Bancroft Posted Thursday at 10:24 Posted Thursday at 10:24 We're planning to have timber cladding around the main part of our ICF build with a 300mm flint 'splashback' on the lower part of the wall (between the bottom of the timber and the ground level). What is the best way to secure/cement the flint pieces to the exterior of the ICF wall? I'm imagining some sort of scrim secured to the ICF which the mortar can then be worked into - but how is the scrim securely attached to the ICF?
Nickfromwales Posted Thursday at 11:18 Posted Thursday at 11:18 With an EPS system I suspect you'd need a form of mechanical fixing at (or above) a certain kg/m2 loading, so perhaps you'll end up fixing a 6 or 9mm cement board to the structure and then using tile adhesive to attach the flint to the CB. If this is a woodcrete then maybe you can parge with cement slurry, tank, and go for the above fixing method.
Russell griffiths Posted Thursday at 12:07 Posted Thursday at 12:07 Will this create a large shelf that you will need a flashing over. on an eps block I rendered onto the eps with a waterproof render with mesh included, then left the surface very rough. then laid natural stone bedded in exterior slip adhesive and stuck back to the render with the same slip adhesive, stainless screws and stainless brackets bedded in every third course.
Bancroft Posted Thursday at 13:20 Author Posted Thursday at 13:20 2 hours ago, JohnMo said: Foam or woodcrete ICF? Foam
Bancroft Posted Thursday at 13:22 Author Posted Thursday at 13:22 1 hour ago, Russell griffiths said: stainless screws and stainless brackets bedded in every third course Was this to help take some of the weight as you built up and add additional purchase points?
Bancroft Posted Thursday at 13:24 Author Posted Thursday at 13:24 2 hours ago, Nickfromwales said: tile adhesive Would tile adhesive be sufficiently strong/permanent for an exterior subject to rain/snow/sun/freezing?
Russell griffiths Posted Thursday at 14:43 Posted Thursday at 14:43 1 hour ago, Bancroft said: Was this to help take some of the weight as you built up and add additional purchase points? I don’t think they were needed at all, but did it anyway.
SteamyTea Posted Thursday at 18:52 Posted Thursday at 18:52 Ask @Onoff There is a small amount of info here. 1
Bancroft Posted Friday at 13:53 Author Posted Friday at 13:53 Talking with our architect today I mentioned this issue and he pointed me towards a product called Surecav. They have used it with a number of different external materials including stone and flint and seem happy with it. Anyone else got any experience with this product? https://www.surecav.co.uk/flint/
jack Posted Friday at 15:21 Posted Friday at 15:21 1 hour ago, Bancroft said: Talking with our architect today I mentioned this issue and he pointed me towards a product called Surecav. They have used it with a number of different external materials including stone and flint and seem happy with it. Anyone else got any experience with this product? https://www.surecav.co.uk/flint/ Others on BuildHub appear to have used Surecav: https://forum.buildhub.org.uk/search/?q=surecav&quick=1 1
Nickfromwales Posted Friday at 17:34 Posted Friday at 17:34 On 10/04/2025 at 14:24, Bancroft said: Would tile adhesive be sufficiently strong/permanent for an exterior subject to rain/snow/sun/freezing? Yup. Have a look at a bag and you’ll see tiling outdoors is completely permissible and commonplace worldwide. The product just needs to be cementitious, and flexible, and primed according to MI’s.
Nickfromwales Posted Friday at 17:39 Posted Friday at 17:39 3 hours ago, Bancroft said: Talking with our architect today I mentioned this issue and he pointed me towards a product called Surecav. They have used it with a number of different external materials including stone and flint and seem happy with it. Anyone else got any experience with this product? https://www.surecav.co.uk/flint/ That obvs pushes the stone course out and then requires a suitable extension to the foundation system to accept the load. A low profile faux version would be affixed to the structure, bonded to cement boards mechanically fixed / bonded on the external facades, so would be simpler and cheaper perhaps, but down to the product you eventually decide upon.
Russell griffiths Posted Friday at 18:01 Posted Friday at 18:01 I thought you mentioned 300mm high, if so you going to push your stone out from the icf by loads if you use surecav, sounds very OTT for just a strip at ground level and below finished floor height, surecav is predominantly used on timberframe.
BotusBuild Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago I am just in the midst of stone cladding onto Nudura (EPS ICF). First it was screeded using Duravit and embedded mesh, and then roughed up to allow the adhesive to key into it. This seems to be the essential step for any "hard cladding" such as stone panels or flints or the stonework as pictured above by Russell. The adhesive (Sicher Kerami plus) came in 25kg bags to be mixed onsite with added water. It's much like tiling a wall - apply adhesive to wall, trowel in vertical grooves, "butter" the stone cladding, affix to wall. Above 2.4m you have to mechanically fix these as well Result: For flints I suspect the mix would be a little thicker and you would want to do the bottom row, let it set off and then do the next row.
Tosh Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago I screwed backer board to the battens. This maintained an air gap at the bottom to ventilate the cladding above. Then fixed a steel mesh to stop 'things' getting up behind the cladding. I screwed temporary battens to support the slate and provide a consistent line (you can just see this on the left of the downpipe) then removed them later. My slate panels had clips prefabricatred into them for a mechanical support, not technically necessary in my case but I still found them useful. Ignore the downpipe connection, that was a temp setup whilst we waited for the correct pieces from lindab to arrive.
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