2019-07-01 Homebuilding & Renovating

(Joyce) #1

168 homebuilding.co.uk


When to get the
building inspector out
The building inspector will
need to visit the site at set
stages to approve the works.
Those inspection stages are:

l Excavations for foundations
l Foundation concrete
l Oversite
l Damp-proof course
l Foul water drains
trenches open
l Surface water drains
trenches open
l Occupation prior to
completion (second fix)
l Completion

It’s not rocket science. All it needs is a
knowledge of Pythagoras’ theorem, some
pegs, string lines and something to mark
theground, such as lime or spray paint.
But whether you aim to take on this task
yourself, or want this to be undertaken by
a groundworker or a surveyor, just who
is going to take responsibility has to be
established within the price agreed from
theoutset.

lHiring equipment
If you’re using a builder for the whole job
then they’ll be responsible for hiring any
additional equipment they need. However,
self-builders who are project managing will
need to make provisions for this. If you’re
employing direct labour, for instance,
then bricklayers may turn up expecting
you to supply not only all of the necessary
materials but also the 600mm x 600mm
spot boards upon which the labourers will
load out the mortar. Additionally, unless
previously agreed otherwise, they will
expect to find a mixer, a water butt and a
hose running from a suitable water source.
If you haven’t got these items on site
when they arrive, your bricklayers may
simply go off to another site and you could
be waiting ages for them to come back.

l Liaising with building inspectors
It’s the responsibility of the main
applicant to ensure that the Building
Regulations’ inspectors are advised of
the commencement of work and then
kept abreast of progress and called out
to inspect at the required stages. It’s the
responsibility of the client (the self-builder)
to make sure that warranty inspectors are,
similarly, advised.
It’s also incumbent upon the self-builder
to make sure that service and utility
providers are contracted and that contact
is maintained with them for the provision
of their services and any necessary work
that may need to be undertaken to facilitate
them carrying out their tasks.
All of these actions can be devolved to
the builder or another responsible person

on site (i.e. a project manager or architect
if they’re retained to oversee the build), but
ultimate responsibility remains with the
self-builder. So you need to make sure that,
if you are devolving these responsibilities,
the fact that you have done so is clearly
understood and undertaken.

l Beam and block flooring
It’s a moot point as to which trade this falls
under. If the suspended concrete or beam
and block floor is to the ground floor, it’s
more or less assumed that it comes within
the remit of the groundworkers — but
not necessarily. It can equally be done
by the bricklayers and in some cases, the
groundworkers will position the beams
and the bricklayers will infill them with
blocks and brush grout them. Again, the
self-builder must make sure they know just
who is going to be responsible; you need to
know who’s doing what.
First floor beam and block floors create
an even bigger grey area. By the time they
are ready to go on, the groundworkers are
likely to have left site and, in those cases, it
may well fall to the bricklayers to put them
up. But they, in all probability, will require
a crane to get them up to the higher levels.

l Insulation
Slab insulation to the oversite will be laid
by the groundworkers. Walling insulation to
the external skins (masonry construction)
will be fixed by the bricklayers or
carpenters (when it comes to timber
frame). However, insulation to a roof,
studwork walls or intermediate flooring can
sometimes be a grey area.
Usually the carpenters will put the
insulation within studwork walls or in the
floor zone. But not always. They may leave
this task to the plasterers, dryliners or
tackers on the basis that other trades, such
as plumbers and electricians, won’t want
it in until they have carcassed (i.e. run the
wiring and plumbing as part of first fix).
Either way, it has to go in and once again
the self-builder must establish who’s going
to be responsible.

The self-
builder or
renovator
needs
understand
these
anomalies
and make
sure that
they are
covered
by at least
one of the
interacting
trades

The Build Trades

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