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X-WR-CALNAME:CPD Essentials
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://cpdessentials.co.uk
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for CPD Essentials
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DTSTART:20190101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200611T090000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200611T170000
DTSTAMP:20260630T185317
CREATED:20200206T143758Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200319T120805Z
UID:8101-1591866000-1591894800@cpdessentials.co.uk
SUMMARY:Historic Building workshop\, Traditional vernacular building construction and materials\, Knightshayes\, Tiverton\, Devon - POSTPONED
DESCRIPTION:Historic Building workshop – POSTPONED\, NEW DATE TO FOLLOW\nTraditional vernacular building construction and materials\n \n\n\nDate:Thursday 11 June 2020 \nWhen: 0900 – 1700 \nWhere: Tiverton Golf Club followed by Knightshayes Court \nCost:  £125.00 plus VAT (£150.00) to include seminar proceedings\, all refreshments\, lunch\, entrance to Knightshayes and comprehensive delegate pack \nThe day’s course will consider in depth the following aspects of historic building conservation and the care and repair of the heritage. \n\nThe local pallet of historic building materials. These including brick\, stone\, flint\, timber\, thatch and tile.\nThe more prestigious materials such as decorative plasterwork and glass.\nThe methods of selection and use of materials\, identification of causes of failure and the selection of appropriate repair and conservation systems will all be considered.\n\nThe afternoon will be spent on a visit to Knightshayes Court. \nThe local pallet of traditional materials. \nThe use of stone and flint in the region was not just confined to the grand buildings and churches but was also used for a variety of ordinary domestic and vernacular buildings. Timber framing was also important in the medieval period but during the 16th century good building timber became scarce in the region. In the late medieval period the region saw some of the earliest use of brick in the country. After the 16th century brick became the most abundant local building material and was used for both the prestigious houses and the smaller domestic buildings. Water reed for thatching roofs was readily available from the reed beds of the wetland areas of the region. However for the more prestigious buildings clay tile was the preferred roofing material and again appeared quite early in the region. Glass for glazing windows became more available at the end of the 16th century though was expensive. \nCare and Repair  \nThe first important stage of the process of repair is to identify the sources which have caused the problems of decay to occur; these must be resolved before the building can be repaired.  It is also important to understand the nature and function of historic materials and the dangers of the use of modern products which may not be as flexible or vapour permeable as the original materials.  The use of inappropriate mortars can result in the rapid deterioration of historic masonry and long term structural problems. Many of the problems with historic structures are due to lack of maintenance and water ingress. The most appropriate methods of repair will be considered\, not only for aesthetic reasons\, but to ensure the correct performance and durability of the new work.  \nA brief history of Knightshayes \nThe house was built by Sir John Heathcoat Amory\, the grandson of John Heathcoat\, creator of the mechanised bobbin lace making machine and owner of a lace factory in Tiverton.\n\nThe foundation stone was laid in 1869\, but it was not until 1873 that the elaborate interior designs were completed. William Burges\, designer of Knightshayes\, had a rocky relationship with the family and was fired half way through the project\, leaving his imaginative vision incomplete.\n\nBurges was replaced by another reputable designer\, John Dibblee Crace\, who turned out to be another ill-fated choice. Much of Crace’s work was covered up by the family\, but later restored by the Trust.\nSpeaker\n\n\nKevin Stubbs BA(Hons)  DipBldgCons(AA)  IHBC   CertEd\nKevin Stubbs is a Historic Buildings Consultant and comes with a background of education\, archaeology and building conservation. He was Director of Archaeology for the Test Valley in Hampshire and later moved to Hampshire County Council to join the Historic Buildings Bureau\, where he became the Principal Buildings Conservation Officer for the County. For eleven years he acted as the Director of a Conservation Centre and now runs his own Historic Building Consultancy and Training Company. \nHe advises on the repair and maintenance of all historic structures and provides training at all levels for the building conservation industry.  This includes the development of historic building technology\, traditional materials and hands-on craft training.  Work for Local Government Authorities includes Conservation Area appraisals\, historic building condition surveys and feasibility studies.  He has provided training exercises with local communities to raise awareness of their village plans and local heritage interpretation documents and he has provided Traditional Skills Awareness Courses for a number of bodies. \nHe undertakes the Historic Analysis of buildings and produces: Statements of Significance; Method Statements; Impact Assessments and Specifications for the repair and conservation of traditional buildings. \nHe lectures for various CPD providers\, Universities and national building conservation organizations including SPAB\, RICS and the Weald and Downland Museum.  Topics include: Bricks and Mortar; Lime\, Plasters and Renders; Cob and Earth\, Timber Frame and Stone Structures and Traditional Roofing. \n\nThe day will include formal Power Point presentations\, material handling sessions and first hand observations of the building.\n\nBookings can be made below
URL:https://cpdessentials.co.uk/event/historic-building-knightshayes/
LOCATION:Tiverton Golf Club\, Post Hill\,\, Tiverton\, Devon\, EX16 4NE
CATEGORIES:Historic Buildings
ORGANIZER;CN="CPD Essentials":MAILTO:alison@cpdessentials.co.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200619T090000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200619T170000
DTSTAMP:20260630T185317
CREATED:20200206T144828Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200319T120341Z
UID:8105-1592557200-1592586000@cpdessentials.co.uk
SUMMARY:Historic Building workshop\, Traditional vernacular building construction and materials\, Shugborough Estate\, Stafford - POSTPONED
DESCRIPTION:Historic Building workshop –POSTPONED\, NEW DATE TO FOLLOW\nTraditional vernacular building construction and materials\n \n\n\nDate: 19 June 2020 \nWhen: 0900 – 1700 \nWhere: Brocton Hall Golf Club followed by Shugborough Estate \nCost:  £125.00 plus VAT (£150.00) to include seminar proceedings\, all refreshments\, lunch\, entrance to Shugbrough and comprehensive delegate pack \nThe day’s course will consider in depth the following aspects of historic building conservation and the care and repair of the heritage. \n\nThe local pallet of historic building materials. These including brick\, stone\, flint\, timber\, thatch and tile.\nThe more prestigious materials such as decorative plasterwork and glass.\nThe methods of selection and use of materials\, identification of causes of failure and the selection of appropriate repair and conservation systems will all be considered.\n\nThe afternoon will be spent on a visit to Shugborough Estate \nThe local pallet of traditional materials. \nThe use of stone and flint in the region was not just confined to the grand buildings and churches but was also used for a variety of ordinary domestic and vernacular buildings. Timber framing was also important in the medieval period but during the 16th century good building timber became scarce in the region. In the late medieval period the region saw some of the earliest use of brick in the country. After the 16th century brick became the most abundant local building material and was used for both the prestigious houses and the smaller domestic buildings. Water reed for thatching roofs was readily available from the reed beds of the wetland areas of the region. However for the more prestigious buildings clay tile was the preferred roofing material and again appeared quite early in the region. Glass for glazing windows became more available at the end of the 16th century though was expensive. \nCare and Repair  \nThe first important stage of the process of repair is to identify the sources which have caused the problems of decay to occur; these must be resolved before the building can be repaired.  It is also important to understand the nature and function of historic materials and the dangers of the use of modern products which may not be as flexible or vapour permeable as the original materials.  The use of inappropriate mortars can result in the rapid deterioration of historic masonry and long term structural problems. Many of the problems with historic structures are due to lack of maintenance and water ingress. The most appropriate methods of repair will be considered\, not only for aesthetic reasons\, but to ensure the correct performance and durability of the new work.  \nA brief history of Shugborough \nHome to the Anson family since 1624\, it was once described as ‘a perfect paradise’\nSpeaker\n\n\nKevin Stubbs BA(Hons)  DipBldgCons(AA)  IHBC   CertEd\nKevin Stubbs is a Historic Buildings Consultant and comes with a background of education\, archaeology and building conservation. He was Director of Archaeology for the Test Valley in Hampshire and later moved to Hampshire County Council to join the Historic Buildings Bureau\, where he became the Principal Buildings Conservation Officer for the County. For eleven years he acted as the Director of a Conservation Centre and now runs his own Historic Building Consultancy and Training Company. \nHe advises on the repair and maintenance of all historic structures and provides training at all levels for the building conservation industry.  This includes the development of historic building technology\, traditional materials and hands-on craft training.  Work for Local Government Authorities includes Conservation Area appraisals\, historic building condition surveys and feasibility studies.  He has provided training exercises with local communities to raise awareness of their village plans and local heritage interpretation documents and he has provided Traditional Skills Awareness Courses for a number of bodies. \nHe undertakes the Historic Analysis of buildings and produces: Statements of Significance; Method Statements; Impact Assessments and Specifications for the repair and conservation of traditional buildings. \nHe lectures for various CPD providers\, Universities and national building conservation organizations including SPAB\, RICS and the Weald and Downland Museum.  Topics include: Bricks and Mortar; Lime\, Plasters and Renders; Cob and Earth\, Timber Frame and Stone Structures and Traditional Roofing. \n\nThe day will include formal Power Point presentations\, material handling sessions and first hand observations of the building.\n\nBookings can be made below
URL:https://cpdessentials.co.uk/event/historic-building-shugborough/
LOCATION:Tiverton Golf Club\, Post Hill\,\, Tiverton\, Devon\, EX16 4NE
CATEGORIES:Historic Buildings
ORGANIZER;CN="CPD Essentials":MAILTO:alison@cpdessentials.co.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200623T160000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200623T170000
DTSTAMP:20260630T185317
CREATED:20200615T160242Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200615T164448Z
UID:9237-1592928000-1592931600@cpdessentials.co.uk
SUMMARY:WEBINAR - Historic buildings - Historic roofing
DESCRIPTION:Historic buildings – Historic Roof Coverings\, Failures and Repair\nDate: Tuesday 23 June \nTime: 1600 – 1700 \nPrice: £18 (inc VAT) \nOnline via zoom \nA talk from Kevin Stubbs – this is the second in a series of talks Kevin will present over the next six weeks \nTalk will include details on: \n\nTiles\nSlate\nLead\n\nKevin Stubbs is a Historic Buildings Consultant and comes with a background of education\, archaeology and building conservation. He was Director of Archaeology for the Test Valley in Hampshire and later moved to Hampshire County Council to join the Historic Buildings Bureau\, where he became the Principal Buildings Conservation Officer for the County. For eleven years he acted as the Director of a Conservation Centre and now runs his own Historic Building Consultancy and Training Company. \nHe advises on the repair and maintenance of all historic structures and provides training at all levels for the building conservation industry.  This includes the development of historic building technology\, traditional materials and hands-on craft training.  Work for Local Government Authorities includes Conservation Area appraisals\, historic building condition surveys and feasibility studies.  He has provided training exercises with local communities to raise awareness of their village plans and local heritage interpretation documents and he has provided Traditional Skills Awareness Courses for a number of bodies. \nHe undertakes the Historic Analysis of buildings and produces: Statements of Significance; Method Statements; Impact Assessments and Specifications for the repair and conservation of traditional buildings. \nHe lectures for various CPD providers\, Universities and national building conservation organizations including SPAB\, RICS and the Weald and Downland Museum.  Topics include: Bricks and Mortar; Lime\, Plasters and Renders; Cob and Earth\, Timber Frame and Stone Structures and Traditional Roofing. \nPlease book below or send me an email to alison@cpdessentials.co.uk \n\n\n\n\n\n\nYou will be sent the link to join via zoom the day before
URL:https://cpdessentials.co.uk/event/webinar-roofing/
LOCATION:Online\, via Zoom\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:For Building Surveyors,For Residential Property Surveyors,Historic Buildings,Quantity Surveying,Rural Practice,Webinars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cpdessentials.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/ks2.png-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="CPD Essentials":MAILTO:alison@cpdessentials.co.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200625T090000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200625T170000
DTSTAMP:20260630T185317
CREATED:20200206T150522Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200319T120251Z
UID:8108-1593075600-1593104400@cpdessentials.co.uk
SUMMARY:Historic Building workshop\, St Fagans Open Air Museum\, Cardiff  - POSTPONED
DESCRIPTION:Historic Building workshops – POSTPONED\, NEW DATE TO FOLLOW\n\n\n\n \nDate: Thursday 25 June 2020 \n\nWhen: 0900 – 1700\n\nWhere: St Fagans Open Air Museum\, Cardiff\, CF5 6XB \n  \nCost:  £125.00 plus VAT (£150.00) to include seminar proceedings\, all refreshments\, lunch\, entry to the museum and comprehensive delegate pack \n\nThe day’s course will consider various aspects of building conservation. \nThe venue has been carefully chosen as the museum has a varied and extremely fine collection of rescued buildings dating from the medieval period through to the 20th century. The buildings illustrate a wide range of structures and roof coverings and building materials used at the various periods. The day will include formal Power Point presentations\, material handling sessions and first hand observations of the buildings. The mornings presentations will be based in a seminar room  and the afternoon will be spent looking at a wide range of buildings on site so come suitably dressed for the weather conditions of the day. \nThe museum stands in the grounds of the magnificent St Fagans Castle and gardens\, a late 16th-century manor house donated to the people of Wales by the Earl of Plymouth in 1948. \nSpeaker\nKevin Stubbs BA(Hons)  DipBldgCons(AA)  IHBC   CertEd\nKevin Stubbs is a Historic Buildings Consultant and comes with a background of education\, archaeology and building conservation. He was Director of Archaeology for the Test Valley in Hampshire and later moved to Hampshire County Council to join the Historic Buildings Bureau\, where he became the Principal Buildings Conservation Officer for the County. For eleven years he acted as the Director of a Conservation Centre and now runs his own Historic Building Consultancy and Training Company. \nHe advises on the repair and maintenance of all historic structures and provides training at all levels for the building conservation industry.  This includes the development of historic building technology\, traditional materials and hands-on craft training.  Work for Local Government Authorities includes Conservation Area appraisals\, historic building condition surveys and feasibility studies.  He has provided training exercises with local communities to raise awareness of their village plans and local heritage interpretation documents and he has provided Traditional Skills Awareness Courses for a number of bodies. He undertakes the Historic Analysis of buildings and produces: Statements of Significance; Method Statements; Impact Assessments and Specifications for the repair and conservation of traditional buildings. \nHe lectures for various CPD providers\, Universities and national building conservation organizations including SPAB\, RICS and the Weald and Downland Museum.  Topics include: Bricks and Mortar; Lime\, Plasters and Renders; Cob and Earth\, Timber Frame and Stone Structures and Traditional Roofing. \nBook online below with a credit/debit card\, to enter names of delegates if the booking is not for yourself please use the note field
URL:https://cpdessentials.co.uk/event/historic-building-cardiff/
LOCATION:St Fagans Open Air Museum\, CArdiff\, CF5 6XB\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Historic Buildings
ORGANIZER;CN="CPD Essentials":MAILTO:alison@cpdessentials.co.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200630T160000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200630T170000
DTSTAMP:20260630T185317
CREATED:20200629T100708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200629T133450Z
UID:9358-1593532800-1593536400@cpdessentials.co.uk
SUMMARY:WEBINAR - Historic buildings - Stone
DESCRIPTION:Historic buildings – Stone buildings\, care and repair\nDate: Tuesday 30 June \nTime: 1600 – 1700 \nPrice: £18 (inc VAT) \nOnline via zoom \nA talk from Kevin Stubbs – this is the second in a series of talks Kevin will present over the next six weeks \nTalk will include details on: \n\nTypes of stone\nQuarying\nWorking the stone\nPhilosophy of repair\nDecay problems\nCleaning & consolidation\nGrouting voids and Bonding\n\nKevin Stubbs is a Historic Buildings Consultant and comes with a background of education\, archaeology and building conservation. He was Director of Archaeology for the Test Valley in Hampshire and later moved to Hampshire County Council to join the Historic Buildings Bureau\, where he became the Principal Buildings Conservation Officer for the County. For eleven years he acted as the Director of a Conservation Centre and now runs his own Historic Building Consultancy and Training Company. \nHe advises on the repair and maintenance of all historic structures and provides training at all levels for the building conservation industry.  This includes the development of historic building technology\, traditional materials and hands-on craft training.  Work for Local Government Authorities includes Conservation Area appraisals\, historic building condition surveys and feasibility studies.  He has provided training exercises with local communities to raise awareness of their village plans and local heritage interpretation documents and he has provided Traditional Skills Awareness Courses for a number of bodies. \nHe undertakes the Historic Analysis of buildings and produces: Statements of Significance; Method Statements; Impact Assessments and Specifications for the repair and conservation of traditional buildings. \nHe lectures for various CPD providers\, Universities and national building conservation organizations including SPAB\, RICS and the Weald and Downland Museum.  Topics include: Bricks and Mortar; Lime\, Plasters and Renders; Cob and Earth\, Timber Frame and Stone Structures and Traditional Roofing. \nPlease book below or send me an email to alison@cpdessentials.co.uk \n\n\n\n\n\n\nYou will be sent the link to join via zoom the day before
URL:https://cpdessentials.co.uk/event/webinar-stone/
LOCATION:Online\, via Zoom\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:For Building Surveyors,For Residential Property Surveyors,Historic Buildings,Quantity Surveying,Rural Practice,Webinars
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://cpdessentials.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/stone.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="CPD Essentials":MAILTO:alison@cpdessentials.co.uk
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR