Monday, 29 March 2010

Industrial downpipes and a summer of downpours.

PVC pipe - it's as ubiquitous as it is icky. And let's not start on the toxicity. Thankfully though, there is an alternative: the macho yet sensuous spirals of galvanised industrial downpipe.





































Which brings me to a rule of thumb for the thinking owner-builder. Divert your attention from the readily available (and usually ho-hum) range of domestic building supplies, and go browsing amongst their commercial (and usually sexier) counterparts.
That said, straying from off-the-shelf at Bunnings to other aisles less travelled often means a good deal of fiddling, adapting and modifying - or even fabricating from scratch. But then, that's been the story of this project from day one - and just the sort of problem-solving in which Phil excels (indeed, revels, despite his rumblings). In this case, there was a bit of head-scratching over brackets. He's such a perfectionist: must be Swiss DNA in there somewhere.






















Then it was time for attaching it all to the building and the usual monkey business - scrambling up and down ladders and hanging off bits of framework - that I'd much rather he retired from. But in the end it all looked amazing - as always.






















And now, after nearly five years (yes, five) of sitting bored and idle, our big fat stainless steel tanks are full to cascading - thanks to another summer of hammering downpours. And we're sitting pretty with over 75,000 litres of rainwater, and a bad case of eco-smugness.

4 comments:

Grand Purl Baa said...

Nice pipes Phil.

Stafford Ray said...

I blundered onto your blog and will refer back to your paint and floor covering revelations, but was immediately intrigued by the house itself. I guess you described its construction in an ancient blog, but it appears to be relocatable, with a steel chassis and adjustable supports? Bit hard to move from its hillside location, but did it come there on a truck?

Wendy Hincks Ward said...

Thanks for your interest Stafford. If you click on "house" in the topics cloud in the right sidebar, you'll find all my posts on the house construction from almost day one.
And if you click on that Flickr widget, you'll see all the photos.
... And if that's not enough - Phil has more about the house and his other projects at philwarddesign.com.
But no, it is not relocatable. It was designed and built by Phil from the ground up - just like a huge meccano set.
It's been a labour of love of over five years!

Kathy said...

Ceci n'est pas une pipe - THAT's a pipe! Well done you two as usual!