Goesbysteve
Established Member
I am currently planning the fit out of an existing double garage as a workshop and I really need some advice. I’d like any thoughts on my situation, plans or anything I’m missing please. I’m sorry for the long post but I hope it gets all the details in. I appreciate anyone who reads it. My post is in two sections. Dealing with flood risk and fit out of garage.
To give you an idea of the location -
The garage is a post 2000 (maybe 2007) dated 3m x 6m single skin concrete block wall with wooden pitched roof and swinging wooden doors. There is a flat concrete slab floor in good condition. I’m unsure if any damp proofing on the slab as it predates our ownership. Should I try to find the builder and get details? Given I live in rural north mid-Wales right next to a river and a stream and the rear of the garage built into earth covering approx 30cm of wall above the slab I am thinking additional protection. Although neighbours have said the house hadn’t flooded in 25+ years of their living here I was told by a previous resident that the property did flood around 1938. From what I’ve been told as we are in the hills water tends to come and go quickly so I am not thinking I need to deal with long term flood. As part of a flood risk mitigation project I probably will look at slot-in flood walls on our front door and the garage. These typically come up to 45cm. However I would want to double up on interior protection for the garage. Maybe a DPM sheet across floor and 30cm up the wall? I wonder if that would deal with any ingress through walls should water get above the concrete slab level. How resistant are concrete blocks and mortar to ingress? Is there any benefit to using a paint on sealer either inside or outside to tank the lower level? Would this actually help? The garage has a black paint on the walls. I’m unsure if this is just regular paint or something like Black Jack bitumen. Anyone know how to tell the difference? It covers the entire wall height.
I realise there will be some comments to not be so mad to build workshop here but it’s an existing building and I don’t have the money to build a workshop from scratch. But help really appreciated on basis of protection. A flood is actually an unlikely occurrence but I’d like to understand my options.
As to the fit out. The roof is built of C24 2x3 rafters and ceiling beams/ties. Doubled up in some locations. Both ends and centre I think. Currently I use the roof space to store suitcases, TV shipping boxes etc. nothing of considerable weight. I would like to insulate between beams and lay sheet material to allow better storage up there. Would -50mm PIR be suitable? I’m limited on thickness given the 3x2s used. I would probably put plasterboard on the underside. Should 2x3s be able to take that weight or am I asking too much of them? What options might I have of reinforcing? Can I build out the walls first then get to the ceiling at a later date?
On the walls I’d like to insulate. I realise there are many options but I was leaning towards a stud wall of 2x3 with -50mm rigid PIR insulation and OSB faced. I will want to add robust shelving to the walls. There is one double glazed window in the back wall. I’ve seen battening direct to walls with -25mm blue treated timber and a DPM roll between wall and batten. I wasn’t sure if that is ok too in my situation. The latter would reduce the space taken up a little. If I go the stud wall route how much of an air-gap should I leave? I’ve seen various ways probably on buildings with far more space than I have here so I don’t want to just go with what had worked for someone else’s building. What are my other options here? If I use PIR that has a film layer both sides do I need an additional breathable layer? I know OSB along with other typical wall panelling is not that water resistant, especially if actually in water. I know there are metal and plastic options but I think they are going to be out of my budget. OSB would he replaceable should the worst happen. How does PIR hold up to water?
On the floor I wasn’t going to insulate specifically. I would add a DPM if necessary and lay interlocking PVC garage tiles. My thoughts here is if I do get any water I want anything on the floor to be essentially waterproof and removable.
The electrics are already in the garage and I have plenty of sockets. RCD and wiring is at the top of the walls and sockets at 1.5m above the floor. I guess I need to release everything from the wall and the replace them back on the surface.
That leaves the wooden doors. They are well fitting and heavy. There is a 25mm rise on the floor level that the doors close against. I’m not sure what to do here but given effort I’d go to to insulate they will be the weak link. Would PIR be an option here again?
I was thinking about having an oil filled radiator set low to come on at 5C. I can then set it higher to get the workshop warm enough to work in. 16C would do me plenty. I don’t mind wearing a fleece lined work shirt! I know little on capacity of rad to deal with freezing temps outside in a garage my size. Would appreciate any advice on this too,
Finally at the end! Thanks for reading. Sorry if I have missed anything or not explained well enough. please do ask for clarification. Again I really do appreciate your advice.
Diolch yn fawr!
Warm regards,
Steve
To give you an idea of the location -
The garage is a post 2000 (maybe 2007) dated 3m x 6m single skin concrete block wall with wooden pitched roof and swinging wooden doors. There is a flat concrete slab floor in good condition. I’m unsure if any damp proofing on the slab as it predates our ownership. Should I try to find the builder and get details? Given I live in rural north mid-Wales right next to a river and a stream and the rear of the garage built into earth covering approx 30cm of wall above the slab I am thinking additional protection. Although neighbours have said the house hadn’t flooded in 25+ years of their living here I was told by a previous resident that the property did flood around 1938. From what I’ve been told as we are in the hills water tends to come and go quickly so I am not thinking I need to deal with long term flood. As part of a flood risk mitigation project I probably will look at slot-in flood walls on our front door and the garage. These typically come up to 45cm. However I would want to double up on interior protection for the garage. Maybe a DPM sheet across floor and 30cm up the wall? I wonder if that would deal with any ingress through walls should water get above the concrete slab level. How resistant are concrete blocks and mortar to ingress? Is there any benefit to using a paint on sealer either inside or outside to tank the lower level? Would this actually help? The garage has a black paint on the walls. I’m unsure if this is just regular paint or something like Black Jack bitumen. Anyone know how to tell the difference? It covers the entire wall height.
I realise there will be some comments to not be so mad to build workshop here but it’s an existing building and I don’t have the money to build a workshop from scratch. But help really appreciated on basis of protection. A flood is actually an unlikely occurrence but I’d like to understand my options.
As to the fit out. The roof is built of C24 2x3 rafters and ceiling beams/ties. Doubled up in some locations. Both ends and centre I think. Currently I use the roof space to store suitcases, TV shipping boxes etc. nothing of considerable weight. I would like to insulate between beams and lay sheet material to allow better storage up there. Would -50mm PIR be suitable? I’m limited on thickness given the 3x2s used. I would probably put plasterboard on the underside. Should 2x3s be able to take that weight or am I asking too much of them? What options might I have of reinforcing? Can I build out the walls first then get to the ceiling at a later date?
On the walls I’d like to insulate. I realise there are many options but I was leaning towards a stud wall of 2x3 with -50mm rigid PIR insulation and OSB faced. I will want to add robust shelving to the walls. There is one double glazed window in the back wall. I’ve seen battening direct to walls with -25mm blue treated timber and a DPM roll between wall and batten. I wasn’t sure if that is ok too in my situation. The latter would reduce the space taken up a little. If I go the stud wall route how much of an air-gap should I leave? I’ve seen various ways probably on buildings with far more space than I have here so I don’t want to just go with what had worked for someone else’s building. What are my other options here? If I use PIR that has a film layer both sides do I need an additional breathable layer? I know OSB along with other typical wall panelling is not that water resistant, especially if actually in water. I know there are metal and plastic options but I think they are going to be out of my budget. OSB would he replaceable should the worst happen. How does PIR hold up to water?
On the floor I wasn’t going to insulate specifically. I would add a DPM if necessary and lay interlocking PVC garage tiles. My thoughts here is if I do get any water I want anything on the floor to be essentially waterproof and removable.
The electrics are already in the garage and I have plenty of sockets. RCD and wiring is at the top of the walls and sockets at 1.5m above the floor. I guess I need to release everything from the wall and the replace them back on the surface.
That leaves the wooden doors. They are well fitting and heavy. There is a 25mm rise on the floor level that the doors close against. I’m not sure what to do here but given effort I’d go to to insulate they will be the weak link. Would PIR be an option here again?
I was thinking about having an oil filled radiator set low to come on at 5C. I can then set it higher to get the workshop warm enough to work in. 16C would do me plenty. I don’t mind wearing a fleece lined work shirt! I know little on capacity of rad to deal with freezing temps outside in a garage my size. Would appreciate any advice on this too,
Finally at the end! Thanks for reading. Sorry if I have missed anything or not explained well enough. please do ask for clarification. Again I really do appreciate your advice.
Diolch yn fawr!
Warm regards,
Steve
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