Churchy00
Member
Hi all,
Please be kind, I'm new here!
So I'm designing a 5m x 3m Garden Room.
Looking to put down an insulated concrete base (100mm thick) on 70mm insulation and 100mm compacted MOT1. I want to make the most of the 2.5m permitted development height to put in a gym.
The room itself has changed design about three times as the Mrs keeps changing her mind!!
It's now got two bifold doors - a 4m and a 3m.
The roof is flat (actually slightly angled - 75mm higher on the front than the back). It's a cold roof with 150mm joists at 400 centres with 18mm OSB and an EPDM rubber roof. It's got 100mm PIR insulation and 9.5mm plasterboard.
The shorter bifold has a 4x2 top plate over the top of it, plus a pair of 4x2 (might use 5x2s) timbers attached to that but mounted at 90 degrees to keep the 4x2 top plate timber as straight as possible - this "lintel" doesn't carry any weight at all so merely needs to sit above the bifold for attaching to. My hope is that any "sag" can be countered by attaching this to the roof structure above it.
Now, I'm struggling a bit with the beam over the 4m bifold. At the moment I've designed in a 152x89 RSJ at 4300 long, supported by 300mm at one end on the wooden stud frame (5x2) and the other by a steel SHS post - the RSJ is fixed to this using 2x M20 bolts through a "tab" on the post. The post is currently 145mm square section but I can't help but think that's miles too big for what I need. The post has an offset base plate that I'm planning on bolting through using Atlas bolts into 7N dense blocks (I'd rather not have to put down a concrete pad foundation if I can help it).
I've added to pictures below that will hopefully make things a bit clearer.
Garden Room...
With cladding removed and showing RSJ in place...
RSJ length and support...
Steel post RSJ attachment...
Steel post base plate is 270mm square but offset to be flush on two sides....thus fixing would only be through the two outer edges....
So I have a bunch of questions....hopefully some of you kind souls can help....
1) Is the RSJ meaty enough for the 4m bifold? Any friendly SEs out there willing to advise?
2) What size steel post do I need - 145mm seems too big....how small can I go?
3) Is the M20 attachment method I'm thinking of OK for the RSJ/steel beam connection? Will it need a 2nd plate welded underneath to support the RSJ or are two M20s robust enough for the job? Will I need a 2nd "tab" on the other side of the RSJ effectively sandwiching the RSJ in between and bolting through all three pieces? What size and thickness should the "tab" be?
4) Will sitting the steel post on blocks be good enough - bolted down using concrete bolts? Perhaps sitting on 100mm compacted MOT1 and two blocks thick?
A lot of questions but I'm hoping this all makes sense.
Would be very grateful for some advice here as I need to cost everything properly before the Mrs will approve the construction.
Feel free to ask for additional info if needed and I'll do my best to oblige.
Many thanks in advance...
Please be kind, I'm new here!
So I'm designing a 5m x 3m Garden Room.
Looking to put down an insulated concrete base (100mm thick) on 70mm insulation and 100mm compacted MOT1. I want to make the most of the 2.5m permitted development height to put in a gym.
The room itself has changed design about three times as the Mrs keeps changing her mind!!
It's now got two bifold doors - a 4m and a 3m.
The roof is flat (actually slightly angled - 75mm higher on the front than the back). It's a cold roof with 150mm joists at 400 centres with 18mm OSB and an EPDM rubber roof. It's got 100mm PIR insulation and 9.5mm plasterboard.
The shorter bifold has a 4x2 top plate over the top of it, plus a pair of 4x2 (might use 5x2s) timbers attached to that but mounted at 90 degrees to keep the 4x2 top plate timber as straight as possible - this "lintel" doesn't carry any weight at all so merely needs to sit above the bifold for attaching to. My hope is that any "sag" can be countered by attaching this to the roof structure above it.
Now, I'm struggling a bit with the beam over the 4m bifold. At the moment I've designed in a 152x89 RSJ at 4300 long, supported by 300mm at one end on the wooden stud frame (5x2) and the other by a steel SHS post - the RSJ is fixed to this using 2x M20 bolts through a "tab" on the post. The post is currently 145mm square section but I can't help but think that's miles too big for what I need. The post has an offset base plate that I'm planning on bolting through using Atlas bolts into 7N dense blocks (I'd rather not have to put down a concrete pad foundation if I can help it).
I've added to pictures below that will hopefully make things a bit clearer.
Garden Room...
With cladding removed and showing RSJ in place...
RSJ length and support...
Steel post RSJ attachment...
Steel post base plate is 270mm square but offset to be flush on two sides....thus fixing would only be through the two outer edges....
So I have a bunch of questions....hopefully some of you kind souls can help....
1) Is the RSJ meaty enough for the 4m bifold? Any friendly SEs out there willing to advise?
2) What size steel post do I need - 145mm seems too big....how small can I go?
3) Is the M20 attachment method I'm thinking of OK for the RSJ/steel beam connection? Will it need a 2nd plate welded underneath to support the RSJ or are two M20s robust enough for the job? Will I need a 2nd "tab" on the other side of the RSJ effectively sandwiching the RSJ in between and bolting through all three pieces? What size and thickness should the "tab" be?
4) Will sitting the steel post on blocks be good enough - bolted down using concrete bolts? Perhaps sitting on 100mm compacted MOT1 and two blocks thick?
A lot of questions but I'm hoping this all makes sense.
Would be very grateful for some advice here as I need to cost everything properly before the Mrs will approve the construction.
Feel free to ask for additional info if needed and I'll do my best to oblige.
Many thanks in advance...