Slightly off topic, but I’m guessing a few people here might have relevant knowledge.
A house that we’re looking at potentially buying is end of terrace house, but it turns out the entire semi-detached wall is single skin/half brick thickness (i.e. 4.5”). Its the standard two storey with a pitched roof in height (approximately 7.5m), although the loft has also been converted into a living space.
The outside of the single skin wall has been rendered, and the inside has been plaster boarded (I’m guessing with some form of insulation on the rear), so heat retention and weather protection are probably as good as they’re going to get.
Obviously the house is pretty old (Victorian, so likely 130+ years old), and there are no signs of problems with the single skin wall. It’s only the side walls that are single skin (I’m assuming more terraces houses were originally planned) as the front and back are normal full brick width (9"), so maybe that makes it less important. What are people’s thoughts with regards to structural integrity looking forward? A case of “something would have happened already if it was going to”, or is that optimistic?
The notion of such a thin wall seems worrisome to me, but equally I know little about these things, so perspective with experience would be appreciated.
A house that we’re looking at potentially buying is end of terrace house, but it turns out the entire semi-detached wall is single skin/half brick thickness (i.e. 4.5”). Its the standard two storey with a pitched roof in height (approximately 7.5m), although the loft has also been converted into a living space.
The outside of the single skin wall has been rendered, and the inside has been plaster boarded (I’m guessing with some form of insulation on the rear), so heat retention and weather protection are probably as good as they’re going to get.
Obviously the house is pretty old (Victorian, so likely 130+ years old), and there are no signs of problems with the single skin wall. It’s only the side walls that are single skin (I’m assuming more terraces houses were originally planned) as the front and back are normal full brick width (9"), so maybe that makes it less important. What are people’s thoughts with regards to structural integrity looking forward? A case of “something would have happened already if it was going to”, or is that optimistic?
The notion of such a thin wall seems worrisome to me, but equally I know little about these things, so perspective with experience would be appreciated.