Hey Everyone,
I'm currently looking at some resolutions to my suspended floor.
Bit of a background, the house was built about 100 years ago, the hallway and kitchen a solid concrete floors, the living room however is a suspended floor with a void underneath with a slight gradient from from about 500mm at one side to 1000mm at another.
I've had a few issues with this:
- The room gets warm enough with the heating on but the floor itself is cold.
- I had wood worm about 18 months ago in one corner where standing water comes through the wall below ground level and sits on top of the soil at the bottom of the void (it does drain away but very slowly). I had this treated and replaced some of the timber floorboards and have had nothing since but my concern is that this could come back.
- I also had some very small white damp rising, but I think this was because I filled what looked like drilled holes into the existing floorboards that were on one side which probably allowed airflow I re-drilled these and this helped that issue.
My plan is to have an engineer assess the structure of my house and then if feasible remove all the timber Hardcore/Sand blind/DPC/Concrete/Screed the whole area.
I'm looking for a bit of guidance as too wether this is the best solution. There is currently 2 air blocks underneath the floor, and wasn't too sure if filling this way is asking for more trouble damp wise, we have ventilation above the floor as well (air vent, open chimney flu and trickle vents).
As the central heating is run under the current floorboards, would it be a case of filling to a certain level and then putting in some new timbers to create a small void for insulation and pipework?
In regards to the water getting through the lower brick work, I'm unsure if I should be digging down to repair pointing and possibly use the breathable water resistant coating you can use on bricks or if filling the void should block that water from getting in and causing any issues.
Sorry there's a lot of info there but i'm just after any advice before I possibly make the wrong choice!
Thanks
I'm currently looking at some resolutions to my suspended floor.
Bit of a background, the house was built about 100 years ago, the hallway and kitchen a solid concrete floors, the living room however is a suspended floor with a void underneath with a slight gradient from from about 500mm at one side to 1000mm at another.
I've had a few issues with this:
- The room gets warm enough with the heating on but the floor itself is cold.
- I had wood worm about 18 months ago in one corner where standing water comes through the wall below ground level and sits on top of the soil at the bottom of the void (it does drain away but very slowly). I had this treated and replaced some of the timber floorboards and have had nothing since but my concern is that this could come back.
- I also had some very small white damp rising, but I think this was because I filled what looked like drilled holes into the existing floorboards that were on one side which probably allowed airflow I re-drilled these and this helped that issue.
My plan is to have an engineer assess the structure of my house and then if feasible remove all the timber Hardcore/Sand blind/DPC/Concrete/Screed the whole area.
I'm looking for a bit of guidance as too wether this is the best solution. There is currently 2 air blocks underneath the floor, and wasn't too sure if filling this way is asking for more trouble damp wise, we have ventilation above the floor as well (air vent, open chimney flu and trickle vents).
As the central heating is run under the current floorboards, would it be a case of filling to a certain level and then putting in some new timbers to create a small void for insulation and pipework?
In regards to the water getting through the lower brick work, I'm unsure if I should be digging down to repair pointing and possibly use the breathable water resistant coating you can use on bricks or if filling the void should block that water from getting in and causing any issues.
Sorry there's a lot of info there but i'm just after any advice before I possibly make the wrong choice!
Thanks