Posts Tagged ‘front gable’

Fitting the first new Purlin

Saturday, August 11th, 2007

The first purlin was relatively easy to fit because we could work off the mezzanine floor below.  We had to remove a lot of stone from the front gable as it was a rectangular purlin, the original purlin had been a smaller square one.

The first purlin is installed in the front gable wall

The first purlin is installed in the front gable wall

The other end of the purlin is positioned inside the first a frame, it rests on a wooden insert which is secured with high tensile steel threaded bar and timber connectors.

The purlin is secured in the first a-frame.

The purlin is secured in the first a-frame.

Because of the distance between both gables was approximately 10m, and thickness of the gable walls was over 0.5 metres, we had to use 2 perlins on each side of the roof each one was 5.5 metres long.    It was harder to fit the purlins at the back of the barn because we were working off scaffolding and we did not have enough of it! Anyway when all the purlins were fitted they almost joined in the right places!

The front and rear purlins almost meet in the correct place. (We forgot to allow for the curvature of the earth!)

The front and rear purlins almost meet in the correct place. (We forgot to allow for the curvature of the earth!)

Fixing the front gable

Thursday, May 24th, 2007

The front of the barn roof collapsed in strong winds in autumn of 2005. I spent most of 2006 cleaning out the inside of the barn and trying to protect the exposed walls from the weather, with hindsight I should have just started to fit a replacement roof in 2006.

The front gable leans out towards the top slightly, but it looks like it has had this lean for years, i didn’t want to take the wall down until I found a straight bit because I thought that would probably result in demolishing the whole barn and starting again, something that I was not prepared to do.

The front gable had been exposed to the elements for some time by the time we started work on it in May 2007

The front gable had been exposed to the elements for some time by the time we started work on it in May 2007

One corner of the front gable wall had been recently rebuilt and looked square, the other side was joined onto an adjoining property. The top of the wall was crumbling because of exposure to the weather.

We constructed a triangular frame from 4×2 and held it up against the front gable to try and figure out the angles of the roof. The side of the barn that had been rebuilt seemed to have a slightly different pitch to the original roof. It seemed easier to use these angles rather than to modify the gable any more than was necessary. We constructed a gable ladder out of 4×2 and cleaned all the loose rubble of the top of the gable before concreting it in place.

Gable ladder concreted to top of gable

Gable ladder concreted to top of gable