Tag Archives: RubbleWalling

Before I forget again

I forgot to post some of the photos Ric took in his last week.

He just about got the east wall finished, but had a mishap with our only pointing trowel, which we use to rake out mortar. So it looks a bit gap-toothy at the moment, we will finish this off when we get up in September and get the raised wallhead blocked out – probably a days work, weather permitting. Meanwhile we are well pleased with how the stonework is turnng out!

One thing that puzzles us: Why is our rubble wall so pale compared to the untouched wall, when it is built from the stone we took out of the walls in the first place? Obviously the mortar is new, but not the stone. Answers on a postcard, please.

He got two more thresholds installed on doors opening onto the courtyard…

He built up stonework to sill height in the last two window openings in the north wing, that started life as doors. So all 5 window openings are ready for sills, quoins and lintels. None of them will have stonework above the lintels.

He heroically got all the openings with blockwork synthaprufed.

He also carried on with his research into how to convert our piles of spoil into graded sand that we can use in our raised drainage mound.

Building rubble wall

With our first window opening in the east wall of the east wing constructed, I rebuilt the granite wall above the window. We had already spread the Synthaprufe liquid DPM on the backing concrete blockwork. The wall has been badly used over the years, but the stonework to the north side of the window is original and is clearly coursed. Conveniently, the top of the lintel lined up well with the base of a course, I was able to run a row of boulders up to 28cm high all the way across the top of the lintels back to original wall. I filled up between granite and concrete blocks with a mix of broken concrete and mortar, then filled in the gaps above with smaller stone, pinned together. I aimed for a flat mortared top surface to match the original, then left it overnight to go off. The wall to the south of the window opening had been badly rebuilt at some point, with no clear coursing, I did the best I could to blend that end of the new stonework in.

The following morning, I ran the next course across, which went up to the original wallhead height. It was quite a bit deeper than the course below but had not used larger rubble, the original builders had used larger stones above the first set of stones to get the depth.

So that got the first part of the rebuilt wall up to original height. When it goes off enough, we can lay the four courses of concrete blockwork above, that will lift the roof to the design height.

First door and window reconstructed!

We bought lintels and sills on the assumption that there were none on site – we were not there at the time we ordered, and were not sure about the state of the few that were still in place.

It turned out:

  • There are doors at opposite ends of the courtyard, one has a sound lintel in place, the other we had taken down and preserved. The latter has an adjacent small window, that had a rough sill (not projecting out at all) already in place and another suitable lintel in storage.
  • The one remaining upper-storey window, in the north-east gable-end, has a sound lintel. We replaced the rotting timber internal lintel with concrete ones whilst we were tidying up that gable-end.
  • We think there are two other lintels that we removed, that can be re-used.

We chose to use the courtyard door + window as the first openings to re-construct. One door pillar, immediately out from the corner where the north and east wings connect, had been demolished, for safety. The other door pillar is sound and forms one side of the window surround. The other side of the window and the sill were also sound. The backing blockwork was all in place, we painted on the three coats of bitumen-based DPC and let it dry out. Ric then built up the missing door pillar cutting quoins to fit into the existing stonework and tying it in with the strips of expanded stainless steel mesh previously set into the concrete blockwork. He stopped about halfway-up on the first day, to let the mortar go off a bit, and restarted next day.

We left it a couple of days further, then used the chain hoist to lift the window lintel up first, then the door lintel. There was a gap between the granite lintels and the two concrete structural lintels set into the concrete block work. We shuttered the gap underneath and poured in medium strength concrete.

And that was it, apart from completing the stonework above the lintels to the old wallhead height – we did that as a training exercise. Beyond that we can then block above that to new wallhead height, ready for the roof.

Rudiments of building with stone

Over the two weeks, Ric taught us the basics of building with stone. This is enough to get us going independently of him, although we would expect to ask for advice as we go, and to learn rapidly from our mistakes!

Splitting Granite. Ric had brought up his set of ‘feathers and tare’, enough to fill 8 holes. We experimented with drilling into granite using our new rotary hammer drill and the 18mm bits, up to 60-70mm apart. We inserted the metal work, with the outer wedges facing the direction we wanted to split. We then got used to hitting the wedges with a small club hammer, listening to the pitch of the sound they produced. We hit the lower-pitched wedges until they reached the higher pitches. As the granite started to give the pins would drop in tone, so we moved between them, keeping them all up as high as possible. After a short period (we were not splitting huge blocks of stone, plus we were working on field-stone which had weathered from new) the granite would give a distinctive ‘pfftt’ noise and give way, pretty much where we wanted it to. We started easy, splitting a rectangular quoin stone across the middle, then worked up to a much more irregular boulder where we needed to spall-off a chunk to make it usable. So far, so good! Of course, in the best of all possible worlds, all our stones would be just the right size and shape, so we would not need to split them up!

As another exercise, we shaped up the sill of one of our new openings. The base for this inconveniently ran through several large boulders. We drilled in and upwards (to get the downward slope for the sill) in the big boulders and used the feathers and tare to split them to height. We used the angle grinder to trim smaller stones to height – cutting parallel lines 10mm apart to the required depth, then using the medium breaker to chip out the remaining stone. Once we had the area cut to size, we laid a mortar bed over it and left it to go off.

Preparing lime mortar: We are using a simple 3:1 mortar mix for the bulk of the building work, where we will not see it. This is two measures of building sand with a small amount of plasticiser, a measure of lime then another measure of building sand, followed by mixing for 20 minutes. This is a little light on the lime, hence the plasticiser, but is quite strong enough. Incidentally, leaving it for longer that 20 minutes is not good, it seems to thin out the mix and is less workable. I actually preferred mixing for 15 minutes not 20, but 20 minutes is the norm.

Laying rubble walling: We picked a door opening that was becoming a window and which needed a single course of rubble, built up to sill height. We laid a bed of mortar on the foundation blockwork and got it to slope up towards the back. We laid the sheet of DPC built in to the backing stonework over the mortar bed. Where it was rather short, we cut an extension sheet that we laid directly on the mortar bed, projecting out, and laid the original over it. This way, any water that gets into the wall will be pushed out the front of the wall. For the first two sections we did, Ric selected the large stones that made up the bulk of the course. We placed these on fresh mortar over the DPC and used small pieces of stone under the edges, to wedge the boulders in place. This done, we put mortar between the gaps and progressively filled in with smaller boulders and, for the narrower gaps, pinning stones. When we came across a strip of the expanded steel mesh embedded in the concrete blockwork, we folded the end back so it would not show and built it in to the stonework, to tie it all together. We part-filled the gap between the inner leaf of concrete blocks and the stonework with mortar, padded out with as much waste concrete as we could. We wanted to avoid hydraulic pressure from the mortar and packing from pushing the stonework out at the base of the section of wall, so we finished filling the gap the following day. We levelled out the top of the course of stones and, prepared the top for sills. The third section, we did on our own – and learnt a lot from it. We ended up being too cautious about using large stones, so ended up with a style of walling that did not really match what was either side – building up the course with a large number of smaller boulders.

The following day, Ric left us to our own devices to complete the walling above a pair of granite lintels he had reinstalled over a doorway and window. This needed one shallow course to tie in to a level in the existing walling, then a full-height one (35cm) above that to get up to the original top of the wall. Being above lintels, I ran a sheet of DPC from the stonework over the lip of the lintels, on a bed of mortar. I had packed a row of small pieces of concrete waste against the concrete blockwork, to raise the mortar bed upwards to the back, to encourage any water in the wall to run down and out. I spent quite a while assembling the 8 large stones we needed, hoisted them on to the scaffolding along with buckets of smaller stones, broken concrete and small wedges to prop stones up. We are using flexible gorilla buckets for the lime mortar, I discovered that I could loop the handles into our hoist and get full buckets up more quickly and easily than lugging up by hand – provided the handles do not give way. Once everything was in place, it was comparatively quick to place the lower, shallow course, back fill the gap and lay the upper course of big stones directly above. Technically we should have waited a day for the shallow course to go off, but we were short of time and accepted the risk that the lower layer might collapse under the one above – it did not, to my relief. We did include three boulders that were slightly too big, the bits that are above the level of the backing concrete leaf will need to be trimmed off before we can lay the concrete blockwork on top, that will raise the roof to the new level.

Preparing for pointing: We roughly filled the stonework with mortar as we went, knowing that next day, we would scrape it back to prepare for final pointing. After a day the mortar was hard enough to stand working, but soft enough to easily scrape back – a bit like granulated sugar that has got damp then dried out. I used a small pointing trowel to scrape mortar away from the edges of stones and to level it back a cm or two to a flat finish. We then used a churn brush to batter the mortar surface to a slightly rough finish. This will allow the final mortar fill to more easily bind to it. This initial picking transforms what initially looked to be messy stonework into a much neater and better defined finish. It is also at this point that you can really see how well the stonework matches what is around it. You have to live with it the way it turns out, but you can learn from it!

The final pointing can wait, we would want to pick out the adjacent old mortar in the original walling and repoint it all together, to get a uniform finish.