Restoring The Queensland House: heritage-listed carpentry Brisbane

We have been restoring and enlarging heritage houses in Brisbane since 1975, and are sticklers for quality and historic accuracy.

Our aim, given owner’s support, is to leave no sign of recent interference on a fine old house; not always possible given the necessities of modern living, but that aim must certainly apply to roof-lines, joinery, cladding, etc., and all internal mouldings for VJ or BJ partitions, belt-rails, skirtings and scotias.

From stumps to ridge-capping we have expert knowledge and construction techniques, supplying plans for council and advice for owners.  We are hands-on carpenters and builders, working with fellow-tradesmen to complete a project, building stairs, steps, balustrades, kitchens, bathrooms as required, with particular attention to the character of the existing home.

Please refer to the second edition of ‘The Building of the Queensland House’ for useful advice regarding this type of work.

For information, contact me, Andy, at  andrewljenner@gmail.com                                                                           or Rupert, at  jennerrupert@hotmail.com 

Photos from a recent job follow……….some  serious carpentry on Queenslanders:

step stringers Qld. house

Rupert cleaning out checks in stringers with a granny’s tooth.

For an external set of steps to a one-off design, with a particular going and rise, using massive iron-bark, it takes very little extra time and expense to work on-site, where the measurements are!

 

newell, landing and stringer, Qld house

Finished stringer in position on landing, rot-treated, painted, and showing rebates for treads and risers, and hole for 18mm step-bolt.

All external timber is coated with copper napthenate and oil-primed, including all cuts, rebates and joints, prior to assembly.  Unfortunately, using lead paint in joints and housings is illegal, though the best protector of timber. Copper is next best available.

step landing Qld. house

Detail of step landing frame.

Using a traditional technique to build the landing is pretty, and very strong, and the new CCA-treated stumps are foolproof.

steps Qld. house

Bottom flight in position, strained to landing.

There is a trick to making external steps with risers: the treads have a slope of 2mm down from front to back, for security of use, and a 5mm gap between the back of the tread and the riser to drain off rainwater.  Seldom seen but necessary.

Qld. house steps

Steps with risers, newels and banisters

steps Qld house

Steps and balustrades in progress.

Balustrades are built as separate units; the ends of the rails slot into rectangular hardwood pegs set into the posts. There are no nails, screws or bolts into the posts, a regular cause of rot.  With a bit of effort and a lever-bar, a section of balustrade may thus be removed to hoist in a grand piano.

Qld veranda detail

Detail of veranda deck construction, joists checked into diagonal bearer.

All deck framing is CCA treated, and joints with copper napthenate.  Trip-L-grips, where not seen, are an irreplaceable fix, though not kosher, and oversize sections take out the bounce.  A veranda must be safe and secure.

Veranda bearer, Qld house

Bearer and joists prior to new roof.

 

Post, Qld. veranda

Detail of  veranda post, showing rebate and double joist to take edge-board. (inside)

Edge-boards, painted with the balustrades, take the weather well, unlike the projecting end grain of the decking, which deteriorates very quickly. The edge-boards slot neatly into the rebates in the posts, covering the top of the fascia, and sheltering all susceptible timber from sun and rain.

Qld veranda construction

Finished veranda, showing exposed rafters, purlins and hip, simple balustrade, edge-board and deck.

Well, not quite finished: the brackets and capitals for the posts have yet to be chosen.  The purlins, in the old style, are checked-in flush with the tops of the rafters and hip, which have a broad section taken off the lower arris. This construction was designed by the owners to be seen, not covered. If you look carefully, the near-left post and section of un-painted head are all that is remaining of the original small veranda, for forensic sake: absolutely every other part is new.

Warning: Over the years we notice relatively new external carpentry has rotted to a horrifying extent, causing great worry and cost to owners. Why this is so is due to a few causes. From the time of building, a Queensland house would survive at least 50 years without damage, why not now?                                                                                      1) Inferior timber (sapwood, ‘treated’ pine, blackbutt, etc) used                                      2) No permanent rot-proofing used in joints (lead or arsenic-based oil paint)              3) Water-based paint applied at any stage to external timber                                No.3 is the worst offender, despite advice to the contrary from painters.  100-year-old cladding exposed to the elements will start decaying from the day it is coated with plastic paint; moisture that has penetrated can not dry out, causing  fungal attack.  Take note, painters. Oil-based paint or no paint is the rule.  Yes, modern plastic paints are excellent, and superior, but never on exposed timber. What is the point of installing expensive external carpentry and joinery if it is to be ruined by the misguided application of plastic paint?

Here are some more work-photos of jobs both heritage and contemporary around Brisbane, thanks to considerate owners who want the best in building practice for their beautiful Queensland houses.  Andy and Rupert have constructed all the new carpentry and building that follows……….

 

tie-down bolts

Tie-down bolts on old-to-new construction

repairs to lych-gate

Repairs to lych-gate

restructuring

Some re-structuring here……..

carpentry

during…………

carpentry

Completed, not painted yet to match existing. Click on and you can see the detail on the new gable.

andrew l jenner

Andy at the bench, with very clean Volleys. Do carpenters have benches any more?

gazebo

New gazebo

Building the gazebo was fun, using very large sections of cypress pine for all construction; cypress is a rather neglected timber, however, it is harvested from our native self-generating forests, and has many excellent properties: it is virtually rot- and termite-proof, resisting all weathering-decay.  It needs no painting or preserving with poisons, and has the most beautiful smell.  We try to use it for all exposed situations where finish and strength are a secondary consideration, but it will outlast all other timbers.

carpentry

Whole rear of Queenslander extended, with concertina doors and large inside-outside deck.

The frame for the external part of the deck is all Queensland cypress, from Womble Bank.

deckink

Multi-level decking.

steelwork

Steelwork on a non-heritage job; we do all our own on-site welding.

steelwork

More steel construction.

An hour with the welder is worth two day’s carpentry; there’s the rub. It ain’t pretty but it’s quick and strong.

decking

Rupert fixing a gun-barrel deck; notice the new posts, joists and edge-board, rescuing a previous disaster.

It's not all work; Andy and electrician mate Mick Hoelscher.

It’s not all work; Andy and electrician mate Mick Hoelscher.

We rely on the other trades in our projects; many are now old friends with invaluable knowledge and reliability.  Our trust in their work makes life easy

work

Pondering the lifting of an unwieldy length of flashing; we fix all our corro, but draw the line at roof-tiles and slate. Rupert, Andy, and Kevin.

balustrade

Retro balustrade and steps.

roof

New roof and onlooker.

repairs

Tricky repairs to inaccessible bay roof.

Here are some illustrations from the second edition of ‘The Building of the Queensland House’, available from many independent bookshops. Google the title for details.                                                                                                                              John Braben is the artist; his drawings show carpenters at work on Queenslanders over 100 years ago, when the carpentry trade was a real craft, a craft Rupert and I continue to this day.

playing a saw

His Master’s Saw.

vj ceiling

Secret-nailing a VJ ceiling.

propeller wedges

Chopping propeller wedges.

auger work

Boring out the housing on a newel-post with a fettler’s auger.

the artist John Braben

The Artist, John Braben.

John has a list of artistic credits as long as your arm, and in ‘The Building of the Queensland House’ he has many more fine drawings of early Brisbane carpentry, including the landscape of Red Hill which wraps the cover.

Veranda post detail

Veranda post detail

25th June 2014  Rupert and I have decided to do a letter-box drop locally, targetting those beautiful old Queensland houses  that are missing all the intricate veranda detail that makes them so attractive; this is what we’re saying…………

There are so many beautifully preserved old Queenslanders on our streets, except, that is, for the finishing of the veranda.  I don’t know why this is so. Can the owners a) not want it, b) not afford it, c) not realise it is missing, or d) not care?

Bracket for double post

Bracket for double post

When the house next door is immaculate in its historic finery, it is hard to believe the lack is deliberate.  Anyway, we have been gently pointing out in our unsolicited junk trash mail that the staggeringly fine houses in question are missing their vital post brackets and capitals, the replacement of which would increase the value a thousandfold, and be the envy of the neighbourhood……….to no avail so far, but we’re hoping for a job or two for the effort.

Seriously, once the veranda decorations are applied, it does make a huge difference to the aspect of the facade.  There are many styles of many eras to choose from; it would be a mistake to put 1890 brackets on a 1930 house, for example, but the original builders would never have left off those details.

We are particular about all replacement carpentry and joinery in heritage houses.  There are important points to be aware of, even with a simple fixture like a post bracket…..             1) Brackets must be cut ‘on the bias’, the grain running diagonally.                                        2) The finished piece must be treated all round with CCA or copper napthenate.                  3)  Oil primers and paints only must be used.                                                                          4)  The brackets should be painted the same (light) colour as the posts and the capital mouldings.

Some brackets

Some brackets, and their position relative to the work.

We have good reasons for all the above, even no. 4.  Brackets are often seen painted a dark colour, even charcoal-grey. May as well not have them, being invisible.  The post fixtures represent a form of classic column, being an intrinsic part of the post, and must therefore be painted as one.  You wouldn’t paint the spokes of a wheel in different colours.

Brackets drawn from Brisbane houses 1880-1930

More Brackets drawn from Brisbane houses 1880-1930.

Many of these brackets were popular in different periods. The two  similar patterns on the left of the top and middle rows were common over a 40-year span.  As fashions changed, styles became more simple until, in the 1940s these brackets were replaced by very plain curved or angular sweeps across the veranda-head from post to post.

As a footnote, and supporting other blogs concerning the Queensland house, it must be apparent  that the state has been losing its heritage constantly over the last forty-odd years as zoning regulations literally clear the way for multiple-dwelling development. 

             Whole inner-suburb blocks in Brisbane now have but a few of the original houses, and I use the word ‘original’ explicitly, because, in every case, the houses being demolished were and are the very first to be built on their sites. Historic documents show open paddocks and bush where no previous architecture has ever existed. 

           The Queensland house was a pioneering project, and is now part of our history.  Local planning treats this invaluable heritage as ‘slum-clearance’ with the crass bravado of third-world gluttony for the New.  The only safeguard for our indigenous domestic houses lies with the householders themselves. 

              It is essential, if our towns and cities wish to retain any last semblance of the historic credentials of the pioneer settlers, that the fortunate present owners  recognise the treasure they possess.  Each stump, each vee-joint board, each piece of hoop-pine or spotty-gum tongue-and-groove flooring, was cut from the surrounding scrub, processed in a bush sawmill and machine shop, and assembled by expert carpenters who were themselves New Chums.  To treat these houses with disrespect is a crime and an insult to the battlers who created our communities.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Building of The Queensland House

The Building of the Queensland HouseThe Building of the Queensland House: a carpentry history of the Queenslander.

Above is the cover, illustrated and designed by John Braben, of the book, and my first blog, which gives me the opportunity of offering some information.
As the title explains, the book is a practical guide to the classic domestic architecture of the state of Queensland, the north-east chunk of Australia. It is not a pretty assembly of photogenic cupolas in garden settings, but a hands-on day-to-day diary of the blokes and their trade, cuts, bruises, falls and all. The specific type of house in question was being built from approximately 1880 to 1920, give or take a few years: this era defines the style.

No new Queenslanders, and fewer originals.
The shame is that, not only was the book not written seventy years ago, but that it was written by me. I have never built a Queensland house; it’s possible that no-one alive has. There are poor copies, on skinny steel posts, with rooms lacking proper height, but no proper Queenslanders.  I have built every part, but not the whole, if that makes sense. The shame is that even now the character of the old suburbs is degrading as more and more old places are either demolished or used as stage-sets for outrageous ‘statements’ in steel and glass. A French, German or English suburb of typically indigenous architecture would be preserved to the last nail.

Queensland without its weatherboard cottages would be the bland featureless anonymity of the new housing estates.  Have you seen the number of  traditional Queensland houses legally demolished every year as a result of zoning decisions made decades ago?  Each unit block occupies land pioneered by the early carpenters, the builders of our original domestic architecture.  In any other country this heritage would be treasured rather than trashed for the slums of the future.

So the book shines a light on the work and materials that go into The Building of the Queensland House, in the hope that those who love the wood-and-corro cottages are not in the minority. There are three parts; the historic setting of the building site a hundred years ago, the carpentry and construction details necessary for accurate restoration, and much advice on enlarging a small cottage to a grand design without wrecking the neighbourhood.

Below:  me, Andy, feeling sore……
Andy Jenner

John has many fine illustrations throughout: the full cover above, for example, shows a bullock-team delivering the stumps to the site in the Brisbane suburb of Red Hill, around 1900, with the scaffolding of the future St Brigit’s church in the background. Dozens of construction-drawings and sections spatter the text, and pages of photographs of all the tools of the trade show what went into the chippies’ kit, box, and bast. Stories and mishaps of the trade, pathetic jokes and instructions on avoiding injury add some Vegemite to the dry bread of scarfs, mortises and rebates.

To my surprise and pleasure, the book is nearly sold out, thanks to the support of local booksellers like Black Cat in Paddington, the BookBank in Toowong, and the unlikely but excellent Wooloongabba Antiques Centre. An attack of hubris has pushed me, for better or worse, to a Second Edition, which if successful will earn me a few dollars a copy, rather than the $1.50 loss that I nevertheless consider worthwhile for the fun of being a Norther. Or, a garage full of expensive wood-pulp. The second edition, to help sales, will be called ‘Wood: fifty shades of brown’.
The books are available from;

The BookBank, Toowong, 07 3870 0050……..Sad note: closed.  Hopefully to re-open at a new location.
Wooloongabba Antique Centre 07 3392 1114
Paddington Antique Centre 3369 8088
New Farm Editions, 07 3254 2122
River Bend, Bulimba 07 3899 8555  has one copy which they can neither find nor, obviously, sell.  Not available from here, but you could try.
Avid Reader, West End 07 3846 3422
Folio, Brisbane City 07 3221 1368
Timber Qld. Fortitude Valley, 073358 7906
New Farm Editions, 07 3254 2122
Books of Buderim, 07 5445 1625
Nook and Cranny, Goondiwindi, 07 4671 5690
Berkelouws, Eumundi, 07 5442 8366
The Station Store, Longreach, 07 4658 2006
The Queensland Museum Shop, Brisbane, 07 3840 7729                                         Mary Who,Townsville,07 4771 3824
Maleny Bookshop, 07 5494 3666
Ideology, Banyo, 0402 511 342
The State Library of Queensland Shop, 07 3840                                                                The Restoration Station Waterworks Road Ashgrove 3366 5855                                 Paddington Hardware

 

Plane             Here are some illustrations from the book, a few: there are very many drawings, plans, elevations, sections and photographs from life and from hundred-year-old books dealing with carpentry and allied business.

(MYSTERIOUSLY, THESE ILLUSTRATIONS HAVE DISAPPEARED FROM THE BLOG:  WHY?)

Since the above info, and the extended list of kind booksellers, the second edition is now available and trickling out into the world.

The new book has an extra chapter on ‘Maintenance’, more illustrations, additions, and excellent drawings by John Braben.  Most of the embarrassing typos are expunged, though inevitably new ones appear. Bugger.

John Braben

John Braben, the artist-illustrator

When I held the new edition, I was puzzled by the fact that despite all the extra pages the book was exactly the same thickness as the first, with the same heavy quality stock used: the reason, thinner paper.  A weightier book, though, by 40 grams or so. Same price.

The printer is local, not overseas: Clark & Mackay in Rocklea, Brisbane, who did wonders with my typesetting and produced the second edition, from start to finish, in a fortnight. I believe in supporting Queensland independent businesses, which is why the book is only available from shops.

 

The bookshops listed above have been very kind to the book, promoting and displaying it where possible. Some have featured ‘meet the author’ events which I find scary but good fun; interesting people turn up with insightful queries, and knowledge is gained all round.
My pallet-loads of the second edition are slowly dwindling as a steady flow stocks shelves around Queensland; as yet no shop in the other states has chanced to sell this admittedly parochial  work, but please call me on 0427 42 43 40 if you’re interested.

Update June 2014

The independent bookshops above have been very loyal, with regular orders coming through.  The 2nd edition is half sold and my printing costs have been well covered. Sales are never going to be more than pocket-money, but here’s my problem: there is no slowing-down of orders as I expected, neither is there an encouraging surge in popularity, so, when this printing runs out, do I go to the great expense of a 3rd edition?  Can I afford it?

A 3rd print would be fun, because there’s more information accumulated that I must include, and more essential Braben illustrations.  Could I afford to do it, and if done, would the small-but-steady sales continue?  Or would I be stuck with a very expensive pile of books?  And a small run is not the answer, because the cost is very high; the more, the cheaper.  An acceleration of sales would give me the green light!

This I suppose is the quandary of the publishing industry, in miniature, for which I have great sympathy.

It is gratifying to get feedback from interesting and unexpected sources. Uni students, to whom the book has relevance in their course, ditto journalism students, young carpenters finding info non-existent in the current trade, bookshops tell me of overseas requests, particularly from Black  Cat in Paddington, Brisbane.  There has been interest from architects who have been most respectful to a lowly chippy. SAD NOTE to the foregoing: Black Cat has now closed, beaten by the congestion and lack of parking.   It’s ironic that the growing popularity of the Paddo main drag has actually resulted in the closure of many shops, and if you’re on a mission to get a book for a present, no chance, it’s chokka.

But new outlets appear, and Jimmy Poulos from the magnificent Restoration Station on Waterworks Rd in Ashgrove now stocks the book, though the proprietor himself is thoroughly expert in Queensland House architecture.

I’m answering my own questions here; there should be a 3rd print!

May 2015  Well the 2nd edition is getting near the end; the last boxes on the last pallet are dwindling. Though another, enlarged edition would be great to publish, the small but consistent sales mean boxes of books occupy space for months and months, and every delivery is usually ten or so books, occasionally a box.  If the orders would stop I’d feel resigned to no new edition, but they don’t stop! And the constant dripping is painful!

What to do?  It’s still a quandary. Well, since writing this, I had to make a decision.

Update October 2015

In the last couple of months something has happened, and the remaining books have been selling at record speed: I have no idea why.   So a third edition is ready for printing, despite the huge cost.  It takes an awful number of sales before I break even, that’s the problem.  Eventually I make a quid, but that seems to get lost in the bills that pile up in the mail: a lump sum is useful, eh.

In a way I’m glad, because there is a heap of stuff missing from the previous editions that really needed to go in. (The entire chapter on ‘Steps’ is re-written, plus more info, illustrations and drawings from John) This means extra pages and cost, of course, weight and thickness too, so extra postage, but it is worthwhile.

Sadly, bookshops are still closing, but the remaining ones are hanging in and benefiting from the extra trade.  Because of its content, hardware shops are now stocking the book, which is marvellous; who’d have thought?