StevieB
Established Member
My current workshop is in a cellar - bare brick walls, uneven surface etc etc. Typical Victorian cellar. What I am planning to do is line the walls to make it a proper room, but it needs doing to a budget. Dot and dab is no good as the surfaces are far too uneven and there are a number of pillars etc in the way. I am therefore really only left with timber or metal stud walling. Metal seems to be out due to cost - £6 per stud as opposed to timber which is a third of that price :shock: looking into this more closely I am left with a number of questions:
The cellar is small enough as it is so I want to minimise decreasing it further. What is the minimum stud sizes you would consider? 50 x 100mm (2" x 4") is overkill as ther is no roof to support and brick walls all round. I am torn between CLS at 63 x 38mm or I could go down to 25 x 38mm. There will be a brick wall all round but the walls are uneven enough that to get the studs vertical it may not be feasible to screw to the wall. I will have a sole and head plate fixed securely but will 25 x 38 be strong enough for a stud wall? There is no roof to support, only wall cabinets which I would french cleat into the studs.
Second question is insulation. Standard glass wool loft insulation is cheapest and really my only option as this has to be done to a tight budget. Do you lose insulation if you compress this stuff ie fit 100mm insulation into a 63mm or even 38mm gap? Or given the price is not much greater for 170mm insulation should I squeeze that into a 63mm gap? There will be variable distance between the stud and the wall itself but not a great deal extra on top of the stud depth.
Third question is plasterboard - 9.5mm or 12.5mm. Apart from strength due to increased thickness, is there much thermal efficiency in having thicker plasterboard? OSB or ply is not suitable as this is a cellar and it needs to look like a decent room, not a wooden workshop (so I have been told!)
Fourth question - damp proof membrane. Looking at cellar tanking websites, a waterproof membrane (plastic sheet) sits between brick wall and back of the stud so any water through the bricks drops down into channels and a sump. My cellar is dry and has been for the last 3 years since we moved in so I doubt it will flood. Thus do I need a membrane is the question? I dont want to induce sweating between the brick wall and the membrance, but similarly do not want damp penetrating the stud wall. Like all cellars its musty and rusts tools left lying about so there is moisture in the air - if I convert the cellar to a proper room I do not want to increase this problem due to restricted air flow etc. There are no drainage channels or sump pump at the moment as there is no need and I will not be putting one in.
Final question - flooring. More specifically, it has a sloped one. Across 4m it drops by approximately 3-5cm. Its a concrete floor which is reasonably flat ie the gradient is constant. I can either level it somehow, or live with it. If I live with it will I regret it? How plumb do people get their own floors? I plan to put down chipboard flooring so may have to joist out for that to secure the boards down flat - would you trim every joist to bring the floor to horizontal? Head height is not an immediate concern as I have 2.3M, but I do not want to lose too much due to a couple of pipes which drop below this level.
From a rough calculation I can stud in CLS, 12.5mm plasterboard and 100mm glass wool insulation in walls and ceiling, for around £500, which is really my budget. Would anyone recommend anything different without increasing my budget significantly? I will be posting detailed pics of the process next year when I start (got to do the bathroom upstairs first over xmas, then I can start on the cellar in the spring) but the planning and the anticipation is half the fun of these projects so I am starting to dream and cost things now :wink:
Cheers for any advice,
Steve.
The cellar is small enough as it is so I want to minimise decreasing it further. What is the minimum stud sizes you would consider? 50 x 100mm (2" x 4") is overkill as ther is no roof to support and brick walls all round. I am torn between CLS at 63 x 38mm or I could go down to 25 x 38mm. There will be a brick wall all round but the walls are uneven enough that to get the studs vertical it may not be feasible to screw to the wall. I will have a sole and head plate fixed securely but will 25 x 38 be strong enough for a stud wall? There is no roof to support, only wall cabinets which I would french cleat into the studs.
Second question is insulation. Standard glass wool loft insulation is cheapest and really my only option as this has to be done to a tight budget. Do you lose insulation if you compress this stuff ie fit 100mm insulation into a 63mm or even 38mm gap? Or given the price is not much greater for 170mm insulation should I squeeze that into a 63mm gap? There will be variable distance between the stud and the wall itself but not a great deal extra on top of the stud depth.
Third question is plasterboard - 9.5mm or 12.5mm. Apart from strength due to increased thickness, is there much thermal efficiency in having thicker plasterboard? OSB or ply is not suitable as this is a cellar and it needs to look like a decent room, not a wooden workshop (so I have been told!)
Fourth question - damp proof membrane. Looking at cellar tanking websites, a waterproof membrane (plastic sheet) sits between brick wall and back of the stud so any water through the bricks drops down into channels and a sump. My cellar is dry and has been for the last 3 years since we moved in so I doubt it will flood. Thus do I need a membrane is the question? I dont want to induce sweating between the brick wall and the membrance, but similarly do not want damp penetrating the stud wall. Like all cellars its musty and rusts tools left lying about so there is moisture in the air - if I convert the cellar to a proper room I do not want to increase this problem due to restricted air flow etc. There are no drainage channels or sump pump at the moment as there is no need and I will not be putting one in.
Final question - flooring. More specifically, it has a sloped one. Across 4m it drops by approximately 3-5cm. Its a concrete floor which is reasonably flat ie the gradient is constant. I can either level it somehow, or live with it. If I live with it will I regret it? How plumb do people get their own floors? I plan to put down chipboard flooring so may have to joist out for that to secure the boards down flat - would you trim every joist to bring the floor to horizontal? Head height is not an immediate concern as I have 2.3M, but I do not want to lose too much due to a couple of pipes which drop below this level.
From a rough calculation I can stud in CLS, 12.5mm plasterboard and 100mm glass wool insulation in walls and ceiling, for around £500, which is really my budget. Would anyone recommend anything different without increasing my budget significantly? I will be posting detailed pics of the process next year when I start (got to do the bathroom upstairs first over xmas, then I can start on the cellar in the spring) but the planning and the anticipation is half the fun of these projects so I am starting to dream and cost things now :wink:
Cheers for any advice,
Steve.