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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
Green Building Bible, fourth edition (both books)
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    •  
      CommentAuthorKatymac
    • CommentTimeFeb 14th 2007 edited
     
    What other stuff would I need?

    I am assuming
    Water Connection £1,000.00
    Drainage £9,000.00
    Electrics £7,500.00
    Heating £10,000.00
    Kitchen & bathroom £4,000.00
    Landscaping
    Car Parking 600sqm 25sqm -£8,000.00
    Paths 50 sqm £1,500.00
    Play area 180 sqm
    Fencing @ £30 approx 125 linear m £4,000.00
    Total £13,500.00 £13,500.00

    Grand Total £45,000.00


    Then either the money to pull down the barn & use the base (don't know how much that would be?) or the cost of the concrete base - which would be more expensive?
    •  
      CommentAuthorKatymac
    • CommentTimeFeb 14th 2007
     
    & can anyone tell me if this is any good??
    House Kit
    Delivery
    Planning
    27.76 m² roof boards., d = 22mm
    0.448 m³ Timber (KVH-Si)
    6.29 m³ Timber
    343.69 m² logs Spruce
    192.9 m² floor boards 28 x 121mm
    321 m Timber for the floor 45 x 145mm
    Doors and Windows
    5 St single window, 1-flg., 0.882/1.058, Wood frame
    8 St double window, 2-flg., 1.45/1.058, Wood frame
    4 St double door, 2-flg., 1.58/2.05, Wood frame
    11 St single door inside 0.88 x 2.08
    Shingles
    roofing paper 333er
    bitumin shingles, rectangle formed
    glue
    Rain Gutters
    Floor Insulation
    damp protection
    Insulation 60mm WLG 040
    Roof Insulation
    laths 18x80
    boards, tongue & groove, 12.5 x 96mm
    damp protection
    Insulation WLG 040
    •  
      CommentAuthorKatymac
    • CommentTimeFeb 14th 2007
     
    Could I knock down the barn and use the base as car parking? - would that be cost effective?
    • CommentAuthorTuna
    • CommentTimeFeb 14th 2007
     
    If you go for a log cabin and pull down the barn, how much floor space are you loosing? Pulling down the barn seems a bit of a one-way option to me - not something you can later undo if you want more space.

    I'm still not sure why you have to do complete landscaping to start the business - as long as there is an area to park cars, I'm sure people will survive if it's a little rough and muddy, and you are budgeting for fencing the entire plot and providing a full play area when you could consider providing 'just enough' for the first year and expanding later. Quite a few people have asked you about phasing your plans and I'm not sure you've really given the idea enough thought.

    Perhaps you could start off by working out what the smallest nursery facilities you could work with would be - the fewest children, smallest play area, least facilities and so on. If you can find that out and still calculate a useable profit each year for expansion, you can put in place a long term business plan to aim for your end-goal.
    •  
      CommentAuthorKatymac
    • CommentTimeFeb 14th 2007
     
    As the main space is open plan - I can't really only renovate part of it - as appealing as that is I'd like to do the offcies/kitchen/staffroom & toilets at a later stage - but they are all required in order to open

    I could do the parking less substantially - however planning & building regs demand the turning circle for deliveries and emergency vehicles

    The parking is mesh over grass so that would mean it would just be grass or maybe just the barley field it is atm

    The fencing is important to keeping the children in more than anything else - OFSTED insist that they are completely enclosed, I have dumped the playarea surfacing and am just looking at grass (with the surfacing to be added later - if I can afford it)

    My "to do later" list atm includes
    Solar hot water
    Rainwater harvesting
    More eco heating??if I go for oil to start with
    Play area surfacing
    Proper parking
    Nicer fencing (eg willow)
    If I go with the barn conversion finishing the internal walls will come later along with window blinds, outside shading & internal windows (ie I will make the hole and put glass in when I can afford)

    OFSTED are so picky about stuff it makes it difficult to consider the alternatives:sad:
    They wouldn't let unfinished building works anywhere the children could get to, so that would mean more fencing

    So if I kept the barn - I would need to put in a concrete slab, if I went down the cabin line

    I'm seeing an advisor next week to discuss my options - to see where I have made errors
  1.  
    Katy, you said:

    "As the main space is open plan - I can't really only renovate part of it - as appealing as that is I'd like to do the offcies/kitchen/staffroom & toilets at a later stage - but they are all required in order to open"

    Could the offices/kitchen/staffroom & toilets be in a portacabin in the short term?
    •  
      CommentAuthorKatymac
    • CommentTimeFeb 14th 2007
     
    No - because potty training 3 yo's can't hold on that long :wink:
    Staff need to be on the premises for insurance (ie not in another building)
    Kitchen & offices could (I guess) - but as my big costs are roofing, insulation & flooring I don't think that would help

    Let me think about it

    There was an idea to only develop half the barn (ie 10m by 10m) & use the rest as an undercover play area
    - but the roof would still need replacing and the building would look really odd with only half being expernally insulated

    Also by the time the loos/kitchen/staffroom & adult loos are in (ignoring the office/reception etc) there would only be enough room for about 20 children and that number doesn't split up (by age range) into effective staffing numbers (that sounds really complicated but here goes

    1 adult :3 under 1
    1 adult :4 2-3yo
    1 adult to 8 3-5

    So 3 under 1 plus 4 2-3yo plus 8 3-5 yo is 15 children any more means more adults

    BUT each area needs 2 adults so I have to employ
    2 for the under 1's (therefore 6)
    2 for the 2-3yo's (therefore 8)
    2 for the 3-5yo's (therefore 16)

    Giving my 30 children - this is for child protection issues that are apparently so important

    If I cut my size I either employ staff to look after no children (not cost effective) or exclude an age range (not ideal)

    I'm not being intentionally awkward btw

    It's the only business in the country where you have to set up, employ your staff & only then find out whether or not you will get a license to open:surprised:
    •  
      CommentAuthorKatymac
    • CommentTimeFeb 14th 2007
     
    & each age range has to have a certain amount of floor space
    • CommentAuthorTuna
    • CommentTimeFeb 15th 2007
     
    I would seriously consider starting with half the barn fitted out, full roof and an internal stud wall to make things simple. Start with the easiest children first - 16 3-5yo's gives you half your projected capacity, with only 1/3rd the full staff numbers. I know it might look funny and not be ideal, but this is about starting a business, not trying to impress people.

    I think I'm right in saying you've never run a business or been the boss of a number of staff? If so, I would suggest you try to take small steps first. Being in charge of six people who depend on you utterly for their income, as well as trying to bring in paying customers, solve teething problems and run a nursery from day to day will be extremely stressful. Breaking the big problem into little steps will help you get there with much less stress and risk. Opening a nursery with a full set of staff and a big overdraft will make your initial cash flow very, very difficult, so starting small might not only help you deal with your costs, but also help you avoid running out of cash in the first year.
    •  
      CommentAuthorKatymac
    • CommentTimeFeb 15th 2007
     
    I already employ 6 staff & have a business with a turnover over 50K pa - this is the next stage

    For the 3-5's I would need kitchen, office (as they need the most paperwork) staff room and toilets plus around 40 sqm of space

    I guess it is possible - but I don't see how it reduces my costs much

    The roof/insulation/heating etc are all still needed - I save on some floor covering (which I may or may not be able to match when I expand) & I guess maybe some windows& doors
    Hmm I'll have a think
    • CommentAuthorTuna
    • CommentTimeFeb 15th 2007
     
    Cool, I'm not saying this is the answer, but I know how hard it is to look at a problem a different way when you've been attacking it for many months. Sometimes you have to take a step back and see if you can let go some of your assumptions.
  2.  
    Can you get a portacabin (for the kit, WCs, offices etc) into the barn by removing a section? Then you have your facilities (and Tuna's stud wall) without serious expense, if you buy well on the p'cab.
    •  
      CommentAuthorKatymac
    • CommentTimeFeb 15th 2007
     
    If I buy a portacabin - will I be able to afford to renovate the barn?

    Last quote I had was for £85K (second hand)...mind you that was for the whole area

    I'd have to work it out.....hmmm
  3.  
    Instead of portacabin at £85k, how about an oldish static caravan? As used on build your own home sites.
    They have plumbing for kitchen and toilet. If you look round you can get one with two toilets, so male/female if that is a must.
    Change a bedroom to an office, maybe even have another bedroom as a First Aid room?

    Most caravan sites throw vans off at 10 years old, so at that point they drop from having a value to being a pain in the neck as they have to pay to have them removed.

    I wouldn't worry about matching floor covering at a later date, you just buy something that is different and looks like it was supposed to be different.

    I've not covered your whole story to get to this point and when I first read nursery and barn I was thinking gardening and wondered why you wanted a play area for kids!!!!!

    I've had several very succesful business, currently I run 5 seperate ones, although they are mainly inerlinked, so if you wish to run anything by me feel free.
    •  
      CommentAuthorKatymac
    • CommentTimeFeb 16th 2007
     
    Thanks - I spoke to an architect today & he seems very supportive......
    • CommentAuthorTuna
    • CommentTimeFeb 19th 2007
     
    To follow up skier-hughes comment - static caravans come very cheap. The one we live in (37' by 12', two bedroom, kitchen and bathroom with bath) cost 8K, though it is about 15 years old. A new-ish one might cost nearer 30K, but no-where near 85K. There are a number of dealers in Great Yarmouth who deliver throughout Norfolk, Katy, if you wanted to explore that option.
  4.  
    Where we had our van you could pick up 10' wide 12 year olds for only £1k, and they'd be in reasonable nick. Most caravan sites allow vans to stay for 10 years, some allow 12 if you were already there, so as soon as a van reached 12 it was worth very little.

    I'd take a trip around the craravan sites now, as this is when a lot of updating is done, you might even find that it is cheaper for them to allow you to pay for the cost of moving it and they just give it to you, if they are updating, as most sites won't take a 12+ van in exchange for new.

    Cost of moving is not cheap, but nowhere near £85k :bigsmile:
    • CommentAuthorGuest
    • CommentTimeApr 2nd 2007
     
    Wonder if the following might be of interest to you. There is a Log Building Company in the UK specialising in Log Building using Scottish Timber and building from solid round log. You can get their brochure/fact sheet at the following site http://www.freewebs.com/rasputinscotland/
    They build at a fraction of the cost of imported cabin kits, and are the only log builders in the UK.
    They also advertise on htp://www.ebuild.co.uk and their contact details are there, or you can phone them on 01292 551840 or 078 593 25202.
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