Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Up On the Roof


When this old world starts getting me down
And people are just too much for me to face
I climb way up to the top of the stairs
And all my cares just drift right into space
On the roof, it's peaceful as can be
And there the world below can't bother me...

"Up On The Roof"
(Gerry Goffin and Carole King)

Finally, we have a roof. It's seemed like an eternity, but our roof is in place after two more days of moving panels, prepping them and lifting them into place, Jerry Ellis' crew has slid all the panels into place and screwed them down to the rafters. It was quite a struggle so this post might take a while...

Actually, most of the struggle was with the weather. About three inches of snow fell on us last week so we postponed the second truckload of panels until Monday. We had covered the entire roof with long sheets of plastic that ran up and down the roof slopes.

Starting yesterday, I began removing all those snow-covered plastic sheets and, of course, the snow that was on them. By the end of the workday Monday, here's what it looked like.

The plastic had been removed from the two south-sloping roofs (not shown) and the easternmost section of the north roof. There were still many snow-covered square feet to go.

The south-facing roofs' SIPs were placed by the end of the day, but I'm getting ahead of the story line.

The previous post discussed the problem we had getting the loaded truck into the driveway. In preparation for the second load, last week we shoveled the driveway, and helped by two days of on again-off again rain, most of the snow was gone. Then the driveway was covered with tarps to protect it from the predicted snow. On Sunday Sandy and I shoveled and pushed the snow off the tarps and dragged the tarps themselves off the driveway. Once it was all cleared we dragged the tarps back on because yet another snowfall was predicted.

That snow came Sunday night but was fortunately just enough to cover the tarps but not hide them. On Monday morning I dragged the tarps off the driveway again and spent a half hour or so shoveling and scraping the county road at the end of the drive.

The crane arrived and was set up at the house and we waited for the second trailer-load of SIPs. By the time it arrived the installers were also in place and we all went down to the road to see if the truck could get in. Even as the driver stopped on the road above the driveway, the truck slide a few more feet downhill. He was not very optimistic that the truck could back the trailer into the drive. It wasn't a really large truck, but a larger one, pulling a trailer, could not make the required turn.

As the driver was about to pull down the hill past the driveway so he could back it in, it occurred to me there might be a possibility he could just pull it in straight, so the drive wheels would be on gravel when the trailer came off the road. I checked with the crane operator to see how far the truck would have to get and be sure there was enough room at the end of the drive to get there.

We concluded that it might work and that it had a better probability than backing in, so we went for it. After a few tries and more than a few back-ups for aligning the trucks wheels, the truck had pulled forward enough to be reached by the crane. Success!

Next began the process of lifting the panels from the trailer onto the "lawn" area. This took longer than we'd hoped because the panels come in bundles and the bundles are mostly too heavy for the crane we had so they had to be "broken" on the trailer and the panels moved one or two at a time.

When this second load was off the trailer we took three trailer trips back to the end of the driveway to bring the rest of last week's first load up to the house. On the first two trips panels were loaded by brute force. By the third trip the panels were too low to the ground and too heavy for four of us to lift by hand, so the crane had to be moved down the driveway to load the trailer and then moved back into place to unload it onto the piles of SIPs.

Finally, a half hour past noon or so, we were ready to start lifting panels. So we took a lunch break. ?!

Here you can see the stack of panels, one in the air and the crew on the roof awaiting it. This panel went on the top of the third bedroom.

The panel on top to the right is just sitting there waiting its turn.

The holes that can be seen in the sides of some of the panels on the pile are where the nozzle is inserted to pump in the insulation. Between each hole is a thin black line that shows where the segment dividers are. There is a small number at each hole that tells the machine operator how many seconds to leave the nozzle in for that particular segment. Pretty slick, eh?

The two south-side roofs were completed on Monday.

Today the large roof that slopes down to the north was completely installed. This shot shows the progress about half way across the building from east to west. The thin panels can be seen awaiting their turn to be covered. They look pretty uneven at this point, and they are, but they will be tacked up onto the bottom of the SIPs with small brads to get them smoothed up.

And here's what they look like from the inside. Notice that some parts of the ceiling are not covered with the thin panels. These are areas that will have "normal" ceilings - the bathrooms and the utility room.

This view shows the second bedroom above and the larger bathroom to the right. There will be a wall between them of course.

And finally, here's a view from an angle that hasn't been shown in any previous posting, looking through the trees to the east of the house. The panel in the air is the last one to be installed. A few minutes later the roof was all in place.

The crew took about an hour to finish screwing down the SIPs, nailing down tongue edges where panels fit into groves in adjacent ones, and filling holes with insulating foam. (At least one hole and sometimes two are drilled into each panel to hook them up to the lifting cable.)

Finally the ball is entirely in our court. Much is left to be done, but it can now all be done on our schedule. Doors and windows will be delivered on Thursday.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Not quite what we'd hoped for


Friday was to be the big day - the day our SIP walls and roofs were to be installed. It started out fine: The crane arrived and the operator set it up right near the building; the trucker called to say he was loaded up with panels and on his way, and the installers arrived and unloaded their equipment. We all waited for the truck to arrive.

On Wednesday and Thursday Sandy and I had begun placing the paneling that will hide the bottoms of the roof SIPs. (Think of them as really thick wall paper.) We couldn't start earlier due to nearly two days of snow, much of it still covering our entry road. There were still a lot of panels to put up and we hoped we could get them done fast enough to keep ahead of the SIP installation.

Soon the truck and trailer arrived on the county road, went just past our drive and began to back uphill into the driveway. He was unable to get enough traction to get started into the driveway. Then he drove south to the end of the road and turned around, hoping that, by heading uphill, backing into the drive would be possible.

To make a long story short, after a few slippery tries back and forth, we ended up with the rig cross-ways on and completely blocking the county road and unable to move either way without slipping all the way into the ditches on BOTH sides of the road simultaneously!

Eventually a wrecker was called to pull the rig uphill and open the road. In the mean time, the crane was relocated to the end of the driveway, just off the road, and all the panels were picked up and moved onto the small parking area there. Then the panels that could both fit and be lifted manually were loaded onto the crane and driven to the house.

The last three wall panels were too large to move on the crane so they are still waiting near the road under a tarp with a half dozen of the roof panels until the driveway can be maneuvered by the truck and trailer. (Our plan is to break up the snow and ice, cover the driveway with tarps and hope the sun will melt it dry under the tarps.)

The rest of the day was spent mounting the wall panels that were moved up to the house. Here's a view of the crew installing the short wall behind the office space.


While the installers worked on the SIPs, and with the help of our grandson Nicholas, I continued placing and tacking the panels into place.


The only upside of the truck-on-the-slippery-driveway fiasco was that we were no longer under extreme time pressure to get all the under-the-SIPs panels in place. Obviously the truck did not go back for the second load so the roof would not be finished this week.

We finished the roof paneling installation Saturday and began covering the panels with plastic in expectation of the snow and rain predicted for next week. Our installers cannot come back until at least Thursday, and more snow is predicted for that day, too, so we don't know when the job will be done. Thursday is the soonest possible, and only if the driveway is not frozen and we can get a trailer in to the house.

With most of the exterior walls now in place, after getting all the plastic up tomorrow, and if there isn't enough wind to whip off the plastic, I'm hoping to get some interior work started.

Bye for now.

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Bummer!

For about a month, the installation of our SIP panels was scheduled for this Friday and Saturday, the 7th and 8th of January. Last week I called the installers to verify that we were still on for those dates and got a "Yes."

I then called the manufacturer to assure them the SIP panels would be picked up on the 7th, the truckers to verify we were still on their schedule, and the crane company to be sure we could unload and lift the panels into place. Everyone was on the same page.

My plan was to use this week to remove the tarps and put up the paneling that will show above the rafters and under the SIPs. (See post showing panelling.) The weather forcast was good - either clear, or well below freezing, so any precipitation would be snow, not rain.

Monday morning we got a call saying the installers could not be here this week and they had to put us off until the 14th and 15th!

What could we do? Nothing! Too late to schedule anyone else, if there even is anyone else nearby with the experience (and availability) to install the SIPs. I called the other three participants in the venture - manufacturer, trucker and crane operator - and verified that a week later would work for their schedules. Fortunately they all said it would.

So, instead of getting ready for the SIPs this week, I am using the week to remove the tarps and spread them on the ground so they might warm up a tad and be more supple when they are replaced over the SIPs next weekend. Next, after the projected snow showers today and tomorrow are over, I'll start lifting and fastening the panels and hope for the best (no rain, but not too far below freezing) for the rest of next week before the panels go up.

I'll post a picture when all the panelling is in place.