Wednesday 26 February 2014

Things are happening

ok, so now all the old metal light boxes and conduits are out and the gaps filled up. That's on the inside.


Externally the concrete car parking out at the front of the house has gone:

First the area was cleared so the concrete cutter could actually get at the concrete.

The first cut is the deepest!!

 The excavator moves in and....





and what's more....

The engineer has visited and deemed that the verandah and footings are fine for us to build the verandah and balcony without any additional work. Woohoo!!

Monday 17 February 2014

First steps

Things are starting to happen at 16 Bond Street.
The front is being tidied:

We've gone from this







                    to this


















and from this



to this

..and wow - we have tiles



















...and action inside too...the metal electrical fittings that are rusting in the walls are being drilled out.
Starting to get exciting!!!

Sunday 16 February 2014

Getting started...nearly

The trip from Canberra to Newcastle is just a tad too long, but will be necessary quite frequently.
At least travelling by train and bus means an opportunity to do some reading, or more research on where to find necessary bits and pieces for the house!

As part of the renovation deal we have acquired a large amount of stuff –filling both double garages and taking up lots of internal space too!! BUT there’s still lots to decide on and lots to source. (There’s lots of lots there!)

If anyone has sources for anything we need, more information or wants to help out  – please get in touch!!!
…and particularly if anyone happens to know the whereabouts of the painting of the Rev. James Coutts (who started the ball rolling in the first place) or any other fittings or relevant artefacts – please let us know!

Di travelled up to Newcastle last Wednesday and met with the Project Manager on site on Thursday. It was planning time with lots of questions (and many answers) on both sides – and a long list of things to do (also on both sides).

The original plan for Coutts Sailors’ Home (G Browne, 1882) always included a wide verandah and balcony, although the building was declared open before they were actually built. We will be finishing the front of the house and reinstating the magnificent verandah and balcony first so then we will have what looks like a building rather than a building site.

There’s always more to it than meets the eye, so our first steps externally are:
  • remove the weeds and more that have overgrown the front. This way we will expose what is left of the tiles on the verandah and see if we can salvage any of them
  • remove the concrete slab that provided parking spaces rather than a front garden. That will expose the verandah structure so that the engineer can get in and assess whether any support work is needed before we move on to the next stage.
  • Source verandah columns...easier said than done. These columns need to be about 4.5 metres high and about 190mm diameter. All of the foundries that we have contacted so far fall short! There is another solution - to use the stainless steel supports which are already on site (part of the renovation deal) and find aluminium or wrought iron sheaths to surround them, so they still look the part. Finding them is not easy either, but we're still working on it.
Then we can start actually building the verandah and balcony.

While all that is happening, work will get going inside too, starting with getting a labourer to chisel/jack hammer out the original metal conduit and power points that are rusting in the walls…and then a renderer to fill all the holes!

Hopefully the next post, next week will include pictures of the action starting!!



Monday 10 February 2014

The past, the present

When the Foundation stone for Coutts sailors Home was laid on 16 March 1882, the occasion was marked with festivities. A public holiday was declared and the Great Northern Band marched down Hunter Street.





When the home was opened in September 1883 a magnificent fancy dress ball was held to commemorate the occasion.

The building was splendid.







Further additions in 1889-1890 included a colonnade some 12 feet wide facing the harbour, making it one of the most impressive buildings in Newcastle.








Over the years the building became run down to the point of dereliction.















January 31 2014: After a rather tortuous process of purchase and then moving to settlement, at last Coutts Sailors’ Home, the construction site also known as 16 Bond Street, Newcastle became the property of Alastair and Diane Kinloch.






Some people would say it is a wreck  a hopeless case, far too much work despite much of the external renovation having been done. We hear those people, but we prefer to look at it as a jewel in need of (rather a lot of) polishing, and a great project (to keep Di rather busy).


It will take time but work is about to start.