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Posted By: RexWhy are British houses so badly built?
Brits will never understand this and will keep saying their houses are very well-built, they last for centuries and so on,
Posted By: RexBrits will never understand this and will keep saying their houses are very well-builtI wonder if they do? Seems to me there's plenty of negative views of UK quality. A comparative international satisfaction survey would be interesting.
Posted By: Rex
As for all the smart houses, the electronics will have given up the ghost and be unrepairable.
Posted By: RexAnd newly built houses usually have no corners left uncut.
Posted By: gravelldQuite honestly I need to stop reading threads like this because it makes me despair at how little progress we are making.
Posted By: wholaaPull cords are safer right? I hate pull cords myself but I just leave the switch outside. Is three-phase common outside the UK? What are the issues with door handles and door hinges?The reason pull cords were common was indeed because building regs decreed them safer, but now switches outside the door are more common. I use wire-free kinetic switches, which happen to be outside the doors. Dunno what the issue with door handles and hinges is.
Posted By: Rexthe most peculiar thing these days would be the fact that practically every house here only has one phase. It causes other issues as well, but if we’re pushing on electric vehicles, well, good luck with one phase chargers.Three phase is a lot more common in murrica because they only have 120 V on a single phase. I just bought an EV and was quite surprised to see them say to always, as far as possible, use a slow charger (i.e. a single phase domestic charger), because that's the only way the BMS will properly balance the cells in the battery. That was my plan anyway since I have a single phase charger so I'm happy to go along with the instructions.
Posted By: cjardPoint your finger at anyone in the chain from field to house, digger man to end buyer, and ask yourself "does that person care?"
Posted By: revorNot entirely true but I mostly agree. Had some great guys on my build self employed who were keen to do a good job took pride in their work.Same here but I think self-builders are an exception since in almost all cases they are the end buyer and they do care about the result. It's probably also largely the case for 'custom builds'; it's the mass developments by speculative builders that are the main problem.
Posted By: wholaaWhat are the issues with door handles and door hinges?From his/her comment about sash windows and separate water taps, maybe he/she also thinks that thumb latches are still specified in the UK. No idea about hinges, though there are still some nasty cheap ones on the market.
Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryPosted By: RexWhy are British houses so badly built?
Brits will never understand this and will keep saying their houses are very well-built, they last for centuries and so on,
Wot Rex said +1
There are houses centuries old - but I'd wager that the modern houses won't last centuries, maybe 50 years or so before major referbs are needed.
Posted By: RexMine is a timber frame but I very much doubt that it will be around in a few centuries time.
As for all the smart houses, the electronics will have given up the ghost and be unrepairable.
Posted By: Simon StillThere are timber frame buildings that are 100's of years old.I live next door to one that is 500 years old. It has had extensions added but the original part is mostly still there. There's a farmhouse in an outdoor museum in our nearby town that's 600 years old. Google says the oldest timber building in the world is 1400 years old https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/oldest-wooden-building But as Peter says, there an awful lot of old buildings that aren't there any more for the few that are.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenOut of interest, what do you get done differently on a build that is intended to last 100 years, compared to one that is intended to last 60 years?
Posted By: WillInAberdeenOut of interest, what do you get done differently on a build that is intended to last 100 years, compared to one that is intended to last 60 years?Not really sure it made much difference. It's mostly just a mindset, I think. But to get to specifics:
Posted By: revorA slate roof for a start.Well, no. Aluminium as I said. Slate doesn't bend.
No flat roofs.Well, no. EPDM which I expect will have to be replaced once or maybe twice.
Loads of insulationAbsolutely.
No OSB or anything that disintegrates if it gets wetLoads of it but not anywhere it will get wet. Ditto plasterboard etc.
Cavity wallsNo chance!
Windows set in the inner leaf or over the cavity.No. Windows set in the insulation.
Brick faced no renderNo. Lime render everywhere over the bales. Inside too. No bricks anywhere (except for one course at the base of the timber garage and broken in gabions in the garden). I dislike wet trades.
Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryFor a starters use good quality timbers properly seasoned and pay attention to good well fitting joints instead of nail plates.Well, we used C16 (actually C24 'cos that's what our merchant had) untreated for the most part. We used nail plates for the major structural supports; not taking loads, just stabilising the joints, and we used loads of joist hangers and we used a lot of screws. 'joints' not so much.
For second don't use cheap wall ties - actually don't use wall ties at all - i.e. don't build with cavity walls. I'm not sure that solid walls will help longevity but IMO it will certainly help with reduced energy use (with EWI) but cheap wall ties are /will be a disaster.I agree with you there, although GBS seem to disagree and think that basalt wall ties in PH are OK. There's a British disease that thinks cavity walls are the bees knees.
Posted By: djh
+1
Solid walls with generous roof overhang is the way forward IMO.