We were asked about cameras in Swift bricks installed to mitigate loss of nest sites under eaves in a hip to gable roof conversion.
Ten Swift bricks will be installed, 6 S Bricks high up in the new gable and 4 custom-built Swift bricks with cameras at the same level as the original eaves.
Most Swift bricks are too small to accommodate a camera, and are not constructed for easy access for maintenance.
The situation is a cavity wall 30cm thick, where access to the boxes is required from inside the building. The outside wall is rendered. We decided to make something to satisfy these requirements:
We used:
This Swift brick will occupy the outside 18cm of the 30cm wall, leaving 12 cm for temporary insulation between the back of the box and the room inside.
It may also be worth reading what we did here.
Ten Swift bricks will be installed, 6 S Bricks high up in the new gable and 4 custom-built Swift bricks with cameras at the same level as the original eaves.
Most Swift bricks are too small to accommodate a camera, and are not constructed for easy access for maintenance.
The situation is a cavity wall 30cm thick, where access to the boxes is required from inside the building. The outside wall is rendered. We decided to make something to satisfy these requirements:
- A material that could take rendering
- White lights in the box requiring placing the sensor outside
- A box large enough so that the camera could see the whole stage, without Swifts wandering off stage
- Access from inside the house.
We used:
- 5mm cement fibre board (aka undercloak or soffit board) for 5 walls of the box. This comes in strips 15 cm wide. The inside wall is plywood.
- A cast half brick entrance piece to get the entrance clear of the rendering.
- A 9mm (internal) plastic tube protruding beyond the rendering for the white light sensor.
- Cameras and white lights were obtained from Green-Feathers.co.uk
- Gorilla Glue is more expensive but is easier to apply and goes off in about 15 minutes
- Stixall is cheaper, but takes longer to apply and longer to go off.
This Swift brick will occupy the outside 18cm of the 30cm wall, leaving 12 cm for temporary insulation between the back of the box and the room inside.
It may also be worth reading what we did here.
Cast entrance piece, cement fibre-board and plywood body. Note plastic tube bottom right containing the white light sensor. |
Access door for simple inspection and maintenance. Removable back for more radical maintenance |
Inside view. The sloping platform keeps the birds on stage |