Sneezle
Member
Hi all,
First time posting here but I have been following this forum for tips for a while.
I could really do with your advice on how to properly insulate a pre-built shed. I can see there are a lot of posts already about this and I have read a lot of them but because I am quite new to being handy and I couldn't see anything directly comparable to lift ideas from, I thought I would be best asking directly.
Scenario
In short, until very recently, we were due to move to a larger house, but due to a chain collapse, that plan has now fallen through. Due to an imminent new arrival (!) we aren’t likely to be moving again for a few years.
I have been using the loft as a mini workshop for a while but this will need to be repurposed as an office space.
I have a nice 12x8 pre-fab shed that I purchased in 2020 which is currently sitting largely unused. I want to find a way to turn this shed into a small workshop to practice some small woodwork and keep my homebrew kit in.
I know this is a small space for a workshop but it’ll be a substantial upgrade from the space I currently have (which is basically a very small table in the loft). I have watched a whole bunch of youtube videos and read a lot of DIY books about converting a shed into a workshop and basically just find myself a bit overloaded by all the conflicting information and basically paralysed by indecision and the fear of getting it wrong and having to either redo it all, or having a rotting mess within 2 years!
Shed
The Shed is 12x8 and is tongue and groove. Timber is treated and is rated for 10 years +. The roof is metal and the building seems watertight. The shed sits on timber bearers on an uneven concrete floor.
The wall batons are 45mm and the ceiling batons are 70mm – which is frustrating as they don’t seem to be conventional sizes for the majority of insulation that I can find in the post 2020 world without making a large bulk order.
I have already had a crack at doing something to the floor (as I needed to start moving some things in from the loft asap!) which I go into below.
Planned use of space
As above, I would like to use this space as a small workshop. I will be running electrics from the house to the shed for lighting and plan on putting in a few plug sockets for power tools.
I would like it to be warm enough to work in over winter or at least so it doesn't freeze or get damp, so homebrew and tools are safe in there. There is enough scope to run a little oil radiator as well.
I don’t have many power tools as I am just starting to learn and I expect if there ever comes a time where I want something bigger, I think we’ll either be getting ready to move house, or I will have gained more knowledge and experience and will have the confidence and ability to build my own to spec.
I would love to take the shed with me but it was difficult enough just getting it in place so it will probably stay where it is when (if) we go so realistically I am looking for a permanent insulation installation.
Current Insulation Plan
Floor
I am a comparative DIY novice but I have lined the floor with a Wickes standard vapour barrier, some water resistant soft foam flooring on top of that and then covered it with a 5mm rubber floor. It seems to have taken some of the edge off the cold and is robust enough for me to do work on it without breakages or damage to the floor.
Unfortunately, the shed was installed and fitted before I knew I would want to use it for a workshop and the floor is fitted with countersunk nails throughout, so I won’t be able to get under it and fit insulation to the floor framework without the risk of damage to the shed.
I did think of a floating floor but as the shed is a pent roof with 203 at it’s highest and 190 at it’s lowest (I am just over 6’2!), so I don’t have space left to fit a floating floor.
Unless you all think there is a good reason, I don’t plan on touching the floor again.
Walls
Ideally, I see that I would have lined the outside of the shed with a barrier. However, the cladding is in situ and nailed in place with countersunk nails, so lining the entire thing isn’t really an option for me (I will be doing this work mostly alone). I was hoping I could use an air gap between cladding and the working space inside to mitigate the fact there was no barrier.
I was originally thinking of insulating the walls using the internal batons as a framework, using nails driven into these to provide a friction fit for 40mm polystyrene leaving a small 5mm air gap between the internal cladding and the inside of the wall. After this was fitted, I was planning on covering any joins in aluminium tape, stapling a vapour barrier on the batons over this (with an overlap) and then finishing by covering with hardboard, OSB or thin plywood (to give enough strength for a french cleat system in due course) before sealing and painting.
Having read into it, I see that the strong recommendation is that polystyrene and electricity don’t mix at all, so I am planning on replacing the polystyrene with PIR (Kingspan or whatever I can find at the moment) but this requires a bit of a rethink. PIR seems really expensive at the moment compared to poly but I want it to be safe to use.
For PIR, the only sizes that seem commonly available without an expensive bulk buy are 25mm or 50mm.
With the batons in the wall being 45mm, I think it will have to be 25mm PIR throughout with a 11mm air gap between internal cladding and wall and then place cut 9mm thick OSB panels to cover the PIR and then seal round the gaps between OSB panels with caulk. Will that actually provide any benefit?
Roof
For the roof, the batons are 75mm, so I was thinking of using 50mm PIR with a 25mm air gap from the top of the roof (again, friction fit the insulation with nails), cover with vapour barrier and then hardboard over it.
Should note, the roof does not sit cleanly on the walls – there is a bit of overlap all around with spaces set out that are wide enough for me to fit my hand down. I assume this is to allow for airflow, so I will try not to block these gaps with insulation and will try to find some mesh to fit over the gaps to prevent insects from coming in.
Windows
For the windows – which are single panel glass, I was thinking of just sealing any gaps in the frames with expanding foam and sticking on a cheap plastic liner on the inside of the glass.
Power
Finally I have been thinking about how to route the power, so what I am planning on doing is drilling a hole in the floor for the power cable to go through alongside the inside of one wall (with a channel cut in the PIR to facilitate this), sealing the hole the cable comes through in the floor with expanding foam and then pulling the cable through the OSB and having everything run from a central point there with the cables on the outside of the OSB. Does that sound sensible? An electrician will fit this for me, but I think I need to have a rough idea for the design and the walls insulated and sorted before I get him over.
As you can see, I have thought about this but I don’t know anyone who is DIY orientated and so don’t have anyone to bounce this idea off of!
Could you let me know what you think about the plan so far? Does this sound like it will work or is this complete overkill for the intended use?
Thanks so much for any advice you can offer! Everything gratefully received!
First time posting here but I have been following this forum for tips for a while.
I could really do with your advice on how to properly insulate a pre-built shed. I can see there are a lot of posts already about this and I have read a lot of them but because I am quite new to being handy and I couldn't see anything directly comparable to lift ideas from, I thought I would be best asking directly.
Scenario
In short, until very recently, we were due to move to a larger house, but due to a chain collapse, that plan has now fallen through. Due to an imminent new arrival (!) we aren’t likely to be moving again for a few years.
I have been using the loft as a mini workshop for a while but this will need to be repurposed as an office space.
I have a nice 12x8 pre-fab shed that I purchased in 2020 which is currently sitting largely unused. I want to find a way to turn this shed into a small workshop to practice some small woodwork and keep my homebrew kit in.
I know this is a small space for a workshop but it’ll be a substantial upgrade from the space I currently have (which is basically a very small table in the loft). I have watched a whole bunch of youtube videos and read a lot of DIY books about converting a shed into a workshop and basically just find myself a bit overloaded by all the conflicting information and basically paralysed by indecision and the fear of getting it wrong and having to either redo it all, or having a rotting mess within 2 years!
Shed
The Shed is 12x8 and is tongue and groove. Timber is treated and is rated for 10 years +. The roof is metal and the building seems watertight. The shed sits on timber bearers on an uneven concrete floor.
The wall batons are 45mm and the ceiling batons are 70mm – which is frustrating as they don’t seem to be conventional sizes for the majority of insulation that I can find in the post 2020 world without making a large bulk order.
I have already had a crack at doing something to the floor (as I needed to start moving some things in from the loft asap!) which I go into below.
Planned use of space
As above, I would like to use this space as a small workshop. I will be running electrics from the house to the shed for lighting and plan on putting in a few plug sockets for power tools.
I would like it to be warm enough to work in over winter or at least so it doesn't freeze or get damp, so homebrew and tools are safe in there. There is enough scope to run a little oil radiator as well.
I don’t have many power tools as I am just starting to learn and I expect if there ever comes a time where I want something bigger, I think we’ll either be getting ready to move house, or I will have gained more knowledge and experience and will have the confidence and ability to build my own to spec.
I would love to take the shed with me but it was difficult enough just getting it in place so it will probably stay where it is when (if) we go so realistically I am looking for a permanent insulation installation.
Current Insulation Plan
Floor
I am a comparative DIY novice but I have lined the floor with a Wickes standard vapour barrier, some water resistant soft foam flooring on top of that and then covered it with a 5mm rubber floor. It seems to have taken some of the edge off the cold and is robust enough for me to do work on it without breakages or damage to the floor.
Unfortunately, the shed was installed and fitted before I knew I would want to use it for a workshop and the floor is fitted with countersunk nails throughout, so I won’t be able to get under it and fit insulation to the floor framework without the risk of damage to the shed.
I did think of a floating floor but as the shed is a pent roof with 203 at it’s highest and 190 at it’s lowest (I am just over 6’2!), so I don’t have space left to fit a floating floor.
Unless you all think there is a good reason, I don’t plan on touching the floor again.
Walls
Ideally, I see that I would have lined the outside of the shed with a barrier. However, the cladding is in situ and nailed in place with countersunk nails, so lining the entire thing isn’t really an option for me (I will be doing this work mostly alone). I was hoping I could use an air gap between cladding and the working space inside to mitigate the fact there was no barrier.
I was originally thinking of insulating the walls using the internal batons as a framework, using nails driven into these to provide a friction fit for 40mm polystyrene leaving a small 5mm air gap between the internal cladding and the inside of the wall. After this was fitted, I was planning on covering any joins in aluminium tape, stapling a vapour barrier on the batons over this (with an overlap) and then finishing by covering with hardboard, OSB or thin plywood (to give enough strength for a french cleat system in due course) before sealing and painting.
Having read into it, I see that the strong recommendation is that polystyrene and electricity don’t mix at all, so I am planning on replacing the polystyrene with PIR (Kingspan or whatever I can find at the moment) but this requires a bit of a rethink. PIR seems really expensive at the moment compared to poly but I want it to be safe to use.
For PIR, the only sizes that seem commonly available without an expensive bulk buy are 25mm or 50mm.
With the batons in the wall being 45mm, I think it will have to be 25mm PIR throughout with a 11mm air gap between internal cladding and wall and then place cut 9mm thick OSB panels to cover the PIR and then seal round the gaps between OSB panels with caulk. Will that actually provide any benefit?
Roof
For the roof, the batons are 75mm, so I was thinking of using 50mm PIR with a 25mm air gap from the top of the roof (again, friction fit the insulation with nails), cover with vapour barrier and then hardboard over it.
Should note, the roof does not sit cleanly on the walls – there is a bit of overlap all around with spaces set out that are wide enough for me to fit my hand down. I assume this is to allow for airflow, so I will try not to block these gaps with insulation and will try to find some mesh to fit over the gaps to prevent insects from coming in.
Windows
For the windows – which are single panel glass, I was thinking of just sealing any gaps in the frames with expanding foam and sticking on a cheap plastic liner on the inside of the glass.
Power
Finally I have been thinking about how to route the power, so what I am planning on doing is drilling a hole in the floor for the power cable to go through alongside the inside of one wall (with a channel cut in the PIR to facilitate this), sealing the hole the cable comes through in the floor with expanding foam and then pulling the cable through the OSB and having everything run from a central point there with the cables on the outside of the OSB. Does that sound sensible? An electrician will fit this for me, but I think I need to have a rough idea for the design and the walls insulated and sorted before I get him over.
As you can see, I have thought about this but I don’t know anyone who is DIY orientated and so don’t have anyone to bounce this idea off of!
Could you let me know what you think about the plan so far? Does this sound like it will work or is this complete overkill for the intended use?
Thanks so much for any advice you can offer! Everything gratefully received!