Friday, 21 January 2011

The Barn Roof - a Start




It has been a considerable time since we had any substantial building works done to the house largely as a result of needing to raise funds by selling our house in GB. That happened over last summer releasing the necessary funds but then we faced the same problem as we had at the start of the whole project - finding a reliable builder who was prepared to do the work at a reasonable price and in a reasonable timescale.

The most urgent aspect for us was, and is, the roof of the barn; the first picture above shows the state the roof was in early on in our ownership. Over the four years we have now had the property it has steadily worsened under the impact of the weather and various insects which have consumed the wood. By the autumn I had begun to have serious doubts about the ability of the structure to withstand another winter similar to that we experienced last year. If we had snowfalls of a comparable quantity then the weight might prove too much and the whole structure would then collapse. This would cause many more problems for us than trying to rescue as much as possible of what exists and might be re-usable.


We approached a series of builders, either people we have got to know or people recommended to us. And we were told that times are tough for builders in this region at the moment as there has been a considerable cutting back in the amount of work for them as people have stopped commissioning work under the impact of the financial difficulties both here and in G.B. Holland, Germany, etc. Hence we thought that we should have no trouble finding someone to take the work on. Wrong! Despite several people visiting, discussing the work, taking measurements and promising to provide us with quotes we had virtually no takers. In the end we have secured the assistance of an English friend with whom we shall undertake to do the work ourselves - not what I had hoped as I am a little tired of working flat out on this project, but needs must.


So at the start of winter we took the old roof off - the tiles and the battens that is - exposing the bare bones of the structural members. You can see this in the second picture above. Two surprisingly things emerged from this work. Firstly that the majority of the timber is in quite reasonable condition. Certainly there are plenty of places where timber will have to be replaced with new or reclaimed timber, but there is far less of this than we had expected. The other aspect is that the barn was not put up in one piece; from the way it has been constructed the original part dates back beyond the eighteenth century, the newer part nearer to the road is probably a nineteenth century addition.


In taking off the roof, the tiles what we could reclaim were carried down to ground level and stored under the barn area, you can see this in the pictures. What was unusable for reconstructing the roof we have kept in a heap to be used as hard core for the terrace we shall put in across the front of the house.

But we are not able to carry on for the moment and finish off the re-roofing as our friend has to be elsewhere for some time now. So as a temporary measure to protect the structure from, the weather we put weather-proof sheeting over it. I tried hard to acquire ‘proper’ tarpaulin but it seems that it is not something that is sold in France. What you can see in the third picture above is not as durable and we are hopful that it will be able withstand the force of the weather for a sufficient time till we can finish the job in late spring.

Between now and then we shall also work on the pigsty area to create a double garage and workshop. Initially this will act as a storage area only so that we can clear out all the ‘stuff’ that we have stored in the un-renovated part of the house. And once the barn roof is completed we shall turn to finishing off this part of the house. This will be a substantial piece of work but we are hopeful - do we never learn??!! - that by the end of this year the structural work will be completed and we shall be facing ‘only’ the finishing tasks. Watch this space!

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