I'm doing a small Kitchen extension.
Front of house. Site is slightly sloped going down to house from the road. Most of the area is crazy paved driveway on a hard concrete base of 2-3 inches.
Trenches were dug to 1.7m to keep inspector happy WRT youngish oak Tree 11m away.
Concrete footings are down, but I do not like the look / aesthetics of engineering bricks proposed for below DPC (3 courses). The slope does not help - end up with 4/5 lines of engineering on side of house.
It’s been suggested that facing bricks (yet to be matched, but labeled as Flettons 22 - Heather?) will be too soft and not get Inspector approval.
Current thinking is one course of engineering, then DPC then two more courses, this time facing, with the "proper" DPC to join existing.
Any thoughts?
Must we use Engineering bricks?
Sensible to use two DPC’s - won't that be a bit of a moisture trap?
Sensible opportunity to install a gulley at front of new extension for rainwater?
Front of house. Site is slightly sloped going down to house from the road. Most of the area is crazy paved driveway on a hard concrete base of 2-3 inches.
Trenches were dug to 1.7m to keep inspector happy WRT youngish oak Tree 11m away.
Concrete footings are down, but I do not like the look / aesthetics of engineering bricks proposed for below DPC (3 courses). The slope does not help - end up with 4/5 lines of engineering on side of house.
It’s been suggested that facing bricks (yet to be matched, but labeled as Flettons 22 - Heather?) will be too soft and not get Inspector approval.
Current thinking is one course of engineering, then DPC then two more courses, this time facing, with the "proper" DPC to join existing.
Any thoughts?
Must we use Engineering bricks?
Sensible to use two DPC’s - won't that be a bit of a moisture trap?
Sensible opportunity to install a gulley at front of new extension for rainwater?