Looking for some advice, as these forums seem to have a lot of people doing this.
I have a detached garage (approx 6mx3m), with a flat roof (well slight angle for drainage, but effectively flat roof) which is OSB with felt on top, the gritty stuff. It is single brick (100mm) with 200mm pillars on the long walls. I have 2 windows, up and over door and will be re-opening side door which is currently blocked up (dont know why... prev owner).
Problem I have is, during winter, it gets quite damp. Very drafty etc, and some of my tools have rusted up a bit etc. I want to be able to have tools all out and hanging and organised etc with no danger of damp/rust. I also would love to be able to store wood, so having it insulated seemed to be the best option. There is a washing machine and tumble dryer in there, which will have to stay there. Its a condenser dryer so it produces quite a bit of heat when used.
Looking at celotex costing, it aint cheap! I am thinking roof, 100m earth wool, or 100mm celotex. Obv earthwool will be no where near as good as celotex, but it is way way cheaper. I understand I need to leave a 50mm gap above insulation for ventilation, which also means I need to put holes in between all the joists on the facias to allow air to flow through. I dont have a softit. Just facias. Trying to local water proof small vents is proving difficult. Anyone ideas?
Walls I am thinking 2x2 studs at 600mm cc, with 50mm celotex and floor 2x1s with 25mm celotex. Then on floor, chipboard floor and walls, probably OSB or ply. Maybe plasterboard, but I am thinking having wood would be much more benefical for wear and tear and the ability to hang stuff on walls anywhere.
My current height to ceiling is 2.3m so I do not want to reduce the height too much.
Now, I really do not know what to do with the up and over door. Replacing it will be very expensive. What about just throwing a stud wall infront of it and locking ti off. Then down the line I could make some hinged doors when the funds are there? Thoughts? What about sealing it from drafts. There are huge gaps around it currently.
On top of this, I will be getting more sockets etc put in. Currently just have a light and 1 double socket.
Regarding damp proofing. I believe layer of DPM on the concrete floor, ran up on top of a vapour layer which is ran down the walls on top of the studs and insulation before finish ply. For ceiling same again with vapour layer on top of the wall vapour layer. Presume will need to use tanalised timber for all studs.
Let me know how far I am of here.
Anyway on top of all that, is all the above really worth it? Is there cheaper options? What about just sealingg the up and over door and putting a vent or 2 and throwing down some vinyl on the floor and put a jumper on? Or just put some stud with no insulation and some OSB on walls. Will this help at all to prevent damp on tools etc? Presume this would not help the temperature, so storing wood would not be the best without insulated.
Just working out costings, I think I am easily looking close to £1000 on all the work getting insulated?
Thanks
I have a detached garage (approx 6mx3m), with a flat roof (well slight angle for drainage, but effectively flat roof) which is OSB with felt on top, the gritty stuff. It is single brick (100mm) with 200mm pillars on the long walls. I have 2 windows, up and over door and will be re-opening side door which is currently blocked up (dont know why... prev owner).
Problem I have is, during winter, it gets quite damp. Very drafty etc, and some of my tools have rusted up a bit etc. I want to be able to have tools all out and hanging and organised etc with no danger of damp/rust. I also would love to be able to store wood, so having it insulated seemed to be the best option. There is a washing machine and tumble dryer in there, which will have to stay there. Its a condenser dryer so it produces quite a bit of heat when used.
Looking at celotex costing, it aint cheap! I am thinking roof, 100m earth wool, or 100mm celotex. Obv earthwool will be no where near as good as celotex, but it is way way cheaper. I understand I need to leave a 50mm gap above insulation for ventilation, which also means I need to put holes in between all the joists on the facias to allow air to flow through. I dont have a softit. Just facias. Trying to local water proof small vents is proving difficult. Anyone ideas?
Walls I am thinking 2x2 studs at 600mm cc, with 50mm celotex and floor 2x1s with 25mm celotex. Then on floor, chipboard floor and walls, probably OSB or ply. Maybe plasterboard, but I am thinking having wood would be much more benefical for wear and tear and the ability to hang stuff on walls anywhere.
My current height to ceiling is 2.3m so I do not want to reduce the height too much.
Now, I really do not know what to do with the up and over door. Replacing it will be very expensive. What about just throwing a stud wall infront of it and locking ti off. Then down the line I could make some hinged doors when the funds are there? Thoughts? What about sealing it from drafts. There are huge gaps around it currently.
On top of this, I will be getting more sockets etc put in. Currently just have a light and 1 double socket.
Regarding damp proofing. I believe layer of DPM on the concrete floor, ran up on top of a vapour layer which is ran down the walls on top of the studs and insulation before finish ply. For ceiling same again with vapour layer on top of the wall vapour layer. Presume will need to use tanalised timber for all studs.
Let me know how far I am of here.
Anyway on top of all that, is all the above really worth it? Is there cheaper options? What about just sealingg the up and over door and putting a vent or 2 and throwing down some vinyl on the floor and put a jumper on? Or just put some stud with no insulation and some OSB on walls. Will this help at all to prevent damp on tools etc? Presume this would not help the temperature, so storing wood would not be the best without insulated.
Just working out costings, I think I am easily looking close to £1000 on all the work getting insulated?
Thanks