kbsoloman Posted Saturday at 21:12 Posted Saturday at 21:12 I am looking at the possibility to remove the area in red to gain an extra 100mm in depth to fit a bigger car and due to a low lintel moving the garage door isn’t an option . Obviously do not want to weaken the wall, Would there be a preferred method to ensure the walls strength ie a steel beam or bracing. There is nothing behind the wall only a path. thanks in advance for any advice
Marvin Posted Sunday at 07:41 Posted Sunday at 07:41 Hi @kbsoloman I don't expect that the blockwork was put up without reason. More pictures will help. Or draw a rough sketch showing more info: how long is the wall to the left of the picture. Whats behind the wall How high is the ground the other side of the wall Otherwise tricky to comment. M
kbsoloman Posted Monday at 05:55 Author Posted Monday at 05:55 Hi the wall is 5.2m long the garage is built onto the side of the house and the dwarf wall is along only around. This wall (the back) and along the side wall(gable end) it is a single story structure. The garden is flat and extends around the garage with only a path behind the wall at ground level. It isn’t acting as a retaining wall cheers
kbsoloman Posted Monday at 05:58 Author Posted Monday at 05:58 Apologies for the pics it’s all I’ve got as I’m away at the minute
Andehh Posted Monday at 06:05 Posted Monday at 06:05 There really isn't a good way around this! Removing all that would not be without the need for a structural engineer type assessment. Would probably be easier extending the garage forwards somehow, as unappealing as that may be... You're not dabbling with wall collapse risk that way!!
Andehh Posted Monday at 06:07 Posted Monday at 06:07 Are you sure you can't get a sectional garage door, and fit it to the inside of your pillars? You'd lose width, but you'd gain your 100mm and spare? .... I'm pretty sure you can!!
kbsoloman Posted Monday at 06:48 Author Posted Monday at 06:48 Hi unfortunately the lintel above the door is only 2125 high.
torre Posted Monday at 08:41 Posted Monday at 08:41 Roller shutter door fitted just forward of the opening with the roller in your soffit space might be an option. The rear wall construction will be for stability of what's otherwise a tall half brick wall
kbsoloman Posted Monday at 09:01 Author Posted Monday at 09:01 Thanks for your replies ive got another few garage door companies coming in to have a look
Nickfromwales Posted Monday at 09:39 Posted Monday at 09:39 Yup. You'll not be altering that wall any time soon, unless you completely rebuild it from the foundation up. Brickwork is tied into the internal dwarf blockwork and the rising buttresses are structural to keep the wall supported. Timber 'barn' doors could work, with electric openers/closers.
saveasteading Posted Monday at 12:39 Posted Monday at 12:39 Steel goalpost built 200mm or whatever to the front. Clad sides and roof. Move door forward fixed to the frame. a lot of money for small benefit.
kbsoloman Posted Monday at 13:47 Author Posted Monday at 13:47 Thanks all. Looks like a new sectional door will fit after all so should gain around a foot extra. Not cheap but will also help further down the line since cars don’t seem to be getting shorter.
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