MariaD Posted November 23 Share Posted November 23 Hi, I am looking for information on building a new two-storey house using natural stones for the external (structural) walls. I've read that natural stone may be cheaper than other building materials. My questions are: Do quarries sell blocks made with stone, and how much would they cost? The house would need wall insulation. Would the insulation be added on the inner side? 3. How the walls would be built? I'd imagine stone blocks are quite heavy to handle. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Russell griffiths Posted November 23 Share Posted November 23 You wouldn’t do it like that nowadays, stone houses were built using natural stone as it was readily available and cheap. it is now very expensive, unless like a lad on here @scottishjohn you have a building plot on an old quarry site. you will need to build the house in some other form and add the stone just as a decorative exterior finish. you could do a cavity wall with stone as the outer skin, or icf or timberframe both with stone externally. but don’t for a minute think it will be a cheaper option, unless you can find somebody with a lot of stone they don’t want. the quarry by me wants £200 for a bulk bag of it, which doesn’t do many metres at all. then you have the labour cost of finding a good team to lay it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Iceverge Posted November 23 Share Posted November 23 Facing a building with stone will be 5 times the price of standard masonry. Building an entire wall from stones will be 15 times more expensive. It is possibly, but it isn't cheap. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteamyTea Posted November 23 Share Posted November 23 42 minutes ago, MariaD said: using natural stones for the external (structural) walls Not very thermally efficiency, then you have the condensation risks to consider and mitigate. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scottishjohn Posted November 23 Share Posted November 23 (edited) I did consider in one of my fancyful moments at the beginning of my project if I had to demolish what i had in the flight of fancy I emialed a chineese stone suplier and they assured me i could have any size or thickness of granite blocks that would be accurate to +or- minus 1-2mm with smooth cut faces and at £1800 per ton delivered FOB to uk then add another £80 per ton to be delivered by road and the fancyfull thoughts continued for a little a pallet of blocks ia about 1.2tons and was around £100 a pallet then and granite is approx 50% heavier than concrete blocks apallet of blocks would build 8sqm -- it became obvious that it would not be viable so 8sqm of granite would be 20times the price of concrete blocks at a rough calculation even using std blocks with large section granite cladding or some other stone still made it unaffordable to normal mortals maybe stone slips to outside of block work would ve affordable to some and give same effect I did not win the lottery --so that idea got shelved would have been great to build something that looked like a bank building using thin set cement as for the condesation risk I did not see that as any worse than any other sort of solid wall as granite takes along time to pass heat through it in either direction so does insulate quite well for a solid product and is totally imperious to water , and when all said and done it is only a water screen and rest of build would be as any other modern build Edited November 23 by scottishjohn 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Iceverge Posted November 23 Share Posted November 23 3 hours ago, SteamyTea said: Not very thermally efficiency, then you have the condensation risks to consider and mitigate. If you included an appropriate insulated cavity it'd be fine surely. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteamyTea Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 6 hours ago, Iceverge said: If you included an appropriate insulated cavity it'd be fine surely. Except where the beams/joist are sitting on the structural external wall. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scottishjohn Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 3 hours ago, SteamyTea said: Except where the beams/joist are sitting on the structural external wall. the stone work would be just the outer shell and everything else would be as in a timber frame house ,so no big thermal bridges Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteamyTea Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 Just now, scottishjohn said: the stone work would be just the outer shell 14 hours ago, MariaD said: two-storey house using natural stones for the external (structural) walls Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Benpointer Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 (edited) Interesting discussion. We are considering using local greensand stone walling for some sections of outer skin on our TF or SIPS build. The Housebuilder's Bible prices stone at £245 per m2 versus £80 to £100 for brickwork, render, or cedar, which we also plan to use. So, stone would be 2-3 times as expensive according to HB. Is Mark Brinkley wrong on that? Edited November 24 by Benpointer Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
joe90 Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 (edited) 37 minutes ago, SteamyTea said: two-storey house using natural stones for the external (structural) walls We would have soon put her straight on that one 🤷♂️ Edited November 24 by joe90 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SteamyTea Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 10 minutes ago, joe90 said: him A him called Maria. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
G and J Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 Let’s not be too binary folks. Life is more fluid nowadays. It’s taken me ages to get used to but I’m getting better at using ‘them’ and ‘they’. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ProDave Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 5 minutes ago, G and J said: ‘them’ and ‘they’. My problem is both of those are plural terms, i.e you are talking of more than one person. Until someone tells me otherwise, all I can come up with for one person is "it" 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
G and J Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 14 minutes ago, ProDave said: My problem is both of those are plural terms, i.e you are talking of more than one person. Until someone tells me otherwise, all I can come up with for one person is "it" It’s kinda rude to call someone’s gender fluid child ‘it’. I’ve got used to thinking of they and them as ok in the singular. Took a while though. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Russell griffiths Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 2 hours ago, Benpointer said: Interesting discussion. We are considering using local greensand stone walling for some sections of outer skin on our TF or SIPS build. The Housebuilder's Bible prices stone at £245 per m2 versus £80 to £100 for brickwork, render, or cedar, which we also plan to use. So, stone would be 2-3 times as expensive according to HB. Is Mark Brinkley wrong on that? I don’t think that will be far out, but it depends on the quantity and the difficulty. 10m in a straight run will be priced one way 10m of little short sections with corners and returns will be priced very differently, then you have the pain in the arse factor to price in. then how busy the contractor is. then he might just not like you and stick a bit more on for that. 😂 just prepare yourself for some shocking prices when you get going. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Benpointer Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 3 hours ago, G and J said: It’s kinda rude to call someone’s gender fluid child ‘it’. I’ve got used to thinking of they and them as ok in the singular. Took a while though. Indeed. When referring to a person unknown most people would opt for 'they' rather 'he or she', as in: "someone called but left no message - I don't know what they wanted". No one would think 'they' referred to a plural number of people in that sentence. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
joe90 Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 Traditional use "They" is traditionally a third-person plural pronoun used to refer to groups of two or more people or things. Singular use "They" can also be used as a singular pronoun to refer to an individual person of unknown or nonbinary gender. This is called the "singular they". Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Oz07 Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 Woke is dead. 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pocster Posted November 24 Share Posted November 24 (edited) (expletive deleted) me - talk about going off topic ! Anyway - to solve all problems - everyone is a homogeneous blob aka an ‘it’ . There are ; 75 ( and counting ) genders summoned up . So many definitions means there are no definitions…. Edited November 24 by Pocster 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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