flanagaj Posted February 13, 2024 Posted February 13, 2024 The granted PP on the plot we are purchasing has oak cladding with a lower brick section with no plinth. I personally, much prefer the plinth as shown in the image below, but conscious of a finite budget I have a feeling that this option adds a lot of expense? The brick plinths seem quite expensive.
nod Posted February 14, 2024 Posted February 14, 2024 Not really in the grand scheme of things What you can see took two men two days Laying around 1000 per day 650 per 1000 for bricks 1
Roundtuit Posted February 14, 2024 Posted February 14, 2024 Plinth bricks can be expensive. From memory ours added >£4k plus labour, but it depends how many corners you have, and whether there are 1 course or two. A cheaper alternative for us would have been to use some non-matching engineering plinth bricks, but I didn't like the contrast. It does give the house some additional character and a traditional look though. 1
Alan Ambrose Posted February 14, 2024 Posted February 14, 2024 >>> lower brick section with no plinth i’m not sure what you mean here - bricks are planned already up to ground level or 150mm above, and you want more courses?
flanagaj Posted February 14, 2024 Author Posted February 14, 2024 6 minutes ago, Alan Ambrose said: >>> lower brick section with no plinth i’m not sure what you mean here - bricks are planned already up to ground level or 150mm above, and you want more courses? The granted PP does not have a plinth
saveasteading Posted February 14, 2024 Posted February 14, 2024 1 hour ago, flanagaj said: The granted PP does not have a plinth It must have something from the ground up to the timber level. If not shown on the planning drawing then that is a technical oversight. The planners will accept a clarification. Bricks are relatively expensive but are replacing something else....blocks or concrete usually.
Roundtuit Posted February 14, 2024 Posted February 14, 2024 Thinking about it, it's not just the plinth bricks. You'll also need wider foundations and the block work behind the facing bricks, as you're effectively building a double width wall up to plinth level. 1
saveasteading Posted February 14, 2024 Posted February 14, 2024 53 minutes ago, Roundtuit said: You'll also need wider foundations Depends on what is proposed. The brick can replace a block, or be used as the concrete shutter if designed for early enough. What was the original intention, and how far advanced are you @flanagaj
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