We recently bought a new to us house. It’s probably our last house before either a wooden overcoat or something worse……an old persons home! Anyway, the original house was built in the 50’s and over the last couple of years was completely modernised and extensively extended. The walls are all insulated, the roof has a about a meter of insulation, it’s triple glazed throughout and the extension floor is fully insulated. We were not sure what had happened under the original house floors. All houses have some compromises when you buy them, we wanted a house close to a good town / village (1 mile max), with no immediate neighbours (so I can’t play in the workshop without irritating anyone), enough ground that I could build a large workshop or had a building suitable for one, good views, south facing and reasonably modernised, and affordable. That limited what we were interested in. The big compromise with the house we have bought is it’s larger than we wanted and needs changing to meet our requirements, however, the extra space will we believe come in as my parents now well into their 80’s will some day very soon need assisted living. They will move into the spare bit of the house.
The kitchen dinner are had UFH (under floor heating) already installed and is right in the middle of the house. We didn’t want to tear out the kitchen and everything else in order to install UFH throughout the rest of the house. This has led to some pondering of how to achieve it without having different levels on the ground floor, something we did not want as we are planning for the future it has to be wheel chair / limited mobility friendly.
The upstairs is a suspended floor, joists and floor boards. The original plan was to lay the UFH heating pipes on top of the floor with a screed covering, this would increase the floor height by 25mm, something we could live with without altering all of the door lintels. However, the house is very long and actually dips either end from the centre. Something we did not realise or even consider initially. It was realised only when one of the workmen said that self levelling screed can only be pushed to give a gradient of around 5mm…….otherwise it will fully level the upstairs. A quick laser level check and sure enough, the house dips nearly 40mm at either end, which would compromise the door lintels by nearly 65mm, which is too much. The options were either to lift every door lintel, or find an alteration solution. The options were lifting all the floors and putting the UFH under the floor or an over board system thats laid over the existing floors but does not need a screed. The cost effective solution, which had the least compromises was to go for a board system. There is a small reduction in heat transfer compared to screed, but not enough to justify the additional expense. This increases the floor height by circa 20mm.
Downstairs, that required a bit of creativity!
The kitchen dinner are had UFH (under floor heating) already installed and is right in the middle of the house. We didn’t want to tear out the kitchen and everything else in order to install UFH throughout the rest of the house. This has led to some pondering of how to achieve it without having different levels on the ground floor, something we did not want as we are planning for the future it has to be wheel chair / limited mobility friendly.
The upstairs is a suspended floor, joists and floor boards. The original plan was to lay the UFH heating pipes on top of the floor with a screed covering, this would increase the floor height by 25mm, something we could live with without altering all of the door lintels. However, the house is very long and actually dips either end from the centre. Something we did not realise or even consider initially. It was realised only when one of the workmen said that self levelling screed can only be pushed to give a gradient of around 5mm…….otherwise it will fully level the upstairs. A quick laser level check and sure enough, the house dips nearly 40mm at either end, which would compromise the door lintels by nearly 65mm, which is too much. The options were either to lift every door lintel, or find an alteration solution. The options were lifting all the floors and putting the UFH under the floor or an over board system thats laid over the existing floors but does not need a screed. The cost effective solution, which had the least compromises was to go for a board system. There is a small reduction in heat transfer compared to screed, but not enough to justify the additional expense. This increases the floor height by circa 20mm.
Downstairs, that required a bit of creativity!
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