Hi all,
I am doing some work on a property and part of the job is to replace a section of suspended concrete flooring.
The property is victorian with a cellar, it has those clay tiles just out side of the front door. Basicly whats happened over time is this small peice of tiled floor {external} has cracked due to the old timbers supporting the original screed has rotted away.
What I planned to do to fix this is, remove the damged floor (only 1m x 0.85m) and install some beam and block and screed the top however as this is my first date with beam and block I did not realise you couldnt buy it off the shelf, you have to have them made and to do that they want plans. I dont have a problem with this sort of thing however for a tiny section it seems like a lot of messing about.
Has anybody had experience of getting some of these beams in nottingham (such a small quant) and also would using some large concrete lintels instead do the trick.
So really any suggestions are welcome as you may think of a few alternatives I have not. The key is it's open to the elements so really wants a concrete/screed top
cheers
I am doing some work on a property and part of the job is to replace a section of suspended concrete flooring.
The property is victorian with a cellar, it has those clay tiles just out side of the front door. Basicly whats happened over time is this small peice of tiled floor {external} has cracked due to the old timbers supporting the original screed has rotted away.
What I planned to do to fix this is, remove the damged floor (only 1m x 0.85m) and install some beam and block and screed the top however as this is my first date with beam and block I did not realise you couldnt buy it off the shelf, you have to have them made and to do that they want plans. I dont have a problem with this sort of thing however for a tiny section it seems like a lot of messing about.
Has anybody had experience of getting some of these beams in nottingham (such a small quant) and also would using some large concrete lintels instead do the trick.
So really any suggestions are welcome as you may think of a few alternatives I have not. The key is it's open to the elements so really wants a concrete/screed top
cheers
