Anyone here built one of these, or something similar. I'm halfway through a small Garden Room which is a lean-to structure against the corner of my garden. This is how it stands now and I'll be fitting vertical T&G larchwood cladding:
I was starting to think about ventilation and just realised I've probably got the wrong end of the stick so need to get back to basics and re-learn what I need to do here. There are 3 main structural cavities in the building:
1 - The one between the outer timber cladding and the exterior OSB face. (I'm just using 19mm battens, not counter-battens, before fitting vertical T&G larchwood cladding)
2 - The one between the interior OSB face and the PIR insulation. About 15 - 20mm in my case
3 - The room itself
The only ventilation I was considering was just the interior of the room (3) with trickle vents on the doors and one 229x154mm 'passive' hit and miss vent. I'm now wondering if the additional vent is really necessary at all? Cavity 3 (the actual room) doesn't really need additional ventilation I believe for the room - it's more for the benefit of the inhabitants rather than the building itself, so trickle vents are sufficient and in the summer the doors can just be opened up. Is that right? I mean with an internal volume of about 15.5m3 how much airflow is required? If in the summer the doors could be opened out and overnight there will be nobody sleeping in it. Is it dangerous to have no other ventilation?
Cavity 2 functions in tandem with the insulation and should be air sealed, so no need to ventilate this.
It's Cavity 1 that I've probably got wrong. This should have been counter battened to enable unimpeded airflow from bottom to top. I'm just fitting horizontal battens however, onto which my vertical cladding will be secured. Ergo, no airflow. To try to improve this I propose cutting out several 2 inch gaps into the horizontal battens, just less than the width of a cladding strip, and also secure stainless steel rodent mesh at the bottom batten gap and at top one too. At the rear of the structure I won't fit cladding right up the rear back wall of the lean-to. Instead I'll leave a 1 inch gaps here and block it off with another strip of mesh. I'll also install a louvre vent in the cladding in each of the two side walls to vent cavity 1. None of this is quite as effective as counter-battens, but is it likely to be effective enough? Any better tricks I can employ instead? I don't want to do counter battens at this stage because of the additional wall thickness and the door/window sills are already going to be too short.
Thanks for any advice.