GBE Skills Gap (Opinion)
GBE > Encyclopaedia > Opinion > State of the Industry > G#41209
About:
Scope/Extract:
- These Opinion Posts have the potential to contribute to filling part of the ‘knowledge-gap’ and I am planning to ring every bit of 50 years of experience in violet construction, 40 years of specification consultancy and 24 years of green construction into its content.
- GBE Continuing Professional Development (CPD) seminars will also be created and published to support this paper and its promotion.
Skills-Gap:
- Absent or Inadequate training on:
- Competent insulation installation:
- Misleading slogan: “The more insulation the better”.
- Does not mean over compressed insulation rammed into voids.
- Apply conductivity thermal insulation at the density it was intended by the manufacturer.
- Filling all the gaps and voids as you go.
- Wrapping all the pipes as you go.
- Signing off procedure to force inspection.
- Air and Wind tightness & Vapour control installations:
- Positioning the membranes in the right order (Vapour closed construction in particular).
- Taking responsibility for sealing the holes you make.
- Negative pressure blower equipment can blow dust back at the tradesperson when they drill holes, as a reminder.
- Sealing of perimeters, laps and all penetrations, products and systems.
- Sequence of assembly: pipes, cables, grommets and membranes.
- Coordination of trades to get grommets fitted to services pipes and cables.
- Retrofitting a grommet is impossible, patching a service penetration is less successful.
- Testing regimes: when and how.
Envelop integrity:
-
- Slogan: Build tight ventilate right
- Making building deliberately airtight to control heat loss and coolth gain,
- Then deliberately purposefully ventilate to control moisture and unhealthy air build ups.
- Slogan: No Insulation without ventilation.
- PAS 2030 & 2035 campaign to avoid condensation caused by insulating without ventilation.
- Slogan: Build light insulate right solar tight:
- Green Building Encyclopaedia (GBE) and Green Building Calculator (GBC)
- Campaign to choose the correct thermal insulation materials to control summer heat gains as well as winter heat loss.
- Air, wind tightness and insulation champion:
- Site agent needs added responsibility to care about integrity.
- Advise, coordinate and guide tradesmen via toolbox talks by manufacturers or suppliers.
- Slogan: Build tight ventilate right
Wetter climate:
Construction stage moisture management
Problems:
- In the UK we are predominantly subject to south-west prevailing moisture laden winds
- South coat, west country of England, south and west Wales, western Ireland, western Scotland, Scottish isles.
- East of country is predominantly drier (as dry as Israel allegedly).
Solutions:
- Build a weatherproof enclosure and build within it.
- Sequence of working: Build structure, then weatherproof roof, complete enclosure, work on proofing, services and interiors.
External Wall insulation (EWI):
- Insulate from eaves down to DPC level to prevent wind driven rainwater entry into insulation.
- Especially tree- or plant-base materials, which when excessively wet can enable mould, rot and unhealthy conditions.
- Insulate below DPC level with protected and/or hydrophobic insulation.
- These include:
- Cellular glass wrapped in waterproof membrane.
- Cellular glass encased by hot bitumen flood coat.
- Expanded Polystyrene protected by DPM.
- Expanded Polystyrene protected by render system.
- Aerogel encased in powder coated aluminium sandwich.
Dry weather working:
- Do not start a vulnerable job unless it can be finished during a dry weather spell.
- Don’t let your building get wet especially if made of timber.
- Don’t let timber surfaces get wet and stained.
- Use a sacrificial coating on fair faced surfaces, that needs to be removed before completion.
- If you sand down the stains only then the appearance of the timber texture will be impaired locally.
- g. Eden Centre top of the quarry Visitors café, ceiling.
- BRM photo
- Choose a green builder who will adhere to these methods by default without question.
Rain sheltering temporary works.
- For violet contractor who cannot be asked.
- For wet climate sites.
- Scaffolding with roof and aprons enclosing the whole building.
- Avoiding spoiling visible fair faced materials and timber in particular.
- Spend money to save time and money repairing or replacing spoiled fair-faced timber.
- Spend money to enable continuous working during inclement weather.
- Enable wet trades to dry out.
- Prevent wet trades from getting wetter.
- Potentially reduced down time and save money.
- Do not cost cut this from the cost plan but value engineer it into the cost plan.
Care gap:
Whether its down to:
- management preventing sufficient time,
- or tight finances caused by main contractors on supply chain sub-contractors,
- or lack of skills
- or lack of manufacturers instructions
- or lack of specification
- or “I have always done it like this, why change now?”
There is often insufficient time to care:
- Constructors with all the skills but no time to care
- Self-builders with no skills but plenty of time to care
Build quality suffers under the current industry approaches.
© GBE GBC GRC GBL NGS ASWS Brian Murphy aka BrianSpecMan ****
28th November 2023 – 4th March 2024
Images:
© GBE GBC GRC GBL NGS ASWS Brian Murphy aka BrianSpecMan ****
21st September 2018 – 16th November 2023
About:
GBE Skills Gap Opinion
GBE Opinion
GBE State of the Industry
- Knowledge-Gap (Opinion) G#41163
- Current Architectural Education (Opinion) G#41163
- Absence or inadequate Architectural Education (Opinion) G#41163
- Finance Gap (Opinion) G#41199
- GBE Time-Gap (Opinion) G#41207
- Skills-Gap (this page)
- Performance-Gap
- Building Regulations Approved Documents A-Z & 7
- Durability-Gap
- I used to be a Master Builder, Architect’s don’t do that
- Universal man v One Planet Woman
Sectors
- Barriers Drivers towards more Sustainable Profitable UK Cement Industry G#182
- Barriers Drivers Sustainable Profitable UK Cement Industry G#1920 N#1771
GBE Greenwash
- GBE Greenwash (Navigation) G#734 N#756
- Polished Concrete Floors (Greenwash) G#737 N#759
- Green Cement (Greenwash) G#735 N#757
- Fibre Cement Cladding (Greenwash) G#948 N#966
GBE CPD
- I used to be a Master Builder v Architect’s don’t do that
- Universal man v One Planet Woman
- Green or Violet materials Which do you use (CPD) #G15560
- Violet (CPD) G#408 N#409
GBE Jargon Buster
- Violet (Jargon Buster) G#1583 N#1516
© GBE GBC GRC GBL NGS ASWS Brian Murphy aka BrianSpecMan ****
28th November 2023