Monday, July 14, 2014

Glass Bottle Wall

HI!

We've been planning to build a glass bottle wall in our home ever since we came back from Alaska. We spent some time in Sadie Cove, across Kachemak Bay from Homer, Alaska. The owners had a wood fired sauna with a glass bottle wall between the seating area and the fireplace. When sitting in the sauna with the fire going, the flickering light on the bottle wall made really interesting patterns.

Deb ran across a video on the internet that talked the viewer through building a glass bottle wall for an outhouse. We didn't particularly care about anything except the technique of creating the glass bottle bricks and placing them into the open space to create the wall. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6egFulKim4

We've been collecting colored glass bottles since we decided to build the home. I want to personally thank each and every one of you who, in the evenings after a hard day at work, made the sacrifice to help empty the full bottles and save them for us! We have quite a collection of beer, wine, vodka, and specialty liquors in all colors of the rainbow. If you feel the need to continue to contribute ...... we need red and blue especially!

Sunday Deb and I spent most of the afternoon cutting the bottles - at 2-1/2" from the bottom, washing them, cutting off a piece of duck tape (that's the brand name!) and butting the two bottle pieces together to form a brick. At last count I think Deb said we had about 100 bricks. I don't think that's quite enough, so .......... let us know when you've emptied some bottles for us!

Cheers!

UPDATE: The wall is complete ......


A couple of days ago we spent 7 hours or so building the glass bottle wall. Going in, we were pretty sure we had enough bottle bricks made; we had nearly 150. We started by mixing up Type S mortar - the stuff used to glue bricks together in a wall. It was a pretty dry mix because we wanted to be able to build a vertical wall without all the mortar oozing out as the wall rises. The mortar was hand mixed in small batches so that it wouldn't dry before we got it into the wall. Dirty job!

I wish I had a picture of Deb working at installing the bricks. She is a wonder! She chooses a brick (to randomize the pattern), applies mud to the lower layer of bottles, styles the new bottle in place and places mud around it. Over and over again, until the batch of mud is gone. While I'm mixing the mud, she's cleaning the surface by patting it with a sponge to fill the cracks, remove excess mud, and smooth the surface. I managed to get in about 20 glass bottle blocks in place before she recognized that her talent at installation was much, much greater than mine!





Up and up and up, 3 bags of mortar mix and we're at the top of the wall space. Here's the final product ....... it's at the base of the stairs near the entry door on the main level. We'll backlight it with floods hidden in the mechanical room, and it should look great. It'll switch on when the front porch light and hall light switches are on.

Cheers!

No comments:

Post a Comment