will be building the straw bale walls in January (pray for good weather!); in February we’ll get the roof on and from then on it’s the internal fit-out, plastering, wiring, plumbing etc. All the work will be carried out by students under proper supervision, as part of their course work.

Funding.
The new centre is being funded entirely through a grant from an anonymous charitable trust, which is paying for the materials used. The Learning and Skills Council is funding the College’s input, and the students are all working as volunteers. Our deepest thanks go to all those involved.

Find out more. Go to www.occombe.org.uk