I am installing floor insulation for a ground floor (bungalow) bathroom, that will have wet underfloor heating. I have already cut up and removed the old concrete slab and dug out soil/rubble until the top of the footings were exposed.
I am now faced with a decision of whether to have the insulation underneath the new concrete slab, or lay the new slab down first. In either case the DPM would go below the insulation / slab and the screed with UFH pipes would go at the very top, and there will be a perimeter insulation strip just for the bathroom.
The right answer isn't obvious to me because this is an unusual situation. The bathroom is a small one, and the rest of the solid floor in the house is not (and will never be) insulated to the same standard. The bathroom floor insulation that I am installing is mainly to ensure that the UFH is reasonably efficient. Since its a bathroom, and the rest of the house has mediocre insulation there isn't a good reason to have the small area of UFH in the bathroom on all the time, so could having thick slab to heat up be undesirable? Since during the relatively long period of time is it heating up, heat will be wasted through the walls and ceiling? In which case am I better off putting the insulation on top of the slab?
I am now faced with a decision of whether to have the insulation underneath the new concrete slab, or lay the new slab down first. In either case the DPM would go below the insulation / slab and the screed with UFH pipes would go at the very top, and there will be a perimeter insulation strip just for the bathroom.
The right answer isn't obvious to me because this is an unusual situation. The bathroom is a small one, and the rest of the solid floor in the house is not (and will never be) insulated to the same standard. The bathroom floor insulation that I am installing is mainly to ensure that the UFH is reasonably efficient. Since its a bathroom, and the rest of the house has mediocre insulation there isn't a good reason to have the small area of UFH in the bathroom on all the time, so could having thick slab to heat up be undesirable? Since during the relatively long period of time is it heating up, heat will be wasted through the walls and ceiling? In which case am I better off putting the insulation on top of the slab?
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