Hi guys,
A family member has got a 200 year old house, ground floor has given way badly and it at the point of collapsing completely. I cut a section out of the floor to reveal that the joist were completely sodden and rotting. This is what has obviously caused the floor to drop.
Now on looking closer, the damp course is higher then the timbers so there's obviously nothing stopping water traveling up the brickwork to the joists. The joist ends are not even wrapped to at least offer some protection.
Anyway, at some point half the living room floor has been concreted so she would like the same doing to this part.
The approx depth is 355mm to the soil below so should be no issues in insulating it correctly and pouring in the concreting providing there are no services underneath the floor that maybe cannot be removed for whatever reason, only way to find out is to remove the old floor first hey!
Now this house is a single brick with no cavity, the main problem I can see is that if the floor is concreted, the finished floor level will approx 100mm lower than the liquid damp course level. Now as the room will need dry lining again, I'm worried about the ingress of damp through the brickwork to the plastboard.
Is there a damp proof membrane that I can use to over come this or is there a proper way to sort this issue out? Thanks in advance for any help you can offer
A family member has got a 200 year old house, ground floor has given way badly and it at the point of collapsing completely. I cut a section out of the floor to reveal that the joist were completely sodden and rotting. This is what has obviously caused the floor to drop.
Now on looking closer, the damp course is higher then the timbers so there's obviously nothing stopping water traveling up the brickwork to the joists. The joist ends are not even wrapped to at least offer some protection.
Anyway, at some point half the living room floor has been concreted so she would like the same doing to this part.
The approx depth is 355mm to the soil below so should be no issues in insulating it correctly and pouring in the concreting providing there are no services underneath the floor that maybe cannot be removed for whatever reason, only way to find out is to remove the old floor first hey!
Now this house is a single brick with no cavity, the main problem I can see is that if the floor is concreted, the finished floor level will approx 100mm lower than the liquid damp course level. Now as the room will need dry lining again, I'm worried about the ingress of damp through the brickwork to the plastboard.
Is there a damp proof membrane that I can use to over come this or is there a proper way to sort this issue out? Thanks in advance for any help you can offer