I can't relate the drawing to the picture, the walls # 6 & 7 are 3 bricks deep so that is about 655mm, that must be a projecting wall surely?Can you please post a photo of the front of the house?
I'm assuming ( which might be wrong ) that the exposed brickwork we can see, is in fact single skin. The plastered areas are twin skin.I can't relate the drawing to the picture, the walls # 6 & 7 are 3 bricks deep so that is about 655mm, that must be a projecting wall surely?
Hello @Doug71. Your assumption is correct.I was presuming it was something like this
This is a detached house.I’ve just skimmed through the thread but a bit unclear of the setup. Is the house mid terrace or a semi?
No room on the left side of the hallway, just brick, no neighbour's houseOne side of the hallway will obviously be a room in your house but the other (stair) side is either outside or your neighbour’s house??
It is flush. Hopefully picture in this in this message makes it a bit clearer.Is the new door actually flush with the face of the outside wall, meaning that the individual bricks that appear as half bricks inside are exposed, end on, outside?
Understood. Thank you for the suggestion.In an ideal world you should have broken this exposure to cold and damp by cutting vertically along the inside edge of the frame to create a gap to insert a vertical dpc and insulation. You could still do this but it will be a difficult, messy job. If you decide to ignore this bit you should at least water seal the brickwork all around the outside of new door.
It is a single layer DPM unfortunately.Also, the dpm that extends under the door should have been a double layer with the top layer turned up the inner face of the frame. If it’s a single layer only you should have enough room to squeeze another dpc under the frame and seal both together with Tec7. If you don’t do this water will run down the face of the door & frame and be blown under and into your new floor.
Please excuse my ignorance - do you mind clarifying what you call "inner leaf"?As you have a detached house you should seriously consider removing the new inner leaf on both sides of the extended hallway as it’s just extending a cold bridge into your house.
Hello @PDW125So the issue here is you’ve made an external wall internal now, and what you’re getting is cold walls and warm air and condensation. The “cold” you’re feeling is basically the brickwork slowly warming up and pulling heat from the inside of the house.
Four things to resolve :
1. There is no vertical DPC in line with the frame, so either there needs to be one cut or both internal and external faces treated with a water repellent 2 bricks past and 6 courses above the new door.
2. It is unlikely there is a DPM below the quarry tiles, and they are on concrete. To gain more room for insulation these tiles and the concrete should come up, blind with sand then a DPM laid with insulation over the top - unless you can get 60mm of screed in with at least 80mm of PIR insulation then suggest 2 layers of 18mm MR chipboard used as floating floor, glued and screwed in opposite directions / staggered joints. If using a floating floor then another DPM is belt and braces - should be sealed at the door threshold with either proprietary DPM tape or fleece backed butelyne tape.
3. Assuming you can lose 35-40mm either side then I would ensure the frame has been foamed properly in place, and then trim back the foam and seal the gap using a 100mm butelyne fleece tape lapped onto the frame by 20mm and then onto the brickwork. Now install PIR backed plasterboard with foam and fixings leaving a 3-5mm gap at the frame edges. Either tape and fill or skim the boards, can’t see how they meet the main house wall or thickness so you may get a step in the walls to deal with.
4. Seal the frame edges to the PB edge with good quality hybrid sealant such as CT1 and let the whole lot dry out and come up to “house temperature” for 3-4 weeks and stabilise before decorating.
Yes, letter box looks exactly as you wrote - with double seals and brush inserts.The comments about letterboxes are probably based on old designs - the new ones in solid / insulated doors are the 3 part airtight type these days with double seals and brush inserts, not a lot gets through them.
Not yet. Technically the installation is not yet complete. Our installer will be returning in Jan to replace glass in side panels - the ones his door manufacturer provided originally were not of the ordered spec (visually).@fleyh did you get a FENSA installation certificate with this ..?
You should have a dpm covering the entire new floor but this should be on the warm side (top) of the insulation, not on the tiles with insulation on top. Just make sure water cannot penetrate under the uPVC frame and into the floor that’s above the damp proof membrane.It is a single layer DPM unfortunately.
If I am able to squeeze another DPM (2) under the frame - should the rest of that second DPM be covering the floor (part covered in tiles at the moment) ?
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Please excuse my ignorance - do you mind clarifying what you call "inner leaf"?
Below is a photo of what that space looks like at the momentIs the wall section directly in front of the new bottom step of the stairs solid or stud?
If you compare the outside corner of the house to the shape inside it will be obvious that there’s a void behind the brick that’s now inside the hall. Almost certainly the cavity wall follows the outer corner of the building and then another single skin of brick returned to the old door position. Behind that brick must be a void between it and the cavity wall that forms the gable of the house. I wouldn’t have been surprised to find that the bit that returns at the bottom of the stairs was simply a stud to close off the gap.Below is a photo of what that space looks like at the moment
Half of the last stairs step had to be cut out to allow new door to open with hinges on the left. New door is installed in the middle of the frame.
Old door had hinges on the right and was positioned in the right half of the door frame.
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