Hi guys, looking for a bit of friendly advice on removing a chimney breast in the living room.
Have already had a steel beam fitted in the loft by a professional company to support the chimney breast, and I personally removed the section in the upstairs bedroom no problem, and was moving on to the living room section.
There were two sections of joist sitting on either side of the stack, so I propped each bit of joist on either side with some acro props, and purchased a a new 3.6m joist from TP and a pair of BM17 splice plates from joist-repair.co.uk with the intention of changing one section of the old joist to a longer bit so that it butted up nicely with the other section of joist on the other side of the chimney breast, then bolt them both together.
So I was all set, and had my plan, and starting smashing the stack down with an SDS hammer with chisel bit, and it was going pretty well, until I got about a third of the way down, and came across something I wasn't expecting.
On the "non-flue" side of the chimney breast (the wider part) it suddenly went into a cavity into next doors chimney....normally this wouldn't worry me too much as it would just mean bricking up that section so the wall stays flush.
But I definitely wasn't expecting to see a whole bunch of randomly (very badly) stacked breeze blocks! They're stacked so randomly, it almost looks like someones chucked them down the chimney breast and they've all piled up at the bottom!
But yet it can't be, as the top breeze block is almost straight, and has been mortared onto the bricks above it which make up the upstairs wall?
It's like someone has said "right, we need to chuck some breeze blocks down this hole till they reach 8ft, then stick one flat one on top of the lot, and then we can build a wall on top!"
I've attached some pics (also notice the remnants of a dodgy electric cable wired into the local double gang socket further along the wall....total cowboys!)
As you can see the breeze blocks are all over the place!
So now I'm wondering what to do. I stopped working as it totally threw me, and was weary of going any further in case it wasn't safe.
as you can see in the closer pic, the top breeze block has been mortared to the bricks above it, yet everything below has no mortar so is just randomly stacked up?
an even closer picture below...... the top breeze block nearest to me is on my side of the party wall, but there's also another one behind it on next-doors side of the party wall.
Do you think it would be ok to carry on smashing it down (obviously from the top, downwards) and then brick it up?
Anyone come across anything like this before?
Maybe I should try and embed a steel lintel into the brickwork above before going any further?
Any thoughts, suggestions?
Have already had a steel beam fitted in the loft by a professional company to support the chimney breast, and I personally removed the section in the upstairs bedroom no problem, and was moving on to the living room section.
There were two sections of joist sitting on either side of the stack, so I propped each bit of joist on either side with some acro props, and purchased a a new 3.6m joist from TP and a pair of BM17 splice plates from joist-repair.co.uk with the intention of changing one section of the old joist to a longer bit so that it butted up nicely with the other section of joist on the other side of the chimney breast, then bolt them both together.
So I was all set, and had my plan, and starting smashing the stack down with an SDS hammer with chisel bit, and it was going pretty well, until I got about a third of the way down, and came across something I wasn't expecting.
On the "non-flue" side of the chimney breast (the wider part) it suddenly went into a cavity into next doors chimney....normally this wouldn't worry me too much as it would just mean bricking up that section so the wall stays flush.
But I definitely wasn't expecting to see a whole bunch of randomly (very badly) stacked breeze blocks! They're stacked so randomly, it almost looks like someones chucked them down the chimney breast and they've all piled up at the bottom!
But yet it can't be, as the top breeze block is almost straight, and has been mortared onto the bricks above it which make up the upstairs wall?
It's like someone has said "right, we need to chuck some breeze blocks down this hole till they reach 8ft, then stick one flat one on top of the lot, and then we can build a wall on top!"
I've attached some pics (also notice the remnants of a dodgy electric cable wired into the local double gang socket further along the wall....total cowboys!)
As you can see the breeze blocks are all over the place!
So now I'm wondering what to do. I stopped working as it totally threw me, and was weary of going any further in case it wasn't safe.
as you can see in the closer pic, the top breeze block has been mortared to the bricks above it, yet everything below has no mortar so is just randomly stacked up?
an even closer picture below...... the top breeze block nearest to me is on my side of the party wall, but there's also another one behind it on next-doors side of the party wall.
Do you think it would be ok to carry on smashing it down (obviously from the top, downwards) and then brick it up?
Anyone come across anything like this before?
Maybe I should try and embed a steel lintel into the brickwork above before going any further?
Any thoughts, suggestions?