Jump to content

Mr Punter

Members
  • Posts

    8233
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    24

Everything posted by Mr Punter

  1. I think this will need a hefty amount of steel above the ground floor windows to support both leaves of wall and posts to support the corners. They will bridge the 2 leaves. It may be that the upper part is in timber frame with cladding, which would help. Either way it needs properly designing.
  2. I think this will be a big thermal bridge and could cost several thousand. Better to put work in at the design stage to see the best solution.
  3. It may work with bay poles. I think you should ask your SE what they suggest as sometimes the bays are structural.
  4. I am sorry this has escalated. Do allow their structural engineer to carry out an inspection. Try to avoid this becoming a dispute, as it may affect any future sale of your property if it is not resolved. Roots from bushes should not cause a retaining wall to move so perhaps it has not been properly designed or it needs replacing.
  5. I would not have an issue with giving access to inspect a wall. Get an assurance from the engineer that the inspection will be limited to assessing the condition of their wall and fence.
  6. I have had 3 new fibre connections to new flats from Openreach at no cost. I guess they must subsidise them by ripping off the likes of @Bancroft.
  7. There are brick dimensions charts that you can download.
  8. You can break off any big lumps or ridges with hammer and bolster. Doing the insulation in 2 60mm layers will help it lay flatter.
  9. A pitched roof is far less likely to cause issues than flat. Natural slate will be cheaper and less defect prone than zinc. Timber cladding often looks cruddy in a few years and flammable cladding is best avoided. The glazing is excessive. It will cause overheating in the sun, higher heat losses in winter, extra capital expense, unpleasant reverberation and glare.
  10. I don't think you will be able to get hold of this for a small area. Probably min order of a pallet and you may need more than 1 size. Just use firrings.
  11. Unless this is for occasional use in a small room like a bathroom it will be prohibitively expensive to run.
  12. So to clarify, are there separate systems for foul water and for rainwater? You may struggle to connect to clay pipe that is encased in concrete.
  13. Ask your floor designers to factor in the tank. You need to be sure as it is a long term load.
  14. I think they are correct. The work on the ground floor compromises the upstairs as the kitchen is open to the stairs. They may ask for additional smoke alarms as well.
  15. The bonding adhesive is fairly sketchy. I wouldn't want to core a 4" hole after filling.
  16. Yes when wet they are probably as thermally inefficient as solid concrete but these are internal walls so should not apply.
  17. This is now mineral wool batts instead of rigid PIR. It is nearly always full filled. As it is single storey and sounds like rendered the risk of moisture transfer is very small.
  18. Another vote for loft mounted PIV and Meaco dehumidifier.
  19. That seems fairly standard. I think the reasoning is that you will notice the lights not working in the event that the circuit fails and the battery backup will mean the alarms still function.
  20. Funny place to have a roof window unless it was going to be converted. If it was just for natural light they would have put a smaller rooflight between the rafters. Leaving it as a bodge was not great.
  21. I think it is any part of the building within 2m so eaves would be included. The slab would not matter.
  22. I would just fit the rooflight as is. I cannot see why the LPA would seek to take action.
  23. It works like this: Height (m) Lambda (W/mK) R-value (m²K/W) U value Thermoblock 0.065 0.05 1.30 0.77 Aircrete 7.3N 0.215 0.18 1.19 0.84
  24. It is very expensive. Essential that the subfloor is completely dust free, which is difficult to maintain unless you do the cutting remotely or with a posh Festool thing.
×
×
  • Create New...