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Wonky

Nov. 10th, 2023 09:43 am
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
 Four bookcases arrived yesterday (with four more to come.) They stand against the wall in a row, all of a height of course, and their tops are not parallel with the coving. I hadn't seen it before, but this is a wonky house...

We were talking with Alison about her orangery the other day and she was saying that the digging out of its foundations had revealed that the foundations of the house itself are shallow. The new foundations go down six feet, the old ones, which have more to support, only three. 

Roselands, that's our estate, was built in the 30s on what I think from looking at old photos was primarily a post-industrial brown field site. Dig down below the top soil and you come across all sorts of junk. I'm not saying it was jerry-built because these are decent. solid houses, but in certain respects - health and safety, you know- it seems standards are higher now than they were back then. When Damian was starting work on the orangery he had to down tools periodically to wait for an inspector from the Council to come and approve his work. I don't suppose the pre-war builders had to put up with any of that kind of thing...

Date: 2023-11-10 09:47 am (UTC)
cmcmck: (Default)
From: [personal profile] cmcmck
Most houses of any age will be wonky- ours certainly is and it's late Victorian.

Date: 2023-11-12 12:04 pm (UTC)
qatsi: (Default)
From: [personal profile] qatsi

It's not structural, but my the downstairs loo in my dad's house has some boxing around the pipework that, at floor level, is laughably not square. Whoever cut the material didn't measure properly, and didn't bother to correct it.

The house dates from 2000-2001.

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