Thursday, August 28, 2014

Surprises and Mysteries

The adventure continues and so also the events connected to our roof renovation (restoration?).

First, in order to make sure that our contractor won't die paying any damage to us, we all decided to protect our beautiful window.
Pity though, we didn't decide on how to do so, so at a certain point, while Oscar was eating his morning fruit, we heard an high pitch drilling noise.
Oscar didn't like it a single bit. Me neither. And when I went out and check, I saw that they had been drilling/nailing/screwing small pieces of wood on the window frame, on which they have attached some wood plank.
The patched glass window
I must confess, I am honestly suspicious that this was the best way to do it and that the holes in the wood will be "patched" properly. And I don't like the idea of patching windows and in particular THAT 106 years old window.

One of the several pieces of wood holding everything together...

Inside, we are now living in a crypta. Isabella spent the first time after realizing that the window was covered crying as in a greek tragedy. She really didn't like the "blackness", but now she has realized that hopefully when everything will be over, there will be the light through the flower again!

The crypta

Holding the grudge, I observed the work proceeding and today few of our tiles, almost a side of the roof, have landed on the boule lane. In this way, thanks to the tractor, the weeds are almost gone. However, our lawn is not flat any longer and could be exchanged for the moon surface.
The tractor is having a party on our lawn

A first layer of tiles has been removed


Finally, Mattias came back from work and had the opportunity to climb up and check the status of everything. Yes, because one of the contractors stated that the roofing felt is actually quite new. We looked at each other totally mesmerized when he said that...
Decently looking roofing felt, with a proper looking lath and new spikes
1) I went through the inspection protocol and found that the inspector said that it looked old. But he possibly looked just at the lower edge of it.

The lower edge of the roofing felt is not looking too good
2) In the protocol there is also stated that the previous owner said that he didn't do any job related to the roof and he had no idea how old it could have been. 
3) We had a copy of a letter of the even older owner (Bengt Svensson) stating that the roof was done 1976 and that can be confirmed by the tiles year (marked on the back of each tile)
4) For safety, we called Bengt who confirmed that the roof was renovated during the 70s.

Now, how is it possible that the nails are on the lath are probably put with a modern nail gun!?
And also, the sheet metal over the three windows on the back side looks reasonably new. 
But noone told us that has been fixed! 
Renovation year 2004. They are fixing the chimney, the windows are the ones from the 70s. The metal sheet looks as today.
So, we are confused. This side of the roof seems to have had a "new touch" but noone wants to get the credit for it.
We have also picture proof (above) that the last owner didn't do anything to the metal sheet of the windows, however that is newer than the rest of the metal sheet.
My suspect is that Bengt, when he renovated the metal sheet over the veranda (stated on his letter), he did also these three windows.
However, this doesn't explain why the lath and the roofing felt is looking like it is 10 years old...

What conforts us is that anyway there is enough metal sheet that is rusty and that needs to be changed and for doing so one has to remove the tiles.

Torn metal sheet

Metal sheet "from the 40s". Back then there were just small pieces - I strongly doubt this piece went through 2 roof renovations without being changed

A very torn piece of metal sheet in the "vindskiva" (wind sheet)

Another vindskiva. Unfortunately, the picture doesn't give justice to its bad state

As we suspected, the state of the small windows is not that good and a very superficial analysis shows that the windows frame is possibly rotten in some parts. Also the windows, as we know, are not in top shape, but we wanted to reserve restorating them for another occasion...

Details of one of the small windows

Paint is falling off and nails are getting rusty

This window has seen better days


Also this window is crying for a bit of mercy, but will have to wait. The frame though might have a joyful near future

Rust on the metal sheet


Monday, August 25, 2014

No entrance, no exit!?

Alright, they finally started to mount the scaffolding. I think they have followed this drawing they left on the well.
Drawings
However, we are very puzzled on how we are supposed to go in/out from our everyday entrance and how I am going to store all our tons of apples in the basement without hurdling.
Jumping in and out could be a proper solution
Nevertheless, the whole operation is exciting and very scary. And I hope that by putting a clear sign on where the trash is I won't find any more garbage (like half finished bottles of water) in our garden.
It's a building site

Pray our window will survive.
Let's cross the fingers...

Back side

I suppose no more bathing for the season

Thursday, August 21, 2014

Hasselagård

It was 1912 and Åkarp was just blooming.
The main streets, Alnarpsvägen, Byvägen and Kullavägen were getting populated with grand villas. The location was, as today, very appealing - afterall, Åkarp is just in between Lund and Malmö.
On the southern part of Åkarp, Fritjof Hazelius (1882-1963), one of the teachers  at Hvilan Folkhögskola and writer, built his own villa, Hasselagård.
He entrusted the danish architect Ivar Bentsen (1876-1943) for drawing the building.
Hasselagård, 1915

It is an interesting detail that Hazelius was author of a magazine for building care (Tidskrift för HEMBYGDSVÅRD Årg.1920 - 1932) where the focus was about building art and environment, for example. He was also relative with Artur Hazelius, who founded Skansen, in Stockholm.
Bentsen was mostly working in Copenaghen, teaching at Kunstakademiet, but he was also the architect for some of Hvilan Förlhögskola buildings (Högahus - the high building - and Västerhus - the western building).
Typical for the period and the architect is the pitched roof and clean lines. This was in line with one style which was strong in this period: with the war approaching building fancy villas was less fashionable and simplicity was preferred.
Amtmandsbolig, architect Ivar Bentsen 
For sure, Hasselagård is a majestic mansion, indipendently of the architectonic style. Why it is called so it is not certain, but there is possibly a connection with the parish of Hassela in Hälsingland.
Back in the days, it was dominating the southern part of Åkarp, with about 22000 m2 of area which was possibly populated by an enourmous orchard.
Today, the property is "just" 4349 m2 and there are still plenty of fruit trees and bushes that can provide some fruit supplies. The vegetation has just gone wild, though, since the last owner died at 93 this March.

Gottfried Kockum moved into Hasselagård after having been studying and working in the USA. There, he was with his wife, Birgit Way Matthiesen.
         Gottfried Kockum (1895 - 1972)

He first studied at the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration and then worked in several banks. 1923 he went back to Sweden and landed in Hallstahammar until 1943. He moved then to Åkarp since he was working as manager at Kockums Mekaniska Verkstad in Malmö.
Hasselagård during the 50s most likely, on the lower part of the postcard (ref1).
From Hallstahammar he brought not only himself and his family, but also a playhouse which is still in Hasselagård soil and which is very particular since it has the roof made of peat. In Emmi Bergkvist's "Gamla Åkarp och hur det var förr", it seems that this comes from Hassela on Hazelius' commission and it is 200 years old - while Burlöv's municipality preservation plan states that it was Kockum's. I am more prone to believe that the playhouse comes from Hallstahammar and it is from the 30s, rather than from 1700...
Playhouse, picture taken by Cecilia Gagge
It is most likely at this point in time that the building simmetry got broken. Looking at two postcards (ref1 and ref2), although it is really hard to see the details, it is possible to see a serie of differences in the building. In ref2 (which is the oldest picture) one observe many windows on the top floor right wing, there are no niches on the roof on the southern side and there is no balcony on the right wing.
All these details are change in ref1 and they are still there today.
In the left bottom corner it is possible to see Hasselagård. This picture must be from the beginning of the 40s (ref2)
Year 1999
When looking at the building from the front side, one get disappointed by that little extension on the left side. Today that hosts the kitchen and possibly, the kitchen has always been there, since in the first postcard from 1915 it is possible to see a little chimney on that roof.
The fact that the amount of windows has changed leads me to believe that there were more rooms where today there is a big master bedroom (it seems the mansion had 18 rooms when Kockum moved there). Which makes sense. The stairs that lead upstairs from the kitchen didn't go to the main bedroom, but to the maid bedroom. More, there was an extra door (visibile in the floor plan still) which would have a purpose only if the master bedroom was not a gigantic room.

Kockumsområdet took part of the land that was south of Hasselagård and most likely belonging to the beautiful orchard that can be seen in ref1.
The area was planned 1958 and it was Gottfried's Kockums Mekaniska Verkstad that asked the permission to build the 63 houses there.

Kockumsområde, 1965. Hasselagård is visilbe on the center right (ref3).
On the old area belonging to Hasselagård, Kockum built also an house (Kockumsvägen 10) where he moved (the house is visible in front of Hasselagård in ref3). He died there, at the age of 76. His wife instead continued to live in Åkarp until 1989, but her last days were at Åkarpshemmet (the hospice Harakärrsgården).

It's 1968 when Gunda and Nils Nielsen move to Hasselagård. Back then, they did a total renovation. Most likely they renovated heavily the kitchen and the bathrooms.

The kitchen, courtesy of Bukowskis Real Estate
The kitchen shows sign of an attempt to be traditional, but has a questionable electric blue color which I have also seen in the 70s style pantry of Villa Bellevue.
The main bathroom is up next to the master bedroom. My guess is that that room back in the days was the maid room - and simmetrical, opposite to it, there must have been the gardener room (a little, tiny, cute staircase goes out of that room, down in the heart of the garden). But this is just my guess and fantasy.
Today the bathroom is far from being modern. The water heater is a very interesting machine connected to the tap of the bathtube and pipes are running through the room in a very peculiar pattern.
No one has had the time to fix a banister to the improvised balcony - I suppose this is a confirmation that the couple didn't have kids.
Tretex has though not been removed from the walls (probably, it was installed in the 40s).

May 2014, courtesy of Bukowskis Real Estate

Nils (Niel?) Nielsen moved to Malmö 1955 after working in Copenaghen under intense stress and was Skåne first and only psychoterapist for a decade.
Together with Elise Ottesen Jensen he founded RFSU (Swedish Association for Sexuality Education) 1933.
In Göteborg, 1948, he met Gunda who became his third wife. Later, when in Malmö, she worked at Malmö Stadsteater as speech therapist (at that time, the theatre director was Ingmar Bergman).

Nils Nielsen (1905 - 1990)

They worked then together in the psychotherapy field, hosting also their reception in Hasselagård. They both loved travelling and that is clear also by the furniture that is spread all around the house. Kimonos and beautiful exotic textiles are hanging on the walls, mixing old and designed furniture with more than few pieces in oriental style.

Gunda Nielsen (1936 - 2014)

After Niel's death, Gunda kept living in the house. I can imagine she loved her garden and she had a passion for flowers and I wish that her efforts will be respected by the next owners.
When walking in the overgrown forest that the garden is today, one can see beautiful flowers peaking out from the high grass and the weeds. The house was enriched by plants and there are traces of more plants also in the basement.  My guess is that they were resting during the winter ready to be taken out for the spring to come.

Octagonal veranda, built 1992. Courtesy of Bukowskis Real Estate
Despite living on her own, Gunda decided to modify once more the floor plan of the house, adding to the "kitchen wing" an octagonal building. Beautiful in its shape and filled with light, but sadly, not mixing properly with the original style of the mansion and badly connected inside with a threshold between the original floor and the one of the newest part (underwhich there is water based floor heating).

First floor plan, courtesy of Bukowskis Real Estate
The first floor is dominated by big rooms for the "social activities". Even though the rooms are quite big, one detail that struck me was that the ceiling is quite low for being such an old and grand building. Precious wallpaper, often torn with humidity stain, decorates the dining room and the living room. Details from another epoch are still visible in the joinery.
An harmonic staircase leads to the basement and to the second floor (and even to the attic).

Second floor plan, courtesy of Bukowskis Real Estate

The second floor is enriched by a beautiful dressing room, with a niche and an enormous bedroom. Sadly, in my opinion, it is clear that there has been some heavy modifications in this floor and the atmosphere is closer to the 60s than "another epoch". But of course, it is also a matter of taste.

Basement and attic are typical for these buildings. The basement is humid and the attic is ventilated. In the basement it was also possible to see in the laundry room and old basin where clothes where washed and an oven. The rooms are spacious also there and the floor is very beautiful for being a basement. A lot of old books (and plants) give a very peculiar smell to this storage place, where a very energy consuming oil boiler is occupying one of the rooms.
Basement plan, courtesy of Bukowskis Real Estate
When passing Hasselvägen today it is hard to spot the big mansion. Instead of the beautiful white fence, one is discouraged by an enormous beech hedge. Two wooden white gates are still the "official" entrances to the area, but one of the paths in the garden is completely hidden in the grass. There is also a mysterious metallic gate on one corner and instead of using the gate, one can go directly in the garden by passing next to the garage. The building is near the road and there is no fence between it and the gate. But by walking on that path, it is finally possible to observe the beauty of the massive white building, which hopefully will end up in the hands of some "old buildings" lover and won't destroy the soul of this beautiful mansion.
North garden. Hasselagård, 5th August 2014





Åkarp's bible

The "holy" book about Åkarp is finally in our hands! "Gamla Åkarp och hur det var förr" (Old Åkarp and how it was in the past) by Emmi Bergkvist.
Oh, how much I have been looking forward to be able to read it without having to be in Tårtrummet!!
My copy of THE book

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Today, they came

And today, it started the process for renovating the roof.
We blocked Kullavägen for a couple of hours. For our neighbour joy, I bet ;-)
Down there there are two big trucks. 

Did it really go through our gate?

Parked in our garden

Friday, August 15, 2014

In the garage attic

Completing the garage cleaning is taking extra time. This is also because there are extra spiders to take care of (...).
One nice detail found is this ventilation shaft:

Ankarsrum?
And then, we took a ladder and we finally put the head in the attic.
Is that a human brain or an humongous wasp nest?
We put the hands randomly and we found tons of cars carpets (used. BLEARGH!), 5-6 double baskets specimen (for vases or for what!?) and finally some piece of history:

An Opel wheel cup possibly from 1960
But instead of finding human bodies, as we feared, we found...a fairly good amoung of extra tiles!!!
An extra amount of tiles can be always handy to have

Thursday, August 14, 2014

The tractor got stuck

To keep high the expectations on what we have found on the garage attic, we should go back in time and tell the story of when the garden tractor got stuck.

Once upon the time, Mattias (who had by the way stated he would be the one writing this post) was finally moving the lawn. He used the tractor for doing this for being fast (and furious).
However, at a certain point we heard "scrunch" and after that the tractor didn't move, nor started anymore.

We had no idea how to identify the issue - we did a basic issues hunting but that didn't solve any problem and we thought that we had to bring it for reparation.
But how? The tractor weights quite much and the wheels didn't move of a single centimeter.

That's how we did it...

A guy with a problem and a solution. He is an engineer!

We put extra soap on the improvised ramp

Mattias pulled the tractor, while me and Isabella pushed. 
The tractor is finally up - but at the end we needed the extra hands of one of our neighbours
Luckily, the problem was not a serious one, although we wouldn't have anyway managed to fix it ourselves: the brakes were stuck!