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Hi all,
we've recently converted our garage into a pantry and utility room which sees me without a garage... this needs fixing
at the side of our house we have a 3.9m passage, which is used as driveway space, it leads directly into the garden. I intend to build the garage on here, attached to the house as a flat roof/or lean to.
I've looked at sectional garages and i'd be looking at around £9000 fitted (base would be extra so another £1500 odd) and if I wanted cladding to make it look nice it'll be another £2640. I'd also then want to insulate and line it. So we're getting on toward £15,000 all in once I've added the doors I want
If I build it with a builder, i'm looking north of £20,000
I really don't want to spend all that. So many other household jobs I want to tick off the list so I'm keen to find a happy middle ground.
the garage would be 6m x 3m
I was wondering if I'd do better to build a dwarf wall, and build a timber structure on top of that? that's something I could likely do myself, I built my shed attached to the other side of the house and that wasn't so bad - the worst bit being the base but if I opt for concrete with brick as my base I'm then only building a frame
Now the garage isn't going to be used as a garage really, the front 2m would be partitioned off, to be used for a gym, the rear 4m x 3m would be used as a pub. So my main aim is a warm comfortable space rather than an expensive garage for a car that'll never be in there.
That being said, at some point we'll likely want to move, so I want to be able to say it's a garage with my head held high rather than it's some half arsed shed that'll fall down in any gust if wind!
So my query is:
would the DPM go on the dwarf wall, and then I merely attach my wooden frame on top of the next row(s) of bricks?
would the wall need to be double skinned?
Assuming I build my frame, do I then cover the external side of that with a breather membrane to then clad over - I will then insulate between the frame and line internally. So do I need a vapour barrier too?
I want to get an insulated side hindged door for the front and double glazed personnel door on the rear - how easy are these to fit on a wooden frame?
I will likely clad the whole thing in composite planks (so I don't need to re-treat) is this a simple enough DIY job?
cheers all, quite excited about this plan, just need to make it work
we've recently converted our garage into a pantry and utility room which sees me without a garage... this needs fixing
at the side of our house we have a 3.9m passage, which is used as driveway space, it leads directly into the garden. I intend to build the garage on here, attached to the house as a flat roof/or lean to.
I've looked at sectional garages and i'd be looking at around £9000 fitted (base would be extra so another £1500 odd) and if I wanted cladding to make it look nice it'll be another £2640. I'd also then want to insulate and line it. So we're getting on toward £15,000 all in once I've added the doors I want
If I build it with a builder, i'm looking north of £20,000
I really don't want to spend all that. So many other household jobs I want to tick off the list so I'm keen to find a happy middle ground.
the garage would be 6m x 3m
I was wondering if I'd do better to build a dwarf wall, and build a timber structure on top of that? that's something I could likely do myself, I built my shed attached to the other side of the house and that wasn't so bad - the worst bit being the base but if I opt for concrete with brick as my base I'm then only building a frame
Now the garage isn't going to be used as a garage really, the front 2m would be partitioned off, to be used for a gym, the rear 4m x 3m would be used as a pub. So my main aim is a warm comfortable space rather than an expensive garage for a car that'll never be in there.
That being said, at some point we'll likely want to move, so I want to be able to say it's a garage with my head held high rather than it's some half arsed shed that'll fall down in any gust if wind!
So my query is:
would the DPM go on the dwarf wall, and then I merely attach my wooden frame on top of the next row(s) of bricks?
would the wall need to be double skinned?
Assuming I build my frame, do I then cover the external side of that with a breather membrane to then clad over - I will then insulate between the frame and line internally. So do I need a vapour barrier too?
I want to get an insulated side hindged door for the front and double glazed personnel door on the rear - how easy are these to fit on a wooden frame?
I will likely clad the whole thing in composite planks (so I don't need to re-treat) is this a simple enough DIY job?
cheers all, quite excited about this plan, just need to make it work