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Spanish rooves
Hi all,
We are currently thrashing through the internet estate agents looking for the ideal home. One reference that comes up often is to a 'de uralite' roof and being naturally apprehensive I've tried searching to find out about it, and whether there are any undesirable aspects to it like some previous roofing materials. All I can find is information about it as a mineral, virtually nothing about its use. Anybody out there any wiser? Thanks. Karen & John |
Re: Spanish rooves
Originally Posted by able_safe
(Post 4282883)
Hi all,
We are currently thrashing through the internet estate agents looking for the ideal home. One reference that comes up often is to a 'de uralite' roof and being naturally apprehensive I've tried searching to find out about it, and whether there are any undesirable aspects to it like some previous roofing materials. All I can find is information about it as a mineral, virtually nothing about its use. Anybody out there any wiser? Thanks. Karen & John methinks you mean duralite .... although this is a US site, it gives you some info http://www.monierlifetile.com/produc...cfm?regionid=2 |
Re: Spanish rooves
Originally Posted by able_safe
(Post 4282883)
Hi all,
We are currently thrashing through the internet estate agents looking for the ideal home. One reference that comes up often is to a 'de uralite' roof and being naturally apprehensive I've tried searching to find out about it, and whether there are any undesirable aspects to it like some previous roofing materials. All I can find is information about it as a mineral, virtually nothing about its use. Anybody out there any wiser? Thanks. Karen & John |
Re: Spanish rooves
Hi guys,
Thanks for your comments, it's definitely uralite though, as in "with rendered walls, under a "de uralite" roof, and concrete beams" and "and the roof is of concrete construction under a de Uralite covering". It comes up on quite a lot of the properties we find (semi rural villa/finca types). As I said I can find reference to the mineral uralite, and to a company "British Uralite" which used to produce asbestos (hence the question). May be that the names you suggest are trade names for variation of it's use? I have also seen it advertised for use in all sorts of buildings. I did think of contacting a supplier - but maybe they might be a little biased? Karen & John |
Re: Spanish rooves
Hello able_safe,
"uralite" or "uralita" means asbestos. Many roofs in Spain were covered with asbestos. Best regards David |
Re: Spanish rooves
Originally Posted by able_safe
(Post 4283492)
Hi guys,
Thanks for your comments, it's definitely uralite though, as in "with rendered walls, under a "de uralite" roof, and concrete beams" and "and the roof is of concrete construction under a de Uralite covering". It comes up on quite a lot of the properties we find (semi rural villa/finca types). Karen & John |
Re: Spanish rooves
Ah, thanks David.
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Re: Spanish rooves
We recently had our roof replaced. The original was in traditional cortijo style - canes, mud, etc and tiles. The replacement was concrete beams, bardillos(?), (which are flat honeycomb terracotta bricks about 2" thk), this was concreted over and the roof tiles (interlocking) placed on top of this. Weather in November proved that it worked.
Our builder talked of another material we could use on the other roofs where we want to retain the original beams - this was a "Polystyrene" type of pellet, which would be mixed into the concrete for laying on the roof and hence much lighter. We have yet to try it as the 2md phase of re-roofing will have to wait for this years bonus! |
Re: Spanish rooves
Hi Clive and Karen (beginning to worry now, there seem to be an awful lot of Karen's in Spain). The new roof you described (beams, blocks and tiles) seems to be the new 'traditional' roof in Spain. We're quite happy with that type. I think the uralite must have been an intermediary style.
Karen & John |
Re: Spanish rooves
We had a traditional roof restored, we had new wooden beams, using the old bricks that were hand made and new laths , our builders restored the traditional roof with a mixture of old and new roof tiles.
The house has a very traditional look and the dark beams and the terracotta bricks look really good. |
Re: Spanish rooves
Originally Posted by cliveandkaren
(Post 4285285)
We recently had our roof replaced. The original was in traditional cortijo style - canes, mud, etc and tiles. The replacement was concrete beams, bardillos(?), (which are flat honeycomb terracotta bricks about 2" thk), this was concreted over and the roof tiles (interlocking) placed on top of this. Weather in November proved that it worked.
Our builder talked of another material we could use on the other roofs where we want to retain the original beams - this was a "Polystyrene" type of pellet, which would be mixed into the concrete for laying on the roof and hence much lighter. We have yet to try it as the 2md phase of re-roofing will have to wait for this years bonus! |
Re: Spanish rooves
Don't know for certain, only saw photographs as described above. But not far from us there are a great deal of new builds going up. I have seen them using the same methodologies for theirs, but have only seen them concreting over, then roof tiles straight on top. Tiles are like ours "modern" versions that interlock together rather than the "traditional" tiles that are crescent moons and just fit one over the other.
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