Hi there, I have a large single skin brick-built shed with a sloping flat roof (felt) and a concrete floor that sits four courses below the level of the surrounding ground level. As a result damp is constantly penetrating through those four courses.
I intend to turn the shed into a liveable room for use as an office.
First thing then is to deal with the penetrating damp. I initially looked into applying a damp proof membrane paint to the interior of the bricks but upon speaking with Bostik was informed the product was unsuitable in preventing hydostatic pressure.
Next I researched a tanking slurry. I looked at the Sovereign K11 http://www.sovchem.co.uk/tanking/hey-di-system.html
and the much cheaper alternative KA tanking slurry http://www.randjbuildershardware.co.uk/ka-tanking-slurry-25kg.html
I had thought I had found my solution. A builder came around that I had contacted via checkatrade.com and he advised me against using a tanking slurry due to its ineffectiveness. He said I should building an interior wall (like a house) from thermalite blocks instead, cost £1500.
Apart from the cost, I'm not keen on losing so much space.
Another builder told me that I should dig out the surrounding ground and coat the OUTSIDE of the bricks with tanking slurry then backfill with dirt since he claimed that with the outside of the bricks being damp all year around and being very porous and the inside painted in the slurry, the bricks would crumble over time as the damp had nowhere to go.
Once I have the damp issues taken care of I was thinking of painting the exterior of the building with a clear brick sealer and then simply screwing battens to the walls, fitting insulation boards between, and then fixing plaster boards over the top of that.
Would this work? Would I get dampness behind the boards? Behind the insullation board? I was also considering eco-quilt as an alternative... http://www.ecohome-insulation.com/?i=1033453
What do you guys think, my head is spinning. lol
I intend to turn the shed into a liveable room for use as an office.
First thing then is to deal with the penetrating damp. I initially looked into applying a damp proof membrane paint to the interior of the bricks but upon speaking with Bostik was informed the product was unsuitable in preventing hydostatic pressure.
Next I researched a tanking slurry. I looked at the Sovereign K11 http://www.sovchem.co.uk/tanking/hey-di-system.html
and the much cheaper alternative KA tanking slurry http://www.randjbuildershardware.co.uk/ka-tanking-slurry-25kg.html
I had thought I had found my solution. A builder came around that I had contacted via checkatrade.com and he advised me against using a tanking slurry due to its ineffectiveness. He said I should building an interior wall (like a house) from thermalite blocks instead, cost £1500.
Apart from the cost, I'm not keen on losing so much space.
Another builder told me that I should dig out the surrounding ground and coat the OUTSIDE of the bricks with tanking slurry then backfill with dirt since he claimed that with the outside of the bricks being damp all year around and being very porous and the inside painted in the slurry, the bricks would crumble over time as the damp had nowhere to go.
Once I have the damp issues taken care of I was thinking of painting the exterior of the building with a clear brick sealer and then simply screwing battens to the walls, fitting insulation boards between, and then fixing plaster boards over the top of that.
Would this work? Would I get dampness behind the boards? Behind the insullation board? I was also considering eco-quilt as an alternative... http://www.ecohome-insulation.com/?i=1033453
What do you guys think, my head is spinning. lol