I have a new tanelised 18ft x 9ft workshop with a wooden floor (22mm T&G on timber bearers), situated on a concrete base. It is internally partitioned so as to present a 12ft x 9ft space to be used as a hobby office/studio.
The office will have heavy desks, chair(s), and server rack with castors, and recording equipment so creaky flooring is to be avoided as far as practicable. I would like the floor to be generally flat and very strong.
I'm minded to use 5mm foam (foiled and moisture barrier) on top of the existing T&G floor, and then lay sheets of 18mm structural spruce ply on top of that.
Carpeting will be placed on top of the flooring sheets for improved sound and thermal properties.
So, my questions as follows...
1. Is this a sound idea in principle?
2. May there be any damp/ventilation concerns due to the proposed moisture barrier, or should I let the floor "breathe through"?
3. Should the ply be allowed to float (allowing for differences in natural expansion/contraction relative to the underlying timbers exposed to the outside air), or should I screw the ply sheets down at intervals to keep the floor "tight" and solid?
4. Will I need to provide expansion gaps between the ply sheets (of 1.8m x 1.2m) and between the floor and the wall timbers? If so, what should I allow?
5. Am I worrying needlessly and should I simply screw 'everything to everything at regular intervals to rigidly lock the materials together?
Apologies if answers are obvious to those'in the know', but it's been (and still is) an expensive project, in for the longer term, and I really don't want to be the cause of floor damage or premature failure !
Thanks in advance.
FJ
The office will have heavy desks, chair(s), and server rack with castors, and recording equipment so creaky flooring is to be avoided as far as practicable. I would like the floor to be generally flat and very strong.
I'm minded to use 5mm foam (foiled and moisture barrier) on top of the existing T&G floor, and then lay sheets of 18mm structural spruce ply on top of that.
Carpeting will be placed on top of the flooring sheets for improved sound and thermal properties.
So, my questions as follows...
1. Is this a sound idea in principle?
2. May there be any damp/ventilation concerns due to the proposed moisture barrier, or should I let the floor "breathe through"?
3. Should the ply be allowed to float (allowing for differences in natural expansion/contraction relative to the underlying timbers exposed to the outside air), or should I screw the ply sheets down at intervals to keep the floor "tight" and solid?
4. Will I need to provide expansion gaps between the ply sheets (of 1.8m x 1.2m) and between the floor and the wall timbers? If so, what should I allow?
5. Am I worrying needlessly and should I simply screw 'everything to everything at regular intervals to rigidly lock the materials together?
Apologies if answers are obvious to those'in the know', but it's been (and still is) an expensive project, in for the longer term, and I really don't want to be the cause of floor damage or premature failure !
Thanks in advance.
FJ

