Showing posts with label Plumber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Plumber. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 June 2022

A Pavement Collapse

At about 7 pm last Tuesday evening I entered the market place in Preuilly to discover a group of concerned neighbours leaning over a barrier and peering into a large hole in the pavement. The man from Véolia, the water company, was there with his van too. He was phlegmatically munching on a sandwich -- an act of desperation by a French man who can see he is going to miss his dinner.

Collapsed pavement, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.

The pavement had been noticeably sinking for over a week, and according to Catherine, who lives in the house next to collapse, it just suddenly crashed into the void underneath, making a huge racket and breaking the town water pipe, which was still spraying water everywhere. It may have been leaking before too, but more likely is that the recent heavy rain was the last straw. Catherine thinks the pipe which runs under the pavement to connect her house's downpipe to an outlet in the gutter has probably been blocked and leaking. It is an inadequate looking rectangular profile and it wouldn't take much to block it up. Luckily there doesn't seem to be any water seeping in to Catherine's cellar.

Pavement collapse, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.

This has been a problem point for years, with a big leak under the pavement some years ago that emptied the town water tower (Fr. chateau d'eau), which contains four hundred cubic metres (so less than the swimming pool, which contains a couple of thousand cubic metres) of water.

Luckily there was no one walking on that section of pavement when it collapsed.

Wednesday, 6 April 2022

Farewell to the Former Mayor

Marriage ceremony, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
Mayor Gilles Bertucelli, officiating at the marriage of our friends Jean-Michel and Martine.

Last week the inhabitants of our small town were shocked and saddened to learn that our former mayor, Gilles Bertucelli, had died. He had lived all his life here and everyone knew him. Here is a translation of his obituary in the local paper.

 

Town function, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
Mayor Gilles Bertucelli officiating at the town New Year's best wishes ceremony. Also present a government Minister, a member of parliament and the President of the Communauté des communes (super shire).

"Gilles Bertucelli, former mayor of Preuilly-sur-Claise, is no more. He died of pleural cancer on Saturday, March 26, perhaps due in part to the asbestos he often handled professionally in his youth, at a time when the harmfulness of the material was not known. He was 69 years old.

In September 1952 his father Norbert came to settle as an electrician plumber in the municipality, where Gilles was born on 7 October. After Grade 10, he entered the family business as an apprentice and then acquired a master craftsman qualification.

In 1976 he married Françoise, and two children were born, Romain and Marie. In 1985, the couple took over his father's company, which had six employees, and continued its development. Gilles was passionate about innovation and invested in new technologies: renewable energies, geothermal energy, biomass, heat pumps. In 2014, when he reached retirement age, it was one of the principal employers in the municipality, with 43 employees.

Gilles Bertucelli was also been involved in the development of the town for thirty-seven years, as a municipal councillor from 1982 to 2008, including a term as deputy mayor and as mayor from 2008 to 2020. He participated in the development of leisure, sports and culture. In 1983, as a young councillor, he and some friends created the MCJ (Maison communale de jeunes -- Community Youth Centre), whose activities are still flourishing forty years later.

Among the main achievements of his mandates are the housing estate of La Saulaie, the heating of the communal buildings, the renovation of the town hall square, and the guinguette (outdoor dinner dance space). A strong defender of small village life, he helped the installation and maintenance of local businesses in the center of the village.

Several Preuillaciens recall with emotion a council meeting where the mayor impressed by his courage. In 2015, sensitized to the fate of migrants perishing in the Mediterranean, he had imagined making available vacant housing in the municipality. At this relatively stormy meeting, with a large audience, partly unfavorable, the mayor managed to turn the opinion around. In response to a mistrustful question, he replied, "I was moved by the terrible images seen on television and I am ready to welcome suffering human beings, regardless of race or religion." The public was won over and embraced the mayor's humanitarian approach."

Memorial ceremony for the World War II Deportees, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
Mayor Gilles Bertucelli officiating at the memorial ceremony for the World War Two deportees.

You can read the original in French here [link].


Police controlling traffic during a big funeral, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
The police were controlling traffic because of the large crowd at the church for the funeral.

Dancing in the street, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
Gilles Bertucelli dancing in the street during a village festival.

Monday, 14 June 2021

Picking up a lapsed project

We have been living in this house for 12 years and a month. When we moved in it was a shell, and over a couple of years we transformed it into a home. Sort of...

The problem with moving into an old building and trying to restore it around yourself is that your life is in contant upheaval. Furniture is constantly being moved from room to room as work progresses, and you get used to living in a bit of a mess until energy and money runs out. Then you stop noticing the mess.

Just recently we received a grant to finish the insulation of our house, and make it more energy efficient. The first step was to replace the water heater in the laundry (which had died) and that was done on last Friday. We are now finishing the laundry with tiles and paint and a real light fitting (rather than the temporary light fitting we have had for 10 years.

Progress!!

The new water heater (and "temporary" light fitting)

Friday, 31 May 2019

Preuilly Pool Opens Tomorrow


All going well with the annual maintenance, the swimming pool in Preuilly sur Claise should open tomorrow at 10:30 am. I'll be there.

Photograph Susan Walter. Tour the Loire Valley with a classic car and a private guide.

It will be open on the weekends in June, then every day except Thursdays in July and August.

Tuesday morning when I popped down there to check all was well, the pool was full of water and the local plumbers were in checking the big community pellet burner (Fr. chaudière) which heats it.

Photograph Susan Walter. Tour the Loire Valley with a classic car and a private guide.

They were both men I knew and who have worked on our house. Pascal has appeared on the blog a number of times and remembers well supporting our newly installed Italian custom made sink with a Traction Avant jack. The other guy, whose name I can't remember, is the one who did the gas connection for Big Berta.

Photograph Susan Walter. Tour the Loire Valley with a classic car and a private guide.

I mentioned I had a photo of Pascal sitting on the floor doing  some braising, and his colleague promptly whipped out his phone and said 'Yes but do you have a photo of him looking like that?!' , showing me an image of Pascal wearing a house coat and bonnet and striking an attitude. When I enquired why Pascal had been dressed like that he was slightly sheepish and informed me that it was just a bit of workplace silliness...



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For details of our private guided tours of chateaux, gardens, wineries, markets and more please visit the Loire Valley Time Travel website. We would be delighted to design a tour for you.

We are also on Instagram, so check us out to see a regularly updated selection of our very best photos. 

Friday, 26 April 2019

How Chateaux Manage Fire Risk


You can't fool around with fire safety on large sites like the chateaux of Amboise and Chenonceau. Your equipment and training has to be up to date and meeting current best practice codes. The fire in Notre-Dame de Paris has made everyone nervous and all the Loire chateaux are reviewing their procedures and equipment.

Photograph Susan Walter. Tour the Loire Valley with a classic car and a private guide.
Local firefighters on exercises.

Like Notre-Dame de Paris, the big heritage sites follow strict rules in the matter of security, overseen by the State regulatory body whether the property is State or privately owned. The safety of people on site is paramount, and there must be sufficient equipment on site to enable the containment of the flames in the most rapid way possible. The Chateau of Amboise, for example, organises one or two fire exercises per year.

Photograph Susan Walter. Tour the Loire Valley with a classic car and a private guide.
A local exercise to rescue an unconscious person from a smoke filled workshop.

Whether it is fire risk or terrorist attack risk, the procedures are similar and highly orchestrated. The sites are insured and the insurance companies monitor the chateaux's adherence to the rules. In addition to the regulations there is a written risk assessment done in conjuction with the fire brigade for each of the chateaux, with a very precise analysis of the potential risks and the equipment on site.

Photograph Susan Walter. Tour the Loire Valley with a classic car and a private guide.
A fire damaged chateau roof is repaired.

Staff are trained for the event of a fire and each has their alloted tasks and role to play. The written evacuation protocol, for a chateau such as Amboise, also includes the priority works of art and artefacts. In these old listed buildings, protocols for maintenance work are also strictly laid out and adherence is monitored.

Photograph Susan Walter. Tour the Loire Valley with a classic car and a private guide.
The remains of a fire damaged roof at the Chateau of Rivau, now turned into a memorial.

At Chenonceau, a chateau that receives 800 000 visitors a year, they must put in place the means to prevent risks. Like any other monument it comes under the 2005 fire prevention regulations and these days has even gone above and beyond what it is legally obliged to do. They have appointed a chief fire officer and two assistants to the staff, whose role is to conduct fire drills on a monthly basis and do daily checks of the alarm system and security lights, all of which is recorded in the safety register. Chambord has a team of nine fire safety staff, plus access to all the mounted police based there.

Photograph Susan Walter. Tour the Loire Valley with a classic car and a private guide.
Braising copper pipes would require a permit, and most likely would not be allowed at all.

The building has automatic detectors and sprinklers plus additional means of extinguishing a fire such as armed fire valves. Extinguishers are dotted about everywhere, there are fire hydrants and the site is equipped with a dry riser (a rigid pipe to which you can attach a fire hose), which allows the fire brigade to pump directly from the Cher. Chateaux and cathedrals pose particular technical problems for fire fighters and dry risers allow hoses to be fitted at different levels without having to run hoses up staircases or ladders.

Photograph Susan Walter. Tour the Loire Valley with a classic car and a private guide.
Small spaces fire engine at Paris Montparnasse railway station 
-- the sort of thing required for cathedral fires in old city centres.

In March last year Chenonceau conducted a major exercise with the fire brigade, simulating a fire in the attic, with an injured person. A month earlier, the chateau of Blois had done a similar exercise. In October it was Chambord's turn.

Any external cleaning or building company doing work on site must be logged in and out, and must keep their own fire safety register. The chief security officer developed and manages the procedures. Companies are monitored before and after their work by the security officers and the work is certified on site three hours after it is finished. Any hot work eg soldering, requires a permit.

In the case of a fire the priority is the evacuation of people. From the sound of the alarm the staff at Chenonceau have three minutes to be in their positions and ready to act. The whole of the chateau personnel, which includes a lot of seasonal staff, is trained in evacuation procedures. This has to be particularly well rehearsed in these large old buildings where emergency exits may not be obvious to visitors. At Chenonceau the aim is to evacuate before the fire brigade arrive to fight the fire, but at Chambord, with more personnel, the aim is to simultaneously evacuate visitors and begin fighting the fire with extinguishers whilst waiting for the fire brigade to get there. The second priority is the removal of works of art, and there also, a written salvage plan is enacted. 

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For details of our private guided tours of chateaux, gardens, wineries, markets and more please visit the Loire Valley Time Travel website. We would be delighted to design a tour for you.

We are also on Instagram, so check us out to see a regularly updated selection of our very best photos. 

Saturday, 10 January 2015

Bertu Bows Out

Norbert Bertucelli, ably assisted by his wife Raymonde, set up as a plumber in rue de cygne, Preuilly sur Claise, in September 1952. He just had a single van as his work vehicle. His son Gilles, who started as an apprentice in 1967, took over in 1985. By then the business employed 6 people and was based in rue Léon Berthier (where the farm supply shop is now, opposite the Claise restaurant). They expanded by buying a business in nearby La Roche Posay and an agency was soon opened in Chatellerault. In 1998 the business started to specialise in renewable energies such as geothermal, heat exchange and wood heating. In 2008 the business moved to the new industrial zone Le Rond, on the outskirts of Preuilly. In October 2014, having reached retirement age, Gilles Bertucelli sold the business to Sylvain and Christelle David.

 SARL Bertucelli headquarters on the outskirts of Preuilly.
They've taken over the business in its entirety, in particular retaining all 35 employees and even recruiting. A new business manager will join the team at the beginning of 2015. The Davids have spent the past few months observing the operation and developing their plans for the future. They intend setting up a training programme, networking with the existing partners of the business and doing some advertising. They will retain the four principal activities of the business -- heating, electricity, plumbing and air conditioning, whilst adding a focus on the latest technology such as wood pellet heating. One of their first jobs was installing a pellet burner in the neighbouring business on the idustrial zone, DTM (who manufacture plastic packaging and moulds.)

 Bertu in fiesta mode...
Françoise Bertucelli, Gilles' wife, will continue to run the office for another month during the transition and after that they will both take retirement.

 Mayor Bertucelli officiating at last year's Victory in Europe remembrance ceremony.
The above information has been gleaned from the local newspaper. Gilles Bertucelli is also mayor of Preuilly so it will be interesting to see what impact his retirement has on his political activities. His sale of the business is not unexpected. He announced a year ago that this was his plan.
To read about our plumbing adventures click here. Bertucelli's replumbed our house, supplying two hot water systems and installing our bath, shower, sink and toilets as well as the gas for the kitchen stove top. They also clean our chimney annually.
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Les Voeux du maire: Yesterday evening we attended the cérémonie des voeux in the salle des fêtes in Preuilly. The gathering began with a minutes silence for those killed in the Charlie Hebdo attack. It was a serious silence too, with no shuffling or whispering. The mayor, Gilles Bertucelli and the President of the Communauté des communes de la Touraine du sud, Gérald Henault, then gave overviews of 2014, bemoaning the tight finances which required cutbacks and economies yet again. One bright spot was the success of a grant programme which provided funds to assist people to insulate their houses or make alterations to help the aged or handicapped. It was so successful that it ran out of money in October, but all grants submitted but outstanding would be processed this month as the new financial year means new funds are available.

The mayor announced that a remembrance ceremony for the Charlie Hebdo dead will be held at 15h (3pm) on Sunday 11 January. Gather out the front of the Hôtel de Ville for a march to avenue 11 novembre.