Sunday, 22 April 2012

House of sticks

The arrival of the framing timbers marks the beginning of the next phase of the building. Going vertical. Framing is always an exciting part of the build, as the spaces, views and scale all take shape. Apart from the the large span trusses in the lounge area which feature the Barwon Heads bridge timbers, the bulk of the framing will use locally sourced plantation pine from Carter Holt
Packs of timber ready for framing

Friday, 20 April 2012

Clean up the timbers

The Barwon Heads bridge timbers came complete with the remnants of the road surface. Before cutting the timber to construct the lounge area, the tar and stones were removed with a hammer chisel and wire brushes. We found the task was reasonably easy to do on a hot day when the tar was soft.
Timbers cleaned up and ready to cut to size

Wednesday, 21 March 2012

The little tractor

After old mate Jed ripped up the front lawn to lay irrigation drip pipes, we had to do a heap of raking. To the rescue came the lawn mower with a custom blade fitted to make easy work of pushing soil back into the irrigation trenches. With a bit of a top dress in spring this garden area should maintain a green fire resistant swathe right through the summer months.

The little tractor

Sunday, 11 March 2012

Raising the bar

Kath spotted a small advert in the local paper. Someone was selling a slab of timber that had been the workbench in the Yarrawonga Coachbuilders shop for 100 years. Close to 5 m long and 1 m wide this chunk of equine history had BHA written all over it. Now back at Spring Spur and awaiting a bit of a tidy up, this piece of timber will become the centre piece "bar" in the Riders Lounge.
The workbench awaiting it's new purpose.

Thursday, 23 February 2012

Consulting the poofessor

Being entirely self sufficient on our own water resources, a key component of the project design was to recycle the waste water generated from the buildings as garden water. After considering various worm and reed bed systems we opted to install twin Taylex aerated treatment plants, which deliver all our waste water back into sub-soil irrigation fields. The first irrigation field waters the central garden areas between the stables and the other buildings, maintaining an important green band right through the summer months and acting as part of our wild fire  management plan. The second field will be installed in plantations to be planted along the colt paddocks, to create shade and suppress summer dust from the lane.

Clay checks the levels in the hole

Taylex plant in, filled with water and backfilled.

Monday, 20 February 2012

Barwon Heads Bridge

Our heavy timbers for the trussed area in the Riders lounge arrived today. Long straight sections of 200mm x 110mm stringbark, salvaged from the "infamous" Barwon Heads bridge.

Our supplier, Mark from The Beauty of Timber, a Kinglake business that was devastated in the 2009 bushfires, has put together this order for us from his re-emerging business. The timber was delivered by their new truck. Looking forward to working with this heritage timber and giving it a new life holding up the roof rather than the traffic.

Offloading the bridge



Sunday, 8 January 2012

New Elevations

Spent a wet Saturday rendering new elevations of Spring Spur building cluster, using Google Sketch-up. Helps put form into the working drawings and even resolves a few details around roof lines etc.
West Elevation 

 South Elevation

East Elevation 

North Elevation 

View from above - NW 

View from above - SE