Hi all...
I am just i the process of designing (& then building) a small back porch for our house. The problem is that due to existing structures and other constraints, mainly windows, the walls can only be around 18cm thick from the outer face to the finished plaster inside! The porch will house our washing machine and tumble dryer so it needs to be relatively well isulated so it stays above freezing. It will be less than 3m squared.
I was thinking of using the followig wall.
OUTER Surface - - - - - - > INNER Surface
Render (20mm) - Dense Conrete Blocks (100mm) - batton (15mm) - insulated plasterboard (25mm) - Plaster skim (5mm)
I know this is far from ideal however I cant see any other routes and I would rather not have a timber frame structure.... unless anyone thinks that would be cheaper & stronger?
My main concerns are:
a) the strength of the wall being based on a single layer of 100mm blocks
b) how warm the room should stay.... the roof willl let very little heat out... I am planning on using a 60W or 120W tube heater available from toolstation.
any pointers would be much appreciated, Andy
I am just i the process of designing (& then building) a small back porch for our house. The problem is that due to existing structures and other constraints, mainly windows, the walls can only be around 18cm thick from the outer face to the finished plaster inside! The porch will house our washing machine and tumble dryer so it needs to be relatively well isulated so it stays above freezing. It will be less than 3m squared.
I was thinking of using the followig wall.
OUTER Surface - - - - - - > INNER Surface
Render (20mm) - Dense Conrete Blocks (100mm) - batton (15mm) - insulated plasterboard (25mm) - Plaster skim (5mm)
I know this is far from ideal however I cant see any other routes and I would rather not have a timber frame structure.... unless anyone thinks that would be cheaper & stronger?
My main concerns are:
a) the strength of the wall being based on a single layer of 100mm blocks
b) how warm the room should stay.... the roof willl let very little heat out... I am planning on using a 60W or 120W tube heater available from toolstation.
any pointers would be much appreciated, Andy