PeteWilliams
Member
I've been using a garden shed (built by the house's previous owners) as my workshop for a couple years and was about to insulate it. The walls were ply with a vapour barrier behind it, but just the studs and cladding behind that.
My plan was to stick a breathable membrane and kingspan between the cladding and the vapour barrier, but when removing the vapour barrier I can see the cladding is damp and starting to rot. Or at least on the first wall I've looked at.
I've only recently painted the external walls of the shed and I don't think it's coming from there, I think it's coming from the ground up - the rot is worse at the bottom, especially on one side - the corner where the gutter used to empty just onto the concrete below.
The shed is on a concrete slab and I think the wooden base is just sat right on it. To make matters worse, it's sat in an area of poor drainage, and there's often standing water around it, but the concrete slab is slightly raised from its surroundings, so I wouldn't have thought it'd be in that much contact with the water.
You can see some photos here: Workshop rot
I'm guessing the only way to fix this is to tear it down and start again, but is there anything I can do before I have the time/money to do that? Even if just to slow down the inevitable?
All suggestions gratefully received!
Thanks
Pete
My plan was to stick a breathable membrane and kingspan between the cladding and the vapour barrier, but when removing the vapour barrier I can see the cladding is damp and starting to rot. Or at least on the first wall I've looked at.
I've only recently painted the external walls of the shed and I don't think it's coming from there, I think it's coming from the ground up - the rot is worse at the bottom, especially on one side - the corner where the gutter used to empty just onto the concrete below.
The shed is on a concrete slab and I think the wooden base is just sat right on it. To make matters worse, it's sat in an area of poor drainage, and there's often standing water around it, but the concrete slab is slightly raised from its surroundings, so I wouldn't have thought it'd be in that much contact with the water.
You can see some photos here: Workshop rot
I'm guessing the only way to fix this is to tear it down and start again, but is there anything I can do before I have the time/money to do that? Even if just to slow down the inevitable?
All suggestions gratefully received!
Thanks
Pete