Tuesday, 10 May 2022

Can You See The Mighty A2, The Famous Roman Road, In This Picture?

 

The A2 is that big ol' road that's full of lorries waiting to get onto ferries at Dover. Three lanes, backed up for five miles, and that's on a good day. It's one of the great importing roads in this country and therefore in the world, the UK having the fifth largest economy in the world.

It was based on the Roman road from Londinium to Doverum (or whatever they called it, I'm sure Wikipedia has the proper answer). So that makes it pretty important at the London end as well.

Can you see it in this picture?

Yep. On the right. No barriers, no signs, barely any traffic and this was mid-day Thursday.

This is what the A2 looks like at Blackheath, just outside the walls of Greenwich Park.

I wonder if this happens to other famous roads in other countries?


Friday, 6 May 2022

Barking Riverside







Everyone should visit Barking Riverside by boat. The ride down goes past all the fancy skyscrapers and riverside flats of Docklands, passes the O2 at North Greenwich and then after a couple minutes more of smaller riverside flats on the south bank... you're in the wide open river with nothing higher than the flight of a seagull to your left or right. The flatlands of Essex and Kent. I'll have some pictures of that later. Barking Riverside is in the middle of nowhere, literally, and yet less than, what? five miles from Docklands?

 

Tuesday, 3 May 2022

The View Upriver From North Greenwich


This is the view from the Uber Boat heading downriver (and so looking upriver from the back) across the North Greenwich peninsula and across the Isle of Dogs, which is where most of 'Docklands' is. 

I was working in 'Docklands' when Canary Wharf was being built, and most of the buildings in this photograph were not even the dreams of developers. Where did all these buildings come from? More to the point, where do the people come from to pay the rents or mortgages (residential) or sit at desks that companies are paying rent on. 

I'm never really going to believe it's all real, no matter how many times I visit the place.


Friday, 29 April 2022

Thirteen Years of Blogging: 2009 - 2022

The first post on this blog is dated 29th April 2009.

That's thirteen years. Which is pretty good going for a personal blog.

A while ago, one of my rare commenters remarked that this blog seemed to be mostly about me getting things off my chest.

Fair comment.

I think that's why I started doing it.

I'm certainly not in it for the money.

Every now and then I wonder about being more professional about the whole thing.

Being more professional would require that I choose a subject and offer a consistent view of the world around that subject.

I would have to produce content for the clicks.

I'd start caring about views and engagement.

I'd have to do SEO (which I think is voodoo anyway) and other such stuff.

The financial and personal reward for all that would be?

Zip. Nada.

Sounds like a decision to me.

Tuesday, 26 April 2022

Moody Soho Cafe Interior Photograph

 

It's been a long time since I took photographs from inside a cafe. It's taking a while to get back into using a proper camera and not being self-conscious about it. This was one afternoon in the Caffe Nero on Old Compton Street.


Friday, 22 April 2022

Decorating Project - How To Look Like A Pro

 Get yourself one of these...



As seen on You Tube decorator videos. The big semi-circle is for scraping paint from the roller back into the paint tub, but maybe my roller was too knackered to give up the paint when I used it. Sure took long enough to wash it out.

Decorating Project - Background

It's called `building', not `precision engineering'. A conventional two-storey brick-built house is basically four brick-and-mortar walls holding up two wood rafts. Those walls were laid by hand by men who knew what they were doing, and used a spirit level frequently, but we're not talking laser levels and automated mortar-laying. My house does not have one straight line or right-angle corner in it. The rafts are made of joists running from one side wall to the other, with planks of wood nailed to them to make floors, and boards nailed to the underside of the upper raft to make ceilings. Those planks were cut straight on a machine, but laid by eye. Gaps in the front and back walls were left that were roughly the size of the window frames ordered by the builder. Add in some more-or-less square stairs, a couple of internal walls, and there's a lot of gaps, slack and empty spaces in a perfectly sound and strong house.

All that coping, skirting boards, filling plaster and other such decorating-and-finishing is to fill up or hide the gaps, make everything look neat and tidy, as well as stopping small things from falling below the floors, or, for that matter, coming up from the earth under the ground floor.

The structural load is carried by the side walls (which are solid in a terrace) and the joists, with a bit done by the front and back walls.

None of the finishing work is structurally significant.

Now that may seem obvious when it's said, but I'm not a builder or a decorator, and I was never quite clear on whether (say) tearing out skirting board would result in the collapse of the wall.

Okay. Laugh. I deserve it. It's not what I trained to do. Nor my father before me, nor either of my grandfathers.

But I'm doing some of it now. And I need to understand this stuff or I don't feel comfortable.

Why do we get cracks in plaster and between finished work? Was it badly done?

Nope. It's because you don't want precision-joints.

Some of that slop between the parts has a useful purpose.

The ground your house is built on expands when there's rain or a lot of moisture in the air, and contracts when the sun stays out for long enough to heat the ground up. That means your house moves slightly. In different directions every year.

The same temperature changes that affect the ground, also affect the materials in your house. Everything moves slightly all the time.

You move the furniture around, and that changes the load on the joists and hence the supporting walls.

Have some vigorous, errrm, married life and the load shifts around on the joists supporting the bed, and that pushes at the ceiling boards in the room below.

That's where all those hairline and other cracks in the plaster come from. If everything fitted precisely, there would be more cracks, not less, since everything would be connected to everything else.

So hairline cracks are a consequence of the features, not a bug.

That's why it's okay to plaster a hairline crack over, and / or slap a good think coat of paint on it.

By `plaster' of course, I mean Polyfilla or decorators' caulk.

Other gaps need silicone, which everyone says has some bend and flex in it, so shouldn't crack. (Instead, somewhere near the silicone will crack instead.)

Large gaps and holes need filling with foam, and then a final coat of filler for the paint.

And no, the filler or the tape will not `resist' further cracking. Any force large enough to shift a chunk of wall, ceiling or floor a fraction of a millimetre is going to laugh at a bit of adhesive tape.

And the bit where I use tape or some careful work to get a good sharp square edge on the corners and edges?

Have you seen my house?