I am stewing over how to build a small workshop (16x8ft). I want to avoid a concrete floor but want something sturdy enough to take the repetitive knocking of hand tool woodworking. The ground is about two foot of soil on top of a chalk bed. I am hoping to build something that will last 30yrs or more, and remain level of course.
I have already built a studio in the garden. I dug nine large holes down to firm chalky soil (approximately 20”) and back filled with hardcore (4”) reinforced concrete (5”) and blocks stacked and concreted until above ground level. They are not going anywhere, but it was a lot of work by hand and, due to the spacing, the floor is a little springy. Not an issue for the studio but not what I want for a workshop floor.
I have a few ideas. The floor will need a lot more supporting points. I will be use 5”x2” joists due to overall height restriction of 2.5m.
Option 1: Use six oak railway sleepers llllll coated in bitumen and resting on a shallow bed of hardcore. This should provide the largest area of support. Concerns include; difficulty getting them all level, warping over time, eventually rotting.
Option 2: Use 600x600 concrete slabs on a bed of hardcore, timber frame raised with single blocks on top of slabs. This will involve the least digging and won’t rot. Concerns include, slabs cracking (especially if blocks are towards the edges)
Option 3: dig lots of relatively small, but deep, holes and use postcrete to cement oak beams in place. Bolt the joists to the posts. Concerns includes; over fiddly, potential movement, lots of bags of postcrete.
Which option would you go for and why? Any other ideas?
I have already built a studio in the garden. I dug nine large holes down to firm chalky soil (approximately 20”) and back filled with hardcore (4”) reinforced concrete (5”) and blocks stacked and concreted until above ground level. They are not going anywhere, but it was a lot of work by hand and, due to the spacing, the floor is a little springy. Not an issue for the studio but not what I want for a workshop floor.
I have a few ideas. The floor will need a lot more supporting points. I will be use 5”x2” joists due to overall height restriction of 2.5m.
Option 1: Use six oak railway sleepers llllll coated in bitumen and resting on a shallow bed of hardcore. This should provide the largest area of support. Concerns include; difficulty getting them all level, warping over time, eventually rotting.
Option 2: Use 600x600 concrete slabs on a bed of hardcore, timber frame raised with single blocks on top of slabs. This will involve the least digging and won’t rot. Concerns include, slabs cracking (especially if blocks are towards the edges)
Option 3: dig lots of relatively small, but deep, holes and use postcrete to cement oak beams in place. Bolt the joists to the posts. Concerns includes; over fiddly, potential movement, lots of bags of postcrete.
Which option would you go for and why? Any other ideas?