I am a newcomer to this amazing forum community, and am hoping to build a 36 " Pompeii oven roughly following the FB online plans up in Norfolk, UK. Unfortunately I have no building experience whatsoever beyond the odd DIY tasks that I have failed to dodge over the years. I started baking bread about a year ago, and when involuntary redundancy coincided with my 60th birthday I determined to build my own outdoor wood fired oven just to show the bastards.
Now comes the hard part. I am embarking on the project with my neighbour, who has some building experience, but I am initially overawed at the skill, the ingenuity and extraordinary designs on display in this forum. Clearly we will be depending on the wisdom and kindness of strangers. I shall be following the best advice I can find in the forum and reading and re-reading the published plans online, but I feel I will be learning everything from scratch, and I wonder if we have gone wrong already.
We have the beginnings of a plan, and a site up against an old brick outbuilding, and one initial worry, have we actually started off with the wrong kind of hollow concrete blocks? These shown in the photographs [Photo 1] are 440mm x 215mm x 140mm and were from Travis Perkins, a builders merchant chain in the Uk and obviously do not correspond to the US dimensions. It seems so strange to be jumping back and forward between inches and millimetres. We have tried to adapt, and come up with the plan shown in the first photograph, which is explained in more detail in the caption. Because space is tight we are going with an igloo style which will have to be suitably coated and waterproofed, i.e. not built into an enclosure. we don't want the oven support to be a full rectangle, and are hoping to have chamfered corners on the edge away from the outbuilding. We hope to use local flint on the facade of the support uprights. To complicate matters, there is a waste water inspection point built into the foundations which we have to leave accessible in the floor of the wood store. One idea we came up with so far to solve some of these issues is to extend the surface of the table beyond the supports, cantilevered out far enough to allow a brick's width of flinting and then some, perhaps by having an underlying structure of wooden sleepers underneath the insulating layer of concrete and fibre board. [This is shown in photo 2. ] It may be possible to achieve the same effect with concrete, I'm open to advice.
Of course, there is always the option of buying a Vitcas Pompeii kit , or a fully constructed imported WFO to plonk on top of whatever structure we end up with, but, for now, we are heading for the fire bricks. We're not mad are we? I look forward to hearing what you master builders think, and thank you in advance.
Now comes the hard part. I am embarking on the project with my neighbour, who has some building experience, but I am initially overawed at the skill, the ingenuity and extraordinary designs on display in this forum. Clearly we will be depending on the wisdom and kindness of strangers. I shall be following the best advice I can find in the forum and reading and re-reading the published plans online, but I feel I will be learning everything from scratch, and I wonder if we have gone wrong already.
We have the beginnings of a plan, and a site up against an old brick outbuilding, and one initial worry, have we actually started off with the wrong kind of hollow concrete blocks? These shown in the photographs [Photo 1] are 440mm x 215mm x 140mm and were from Travis Perkins, a builders merchant chain in the Uk and obviously do not correspond to the US dimensions. It seems so strange to be jumping back and forward between inches and millimetres. We have tried to adapt, and come up with the plan shown in the first photograph, which is explained in more detail in the caption. Because space is tight we are going with an igloo style which will have to be suitably coated and waterproofed, i.e. not built into an enclosure. we don't want the oven support to be a full rectangle, and are hoping to have chamfered corners on the edge away from the outbuilding. We hope to use local flint on the facade of the support uprights. To complicate matters, there is a waste water inspection point built into the foundations which we have to leave accessible in the floor of the wood store. One idea we came up with so far to solve some of these issues is to extend the surface of the table beyond the supports, cantilevered out far enough to allow a brick's width of flinting and then some, perhaps by having an underlying structure of wooden sleepers underneath the insulating layer of concrete and fibre board. [This is shown in photo 2. ] It may be possible to achieve the same effect with concrete, I'm open to advice.
Of course, there is always the option of buying a Vitcas Pompeii kit , or a fully constructed imported WFO to plonk on top of whatever structure we end up with, but, for now, we are heading for the fire bricks. We're not mad are we? I look forward to hearing what you master builders think, and thank you in advance.
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