yngndrw
Established Member
Hello,
I know the subject has been covered many times but a lot of the time they are specific questions or related to new wooden workshop builds.
I have four buildings to do up: (In order, I'll start with the smallest and work up to the largest and most important)
- An outdoor office building
- A garage (Office / hobby room conversion for my parents to use)
- My workshop
- My house
The construction is slightly different between each of them but they all have a lack of damp proofing in common.
So the first is an outdoor office building - It has solid brick walls (About 240mm thick), appears to have a lime-based mortar with no damp proof course and the concrete slab appears to have a membrane under it as you can see some sheeting at the edges. My plan is to pull all of the plasterboard off the wall, put in a course of Dryrods and paint on some liquid-applied DPM making sure that I go over where the Dryrods are and that I cover a good 150mm of the floor. I was then thinking of sticking 25-50mm of PIR to the wall with adhesive (It's only a small building) and then applying plasterboard with dot and dab. For sockets I'd probably just stick a block of wood in the same thickness as the PIR and foil tape over that, I don't think it has to be perfect for that building but I'd love to have some advice for that. The only complication is that the building will also house a large solar inverter, three phase distribution board and battery which needs some proper support on a fire-resistant wall, so my plan was to use fire-resistant plywood on that wall in place of the plasterboard and to screw through the PIR into the wall with long screws. I'd then use unistrut over the top of that for the heavier items and either fix that into the plywood or use some rigfix bolts into the wall behind depending on how good of a fixing I get for the plywood. Because I plan to paint the liquid DPM onto a section of the floor, I think I should be safe to plaster right down the to floor.
The second task is the garage which is slightly different. This has solid blockwork walls (Single thickness with pillars) with a damp proof course. (At least on three sides, I may need to use Dryrods both horizontally and vertically on one wall which joins onto another building) I don't know if the concrete has membrane under it and I believe it's a cement based mortar. Again my plan was to paint on the liquid-applied DPM and to do very much the same in regards to insulation. Sockets will be surface mount in here so no issues there.
The third task is my workshop and I want to do a slightly better job in here as I'll be air conditioning it to control humidity and I'll also want to fix stuff to the walls. The construction of this is also a solid wall made from single thickness blockwork like the garage with what appears to be a cement based mortar, but sadly this building does not appear to have any damp proof course. Again my plan was to use Dryrods and liquid-applied DPM but this time I need a stronger wall. I was thinking of some thicker PIR (50-100mm) within a studwork frame, tape over the joins and then face with plywood sheets. The roof isn't insulated so that also needs doing, along with ventilation. (I'll add that when the rotten wooden soffits are replaced with UPVC) Sockets will be surface mount in here so no issues there.
Finally there's the house, very much like the first outbuilding in that it's a solid brick wall with lime-based mortar, no damp proof course (Electro-osmosis damp proofing was added about 40 years ago, which I believe was a scam?) and the concrete floor doesn't have any membrane. We want to add underfloor heating and don't have much (any) height available so I think we'll just have to do what we can. Again my plan is generally the same as with the workshop - Dryrods, liquid-applied DPM, studwork with 100mm PIR and then plasterboard. We don't really have much weight to hang from the walls (Kitchen will be moved to an extension) so I'm not even sure if we need the studwork. Also not sure how to do sockets within the house. This is a long way away though, the main thing is to practice and learn the skills on the buildings I don't care as much about, then apply that knowledge to the workshop and house.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
I know the subject has been covered many times but a lot of the time they are specific questions or related to new wooden workshop builds.
I have four buildings to do up: (In order, I'll start with the smallest and work up to the largest and most important)
- An outdoor office building
- A garage (Office / hobby room conversion for my parents to use)
- My workshop
- My house
The construction is slightly different between each of them but they all have a lack of damp proofing in common.
So the first is an outdoor office building - It has solid brick walls (About 240mm thick), appears to have a lime-based mortar with no damp proof course and the concrete slab appears to have a membrane under it as you can see some sheeting at the edges. My plan is to pull all of the plasterboard off the wall, put in a course of Dryrods and paint on some liquid-applied DPM making sure that I go over where the Dryrods are and that I cover a good 150mm of the floor. I was then thinking of sticking 25-50mm of PIR to the wall with adhesive (It's only a small building) and then applying plasterboard with dot and dab. For sockets I'd probably just stick a block of wood in the same thickness as the PIR and foil tape over that, I don't think it has to be perfect for that building but I'd love to have some advice for that. The only complication is that the building will also house a large solar inverter, three phase distribution board and battery which needs some proper support on a fire-resistant wall, so my plan was to use fire-resistant plywood on that wall in place of the plasterboard and to screw through the PIR into the wall with long screws. I'd then use unistrut over the top of that for the heavier items and either fix that into the plywood or use some rigfix bolts into the wall behind depending on how good of a fixing I get for the plywood. Because I plan to paint the liquid DPM onto a section of the floor, I think I should be safe to plaster right down the to floor.
The second task is the garage which is slightly different. This has solid blockwork walls (Single thickness with pillars) with a damp proof course. (At least on three sides, I may need to use Dryrods both horizontally and vertically on one wall which joins onto another building) I don't know if the concrete has membrane under it and I believe it's a cement based mortar. Again my plan was to paint on the liquid-applied DPM and to do very much the same in regards to insulation. Sockets will be surface mount in here so no issues there.
The third task is my workshop and I want to do a slightly better job in here as I'll be air conditioning it to control humidity and I'll also want to fix stuff to the walls. The construction of this is also a solid wall made from single thickness blockwork like the garage with what appears to be a cement based mortar, but sadly this building does not appear to have any damp proof course. Again my plan was to use Dryrods and liquid-applied DPM but this time I need a stronger wall. I was thinking of some thicker PIR (50-100mm) within a studwork frame, tape over the joins and then face with plywood sheets. The roof isn't insulated so that also needs doing, along with ventilation. (I'll add that when the rotten wooden soffits are replaced with UPVC) Sockets will be surface mount in here so no issues there.
Finally there's the house, very much like the first outbuilding in that it's a solid brick wall with lime-based mortar, no damp proof course (Electro-osmosis damp proofing was added about 40 years ago, which I believe was a scam?) and the concrete floor doesn't have any membrane. We want to add underfloor heating and don't have much (any) height available so I think we'll just have to do what we can. Again my plan is generally the same as with the workshop - Dryrods, liquid-applied DPM, studwork with 100mm PIR and then plasterboard. We don't really have much weight to hang from the walls (Kitchen will be moved to an extension) so I'm not even sure if we need the studwork. Also not sure how to do sockets within the house. This is a long way away though, the main thing is to practice and learn the skills on the buildings I don't care as much about, then apply that knowledge to the workshop and house.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.