HandyAndy
Established Member
Afternoon all - I know this is probably more building work than woodwork but it involves wood and I figured you guys might help me overcome my current creativity block! I have a customer who wants me to sort out their back step (see attached pic)... 'sort out' meaning "I'm not quite sure what I want but can you just come up with something and fix it please?". So... there's wonky paving stones (laid on soil by what I can tell) with tiles on top, worn threshold on top of that and then the finished internal floor on top of the tiles... and the oak floor is higher than the threshold. As far as I can tell the door doesn't butt-up to the threshold at all so in its current state water could easily penetrate and ruin their lovely solid wood floor.
My current thinking is along the lines of, knock the house down and start again... I mean, remove the threshold, cut back the tiles and wonky slabs to the line of the solid floor edge, dig out the soil, put in 100mm of MOT1 sub-base, DPC membrane then build a new concrete / brick step. Remove the rain deflector from the bottom of the door (this will probably break when I take it off), fit a new wooden threshold that actually butts up to the door and is higher than finished floor level, re-fit new rain deflector, paint, seal etc. All in all 2-3 days work.
Can you creative types think of a simpler option?
My current thinking is along the lines of, knock the house down and start again... I mean, remove the threshold, cut back the tiles and wonky slabs to the line of the solid floor edge, dig out the soil, put in 100mm of MOT1 sub-base, DPC membrane then build a new concrete / brick step. Remove the rain deflector from the bottom of the door (this will probably break when I take it off), fit a new wooden threshold that actually butts up to the door and is higher than finished floor level, re-fit new rain deflector, paint, seal etc. All in all 2-3 days work.
Can you creative types think of a simpler option?