Sunday 28 October 2012

Removing and rebuilding hemp walls

During our absence from the building site for almost three weeks there was a severe storm and a large branch from a neighbour's gum tree fell onto the fence and into our yard. The fence was dented, but thankfully it missed the house - one of the reasons we deliberately did not locate the house under the gum trees. The storm also moved the hardwood pallets off the plastic they were holding down covering the pallets of binder. The pallet fell into the hemp wall but hardly damaged the wall, leaving only a 3mm deep line where it hit the wall.

Fallen tree branch and dented fence
The walls of the drier mixes we had done had been left to dry for three weeks, but were very soft and crumbly. Further inspection showed that the dryer mix had not solved the problems of the hemp wall pulling away from the timber frame around the doorways or the cracking. The dryer mix had both vertical and small horizontal cracks, however there was no cracking between rises, showing that wetting down a bit more between rises made a difference. The problem with the dryer mix was that it appeared that it had not bound together properly, when you ran a hand across it, in parts, the wall just crumbled away. The top of the window sill was also loose and crumbled when touched. This was in contrast to the wetter mix that had only been done the week before which was solid and did not crumble at all. Some parts of the dryer mix wall were more solid than others, but the mix where we had used 10 litres rather than 9 litres of water was more solid and much less crumbly than the 9 litre mix, although it was still weather than the wetter mixes we had done.

Video providing a comparison of the walls.

Horizontal crack mid rise in dryer mix
Vertical crack in dryer mix
Vertical crack in wetter mix
Marks showing where the wall has crumbled when rubbed
Worried that the render would not be sufficient to hold together the crumbly walls with out cracking we decided to demolish the walls we did with the dryer mix and redo them with a wetter mix. The ease with which the walls were able to be removed confirmed that we made the right decision to demolish them. It was also very obvious when we got the the walls that had been made with the wetter mix, they were hard and we could not easily remove them by hand.

Wall removal
Wall material taken out
 It had taken one day, 17 mixes, to do the dryer walls. It took half a day to remove the section and another day to rebuild them, and with the extra half a day we had we did the next rise in the main bathroom. This time we used an in between mix of one and a third buckets of water. Not as wet as our previous mix of one and a half buckets, but wetter that the too dry one bucket mix. This time we also made sure that we sufficiently wet down the joint between the rises. We used a child's watering can.

Kitchen wall redone
Wall solid even when form work just removed
New walls done too
 I followed Rodney Gregg's recommendation and got some washers used to attach Styrofoam and used these to put screws in to pull the wall back in where it had pulled away at the door edges. A large chain hardware store did not carry the washers, so I looked on the Internet for Styrofoam walling suppliers. Just when I thought I would have to drive a long way or get the  mail order. I found on the Internet that Culburra Beach Hardware was a distributor for Ezywall Styrofoam products, one of the accessories for which are the plastic washers I needed. So I purchased a box of 500 and have using them to pull the walls back to the studs where they have come away. It has worked a treat.

Ezy washer and screw
Hemp wall pulled in to stud
Wall pulled back in




Saturday 20 October 2012

Visit to Tasmanian Hemp House built by Rodney Gregg

A work conference in Tasmania provided me with the opportunity to visit Roger Bodley’s hemp house on the north coast of Tasmania near Wynyard. Unfortunately Roger could not be there as he was attending the 3rd International Hemp Building Symposium in Switzerland. However his builder, Rodney Gregg, kindly showed me around and gave up hours of his time to speak to me about hemp building, giving me renewed hope and confidence in our build after our recent problems.


View from the approach to Roger's house
Roger's house showing the ocean view
Roger’s house is built on a steep site with uninterrupted ocean views of Bass Strait. Hemp has been used extensively in the walls, floor and ceiling. For the floor a magnesium board was attached to the underside of the floor joists, the area between the joists filled a light hempcrete mix and the beautiful Blackwood timber floor boards attached over the top.  The magnesium board is vapour permeable, enabling this characteristic of the hempcrete to be retained. The walls of Roger’s house were, at about 350mm, almost twice as thick as in my build. They also did not have noggins to contend with, they are unnecessary in a hemp house as the hempcrete once dried will provide the necessary resistance to lateral forces (my Council would not accept this). 

Rodney and I compared our hemp building work methods, although he was working on a much larger scale that I am. In parts the walls of Roger’s house are two storey’s high. Rodney had his own scaffolding and put this up around the house, then formed up the full height of the external walls using Formboard with external stiffening timbers that Rodney usually uses for casting suspended concrete slabs.  He then formed up and poured 600mm rises on the inside. The chop of hemp he was using from the UK was much finer than the hemp I am using from Ecofibre, and finer than the hemp I used at Klara Marosszeky’s workshop (in which was a chop finer than the Ecofibre hemp). They had some issues in working out how to mix up a sufficiently large volume of hempcrete mix and ultimately used a concrete truck to mix the hempcrete. This is not a solution Rodney would use again as they had to make the mix wetter than they would have liked to enable it to tumble in the mixer and not just get stuck to the sides. They put in and tamped a 200mm thick layer of hemp at a time. Despite their layers being much thicker than mine, I am doing layers of about 50mm, in an unrendered section of wall in the garage the tamping looked even and you could not see definite lines between the layers. I suspect that this may have to do with the finer chop of the hemp allowing thicker layers to be placed and tamped. I was reassured that Roger’s finished wall did not look different to mine, except for the size of the hemp.
Close -up of unrendered wall
Unrendered "truth" wall in the garage
Fine chop of the hemp
Once the walls had been placed they used more magnesium board as a ceiling lining, leaving the bottoms of the timber I-beams exposed in the main living area, as a decorative feature. A light hempcrete mix was then placed between the roof beams, the sarking installed and the Colorbond decking style roofing material was placed on top. 

Rodney showed me the binder and render they used, all of which was imported from Europe – the binder was the UK Tradical binder, it was a very fine almost slippery lime based powder, it did not look like it had any sand in it and did use any added sand like the AHMC binder I am using. For the renders he used one type of render, done in three coats by a professional renderer on the inside and three coats each with a different product on the outside. The internal render was a very fine lime based powder and each coat was quite thin. The external render was much thicker and Roger had wanted a textured finish on the outside, so one of the external coats looked like it had little polythene beads in it, that created this finish. I can not recall the product used but it was imported from Europe. The need for a special external render on Roger’s house may have come from the absence of eaves and the driving rain and wind that would come straight off Bass Straight in bad weather. Thankfully I was there on a beautiful day.
Detail of external textured render and curves around windows
The day was sunny with cloudy patches and a gentle breeze, but the inside of the house was warm but not stuffy. It had a soft comforting feel that is hard to describe. The large rooms were not echoey but at the same time sound was not overly dulled. I could not tell whether this feeling came from the hemp walls themselves or the gentle curves in the corners of the walls and the ceiling, but it was very pleasant nonetheless.  

Main living area
Upstairs bedroom with view
I was also impressed by the use of timber in the house, the beautiful timber stairs showing the natural edge of the log, as well as the custom made Blackwood timber doors and door jambs. The timber work in Roger’s house has inspired me to make my own door jambs – I just have to source some nice timber. Roger’s house also used Aluminium framed windows. I was very happy to see this as I am also using Aluminium framed windows, whereas most other hemp houses I have seen in books and on the Internet use timber framed windows. The finishing detail on Roger’s windows was a little different to the approach I will take as his walls are thicker than mine, but I was pleased to see that the Aluminium framed windows did not look out of place.
Lots of windows facing north and the views
Curve of the house matched the curve of the slope
I asked Rodney lots of questions about construction detail and how different materials could be used in conjunction with hemp walls. Rodney generously and patiently answered all my questions and i think I will have a better house because of it. Roger’s house does not use any skirting boards and I will do likewise. I had been worried about my internal door jambs detail and how to joint the plywood I had intended to use for my internal wall linings with the renders hemp walls. Both matters were solved by switching the internal wall lining to rendered Magnesium board, so I could (try to) replicate the lovely rounded corners in Roger’s house and bring the render up to the edge of my door jams. 

Rodney also introduced me to renderers mesh and recommended that I place it in the render at any stress point, such as above the corners of doors and windows, to prevent the render cracking. I could also use it over the sections where my hemp wall had cracked to prevent any movement in the render. Rodney also provided me with a method to rectify the sections of wall that had pulled away from the stud using a large round plastic anchor disk, normally used from attaching polystyrene, and a long decking screw. I will definitely obtain the necessary materials and try this out. He also shared with me his neat method where extra keying in was required. It involved the attachment of a piece of timber shaped like a wedge with the tip cut off. This could then be attached to a stud or lintel and the hempcrete would key into the narrower end of the wedge, with the wider end holding the mix in. We also discussed parapet wall detailing and flashing – he cut a 25mm slit into the hemp wall, slipped the top of the roof over flashing into the slit, then sealed the slip with some silicon and rendered over it all.  

I am indebted to Roger for opening his house to me and Rodney for his time and sharing his experiences. It is this kind of sharing of knowledge that will support the growth of a hemp construction industry in Australia.

Thursday 11 October 2012

Mix too wet

Half way through the hemp walls it was a real blow to our confidence and morale to find out that our hemp mixes have been too wet. Correspondence with Klara from the Australian Hemp Masonry Company pointed to my cracking and pulling away cracking problems being caused by my mixes being too wet and therefore having a higher amount of shrinkage and also possibly insufficient wetting down between layers. On reflection I have noticed that I have been making wetter mixes as the days have got much hotter.

So we have reduced the amount of water in our mix to one 9 litre bucket for each mix (5.5kg hemp, 9kg binder and 8.5kg sand) with just a tiny bit more water added if the sand is really dry. With our dryer mix recipe in hand we did one days work hemping and will be more cautious and see how it goes before doing more walls. We used 9 litres of water only for these mixes and I was worried that they looked too dry as the sand did not seem to be held to the hemp and binder but looked like it was sitting on the outside, but as my partner pointed out I got it wrong the first time, so he got his way and we used 9 litres only. But just to check I made our last mix using 10 litres of water and was much happier with how the sand was bound in.

The dryer mixes looked a little different. They stuck more around the top of the mixer, but when emptied out left the inside of the mixer looking cleaner, they poured out of the buckets easier, but were not any different to tamp.

When I took the form work off these dryer sections the next day I could hear some sand fall out when I removed the formwork, and had a little bit of hemp fall out when I removed the spacers. I thought the wall was well tamped but the hemp falling out happened on a few but not all spacers, so whether it was due to insufficient tamping or too dry a mix I could not tell. To try to ensure more even wetting down, particularly when starting a new rise, where the old layer can be quite dry we have used a children's watering can. Due to other commitments we can not work on the walls for a couple of weeks, so we will see how they look when we return to site by which time they will have had a chance to dry out.
The dryer mix
My friend Martin, who helped out with the build a few weeks ago but has no background in hemp building, seemed to be able to pick the cause of my problems and commented in response to my complaint about cracks in my walls -  "They look like the shallow, narrow, non-structural cracks that you get in cement as it drys, if you mix it up a bit too wet. Isn't that what the render is for? To cover up the imperfections and hold the whole show together?" I only hope he is right about the render being able to cover up such imperfections.

Following my worries about my mix now being too dry, I turned to Klara again for advice. She said "The mix should be as dry as it can be and still clump together." But if with 9 litres of water the mix was still too dry I could add up to a quarter of a bucket of water. So after my earlier debate with my partner it appears that the mix I used with 10 litres is still within the acceptable limits. I estimate that in the old mixes I was using about 12 to 14 litres of water (as my one bucket then was about 4-5 cm from the top), so clearly that was too much water.  

We will finish the rest of the house using dryer mixes and then see what we can do about the back section with the cracks, perhaps we will do some test render patches to see if that will cover them, before we contemplate the possibility of having to pull some sections down and redo them.

Kitchen wall up to window height
Uneven layer due to noggins alternately being at differnt heights at top of previous rise
No new wall, but formwork moved up ready for the next weekend of work

Tuesday 9 October 2012

Hemp Wall Cracks and Problems

We had a long weekend ahead of us and so started with the most time consuming and difficult part, working in the section above the windows and below the roof. The section we did above the windows did not work as well as hoped. On the outside it was OK, but on the inside where the timber we had added to support the hemp was thicker, we had not left a large enough section to be able to fit our fingers in to tamp the hemp down and accordingly there was insufficient hemp coverage in these sections. We will patch them and hope that the render covers it all evenly.

Insufficient hemp coverage
A patched up section
My second issue was that as the walls have dried they have pulled away from the timber frame at the doors.  I believe that this has been exacerbated by the large number of studs next to some of the doors, up to four studs together. The high walls and large openings for the sliding doors required additional support, hence the high number of studs. I am worried that these sections where the hemp has not been able to key into the other side may crack off. I do not know if such concerns are unwarranted as these edges are bound to the rest of the wall which is keys in to each side. Interestingly at the windows where the hemp is bound into the rest of the wall at the top and bottom the same sort of pulling away has not occurred.

The worst of the pulling away sections
My third problem is a number of cracks, a number of horizontal cracks have developed mostly where two rises join together. There has sometimes been a few weeks between when rises were done, hence the older sections were much dryer. Vertical cracks have also developed on each end of the back pavilion on the shorter walls just around the corner from the long 9.6m back wall. There is one crack in almost an identical position on each of the shorter walls, but no vertical cracks in the long 9.6m wall. Traditionally in a brick wall an expansion joint would be put in a long wall to avoid cracking, but here the cracks have appeared in the shorter walls.

Horizontal crack between layers
Another horizontal crack between two layers of different dryness
Vertical crack
To cope with the pulling away at the door frames I improvised a U-shaped metal bracket out of some left over fascia brackets. The metal, being much thinner than timber restraints, was spaced to ensure that I was still able to tamp all around the bracket. Whether this will work will only be seen once the walls dry out.

Metal bracket placed where there are four studs in a row
Metal bracket inside form work, with enough space left to tamp around it
On the positive side the plumbing rough in had been completed - on the first day my plumber got back from holidays (many thanks). The kitchen wall certainly had a lot of pipes and conduit through it  - hot and cold water, gas and electricity.

Kitchen wall with lots of pipes
Holes made in form work for pipe penetrations
Predicted poor weather over the long weekend did not arrive and we did four days of hemp walling, with Tony once again helping us on the last two days. A third person made the hemp walling more than 50% faster, particularly on the low long easy runs where we quickly went through a lot of mixes. With all this effort we have now started all the walls except a few short ones beside the front door and between the glass sliding doors. To be able to do this we had to relocate two and a half of binder that were too close to the wall in the front pavilion to allow access. Almost one pallet was moved to and stacked up in the room we mix in and the other pallet was stacked extra high on top of the remaining two pallets in the front room. Storage of materials under cover of the roof, while allowing access to the walls has been an issue, solved with the hemp by using up half a bag until it was light enough for two people to lift up onto the other bags, therefore allowing us to clear the floor area quicker than if we had just used full bags.

Back wall of the back pavilion completed
Hemping around the instantaneous gas hot water system
First rise in the kitchen wall
First rise in the front pavilion