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Construction Photos
Last additions - jazzman
Kitchen2.jpg
KItchen view 3jazzmanOct 28, 2010
Kitchen3.jpg
Kitchen view 2The cooker hood was got cheap for 6,500 baht from Home Pro, Udon. Normal price was baht 13,000 but it was in a sale because it had been a demo on a display board in the shop. The two-ring glass cooker hob cost about 4,000 baht (if I remember rightly) from Global House, and the stainless steel double sink and drainer cost about 2,700 complete with tap (faucet), drains, and underneath plumbing pipes and U-bends.jazzmanOct 28, 2010
Kitchen4.jpg
Kitchen view 1We keep adding bits to this kitchen and it's still not complete. A breakfast bar still has to be built from the left hand side near the fridge to halfway across the archway. And the fridge will be replaced with a side-by-side. Cost: there is about 65,000 baht's worth of KITZCHO?® units. The solid granite counter tops cost about 18,000 baht including installation. jazzmanOct 28, 2010
sloping.JPG
wall 5Then it fell over. One night of rain was enough. This wall will be rebuilt using correct engineering and correct drainage. Another 40 trucks of dirt will be needed to top up the infill that was washed away. Probable total cost: around 250,000 baht.jazzmanJan 29, 2010
fallen_1.jpg
wall 4Wet dirt is a viscous mass far heavier even than the water in a swimming pool, and exerts even more pressure on the surrounding walls.
A rogue bnuilder charged about 180,000 baht for this wall.
1 commentsjazzmanJan 29, 2010
fallen_2.jpg
wall 3If a perimeter wall is to be used for retaining fill dirt, it needs some careful consideration. This wall is (was) 100 x 20 for 1 metre of in-fill.
Think about the 20 cm thick, steel reinforced walls of your tiny 4 x 8 swimming pool...
jazzmanJan 29, 2010
fallen_4.JPG
wall 2It's not just for keeping thieves out, and your kids, rabbits, and dogs in either.jazzmanJan 29, 2010
fallen_5.jpg
Wall 1A perimeter wall might not just be for decoration.jazzmanJan 29, 2010
Consumer_Unit~0.JPG
Mini consumer unit.Used in the motel. See next pic for etails.jazzmanMar 20, 2009
MCBs.JPG
Mini consumer unit: close up.Note the amperages: mainbreaker 32A, Lighting & fans 10A, sockets and shower units 20A.jazzmanMar 20, 2009
bathroom_tiles.JPG
Bathroom wall tiles.Been trying for several days to get cheap tiles, but the prices seem to have gone up considerably since I built my house. I really wanted white, but I was not prepared to pay 160 baht / m2 or more for the cheapest plain white tiles I could find. I was able to negotiate 123 baht / m2 for 54 m2 of these very light green ones.
It is not necessary to render the walls first.
jazzmanMar 20, 2009
Consumer_Unit.JPG
Consumer unitsEach room has its own mini consumer unit with a 32A 2-pole main breaker, a 10A and a 20A MCB. The units cost 500 baht each, fully equipped.
Doing it like this will ensure that if a guest overloads a circuit in the room, only the room breaker(s) will trip and not leave all the rooms in the dark.
The entire building will have a larger consumer unit with an RCCB - of course.
For more details of this and other consumer units, see the Electrical Fittings album.
jazzmanMar 20, 2009
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