redefined_cycles
Established Member
Hi all. So I started a thread asking about the lintel and other stuff for my outhouse project. But it was all a bit ambiguous and I've started exploring options already. Basically the outhouse is a mess but also not very water tight and during winter lots of bike stuff tends to get 'rusty'. Original thrwad here Outhouse/shed door frame replacement - making wider!
Two things need doing. Firstly door/frame replacement and I'd been thinking a composite or UPVC. Something reclaimed/recycled obviously. Secondly some more shelving/storage system and a good tidy up as everythings gotten ahead of me (clinically diagnosed with dyslexia and organisational difficulties )
That's the back door after a tiny porch area. Window next to it and then the door frame I'm gonna be ripping out (methodically). The culprit being mainly at the bottom as can be seen big rotten gaps in the frame and the door is also 'gaping' beneath.
I took some online input to explore whether there's a lintel above the outhouse doorframe. To get a masonry drillbit past the woodwork and see if it hits a metal plate. Instead I cut a piece out from the frame (maybe not as clever) and there's definitely not a lintel beneath the one layer of bricks above that door.
From what I can gather after some more cutting the frame around the left side of the frame where door is hung. The red thick squares represent the brickwork that the door frame is screwed into face on (the blue lines being frame fixing). Seems as though these bricks - most probably a load bearing wall - were dround and chiselled away when this current frame was put in.
Below at the bricks on the left, the frame is fixed into these (blue lines being frame fixings). Then it appears they just added that wooden board over after the upvc windows/door were put in.
Now, coming over to the missing lintel. I can only assume that this is because the roof is made from corrugated metal with concrete poured into/around it. Hence what's probably fixed straight into the house (on the left). I've taken some input from a (non-professional) builder to just remove the overhead bricks when installing new/salvaged upvc frame.
Problem remains how I'd get a standard door frame (not custom built to my opening and) for the fixings of the left to knock/fasten straight into the brickwork). Watch this space...
Two things need doing. Firstly door/frame replacement and I'd been thinking a composite or UPVC. Something reclaimed/recycled obviously. Secondly some more shelving/storage system and a good tidy up as everythings gotten ahead of me (clinically diagnosed with dyslexia and organisational difficulties )
That's the back door after a tiny porch area. Window next to it and then the door frame I'm gonna be ripping out (methodically). The culprit being mainly at the bottom as can be seen big rotten gaps in the frame and the door is also 'gaping' beneath.
I took some online input to explore whether there's a lintel above the outhouse doorframe. To get a masonry drillbit past the woodwork and see if it hits a metal plate. Instead I cut a piece out from the frame (maybe not as clever) and there's definitely not a lintel beneath the one layer of bricks above that door.
From what I can gather after some more cutting the frame around the left side of the frame where door is hung. The red thick squares represent the brickwork that the door frame is screwed into face on (the blue lines being frame fixing). Seems as though these bricks - most probably a load bearing wall - were dround and chiselled away when this current frame was put in.
Below at the bricks on the left, the frame is fixed into these (blue lines being frame fixings). Then it appears they just added that wooden board over after the upvc windows/door were put in.
Now, coming over to the missing lintel. I can only assume that this is because the roof is made from corrugated metal with concrete poured into/around it. Hence what's probably fixed straight into the house (on the left). I've taken some input from a (non-professional) builder to just remove the overhead bricks when installing new/salvaged upvc frame.
Problem remains how I'd get a standard door frame (not custom built to my opening and) for the fixings of the left to knock/fasten straight into the brickwork). Watch this space...