garryn Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 I've not noticed this cottage before but its sinking quite badly. The thatched roof looks like it's quite new. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwanR Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 Where is this one please? Reminds me of something I saw when we were out a couple of weeks ago but I thought I was seeing things. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Meantime Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 4 minutes ago, SwanR said: Where is this one please? Reminds me of something I saw when we were out a couple of weeks ago but I thought I was seeing things. I was wondering that. It looks familiar. Judging by the danger keep out signs, it's due for some remedial work. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorfolkNog Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 Horning possibly? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwanR Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 34 minutes ago, NorfolkNog said: Horning possibly? That’s what I was wondering as I’m sure that’s where we were. We didn’t get down to Wroxham on our recent trip. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Seagypsy Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 Horning some where as you come to Horning from Wroxham direction I think Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vaughan Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 At a guess, I would say that is down the bottom of Marsh Rd in Hoveton, near where the Bure Court used to be. Most of the houses and bungalows around there are constantly sinking into the marsh and have been jacked up again several times during their lives! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chelsea14Ian Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 I think it's also Hoveton.Where ever it is hope it can be fixed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
marshman Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 Most of the wooden ones don't have proper foundations so as Vaughan has suggested some work with jacks may sort out the problem - to pile it properly might be the case of the never ending pile driving story in a bog!!! 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
garryn Posted March 31, 2019 Author Share Posted March 31, 2019 It is in Horning getting towards Grebe Island coming from Wroxham. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
garryn Posted March 31, 2019 Author Share Posted March 31, 2019 This shows it much clearer from the river. It's going to take a lot of work to Jack it back up level Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wyndham Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 Here's one we took. It's between Southgates and The Ferry Inn. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NeilB Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 This used to be a holiday let, about 40 years ago though as I was about 6 or 7 !! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Seagypsy Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 6 minutes ago, Wyndham said: Here's one we took. It's between Southgates and The Ferry Inn. That's the one we saw it 2wks ago got position wrong knew it was Horning Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Smoggy Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 It's a houseboat badly in need of a pumpout.....More beer at the other end should sort it! A lot of the houses in the fens are built on rafts instead of normal foundations and tend to subside, if they were on foundations they would just fall apart very soon, don't know if this is the same issue. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
misswhiplash76 Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 this is heron cottage was used as holiday let Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
riverman Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 It's not subsidence. I heard about this the other week from a local builder. Apparently one side was steel piled the other year but the other wasn't. The old timber side just gave way all of a sudden and kind of concettinaed in on itself, with by all accounts with an almighty bang. Luckily nobody was inside. Apparently the thatch is very recent and there are plans to remove and save it. I would imagine it will be a pull down and start again job. I've jacked up houses, that one has gone down so far I can't see it being cost effective. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteveO Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 Definitely in Horning. I heard that there was a grand piano in it at the time. May have been at the end which sank. if not, I wouldn't mind betting that it is now. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Meantime Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 I remember watching the piling go in for the foundations of the new shop and apartments at The WRC. They would pile a steel tube almost level, then weld another on top and pile again. I asked at the time how deep they go. We just keep adding more tubes until we hit something solid was the answer! Some of the piles had at least 9 or 10 lengths added. Mind you it has been there best part of 15 years and it still looks level to my untrained eye! Edited to add that off course the "new shop" is no more, it is now another apartment. The shop having moved to what used to be part of The Waveney Inn. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JennyMorgan Posted March 31, 2019 Share Posted March 31, 2019 13 minutes ago, EastCoastIPA said: I remember watching the piling go in for the foundations of the new shop and apartments at The WRC. They would pile a steel tube almost level, then weld another on top and pile again. I asked at the time how deep they go. We just keep adding more tubes until we hit something solid was the answer! Some of the piles had at least 9 or 10 lengths added. Mind you it has been there best part of 15 years and it still looks level to my untrained eye! Edited to add that off course the "new shop" is no more, it is now another apartment. The shop having moved to what used to be part of The Waveney Inn. When I part owned the WRC the Environment Agency or whatever they were called back in the late seventies put in some test bores near where the 'new' shop was to be built. Forty to fifty feet before there was any support, four hundred feet before they hit anything really solid! At forty feet they retrieved the skeleton of an 'equus-equus', a small horse if I remember correctly. I offered it to the Castle Museum at Norwich but apparently they are quite common so they didn't want it. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheQ Posted April 1, 2019 Share Posted April 1, 2019 When the block of terraced houses was built on the old Southgates yard, just up river from Horning Sailing club, they test piled and hit solid at 25ft, when it came to build the block, some of the piles went down 90ft+ Meanwhile the Sailing club is slowly subsiding itself, the end nearest the flag pole is several inches lower than the rest of the building. About 5 years ago the club were told that the current building has less than 10 years life left. The Club has been busy trying to increase the piggy bank and get things organised ever since. The new building will have to be very different because BA has said they will not permit new portacabins. It will have to be a piled proper building not a group of porta cabins sitting on railway sleepers.. So it will be expensive... 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JennyMorgan Posted April 1, 2019 Share Posted April 1, 2019 Q, a floating platform might be cheaper. Either floating on water or on the marsh. In practical terms deep piled foundations are seemingly a thing of the past in such situations. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheQ Posted April 1, 2019 Share Posted April 1, 2019 I'm not actually involved with the decisions on how the building will be built but I'm sure they will go into all options. The big pile next door to the club and the little boat house were built not that long ago with some very large piles... Back in the early 1970s I was living in my parents Married quarter on Benbecula which were built on the bottom of an old sea loch / peat bog. The row across from us was still under construction. They dug a deep trench around the foundation line filled it with concrete, Dug out the peat from the middle, which was refilling with water rapidly, Stuck a pipe in and kept the pump running emptying the water, back filling the hole with large ballast. Capped the lot with concrete, pump still running, Removed pipe in a hurry and capped the hole. So the married quarters were floating on their own open bottom hull of concrete.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Poppy Posted April 1, 2019 Share Posted April 1, 2019 42 minutes ago, TheQ said: I'm not actually involved with the decisions on how the building will be built but I'm sure they will go into all options. The big pile next door to the club and the little boat house were built not that long ago with some very large piles... Whatever is chosen, I hope it's nothing like 'the big pile' - or monstrosity - next door. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheQ Posted April 1, 2019 Share Posted April 1, 2019 The club doesn't have the 1/2 million or more that cost... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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