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Hi all,
In the process of updating our garage. It's a stand alone building, brick on the inside, stone on the outside. The internal floorspace is 3.4m * 4.7m. It's just be used for storing bits and pieces and we decided that we'd like to update it, maybe use it as a gym.
The floor was a bit of a mess, the cement was cracked everywhere and wasn't level:
Plus the electricity comes into the property here as well (that black tubing in the middle of the wall).
I started removing the cement and it came up really easily. I didn't even need my breaker, it was only an inch thick and seemed to have been laid on top of cinder blocks from a slag heap.
Anyways, so I removed the cement and the cinder. So the garage floor now looks like this:
So the first point is about the leccy. It seems like underneath the cement where the electrical supply comes into the garage is a big stone and some rusted iron bolts holding something in place (although one of them broke and I left it on top of the slab). I was worried about doing anything near here so I've just left it.
What I want to do, is lay a new concrete slab. So in my mind, this needs to be 4 inches thick. There's no cars coming in here, so I 'think' that this would be enough?
What I think I need to do next is: get a whacka/vibrating plate to flatten everything down, probably put an inch or 2 of sharp sand, then a plastic sheet and get 1.6 cubic metres of ready-mix poured in.
However, do I need any shuttering/form-work? since everything will be below the level of the garage door by a couple of cms. Also what to do about the leccy point? What's the best approach to deal with that?
That bit will also stand proud of the cement, so I think I'd need to look at taking the top 3 cms off it somehow.
If I were to get that down to the same sort of level as the cement slab, I think I'd still end up with bridging between that bit and everything else. So, unless anyone can point me in a different direction, as I'm writing this, I think I'm going to have to see if I can remove that stone (or at least the top layer of concrete on it).
All advice gratefully received.
Thanks,
Tony
In the process of updating our garage. It's a stand alone building, brick on the inside, stone on the outside. The internal floorspace is 3.4m * 4.7m. It's just be used for storing bits and pieces and we decided that we'd like to update it, maybe use it as a gym.
The floor was a bit of a mess, the cement was cracked everywhere and wasn't level:
Plus the electricity comes into the property here as well (that black tubing in the middle of the wall).
I started removing the cement and it came up really easily. I didn't even need my breaker, it was only an inch thick and seemed to have been laid on top of cinder blocks from a slag heap.
Anyways, so I removed the cement and the cinder. So the garage floor now looks like this:
So the first point is about the leccy. It seems like underneath the cement where the electrical supply comes into the garage is a big stone and some rusted iron bolts holding something in place (although one of them broke and I left it on top of the slab). I was worried about doing anything near here so I've just left it.
What I want to do, is lay a new concrete slab. So in my mind, this needs to be 4 inches thick. There's no cars coming in here, so I 'think' that this would be enough?
What I think I need to do next is: get a whacka/vibrating plate to flatten everything down, probably put an inch or 2 of sharp sand, then a plastic sheet and get 1.6 cubic metres of ready-mix poured in.
However, do I need any shuttering/form-work? since everything will be below the level of the garage door by a couple of cms. Also what to do about the leccy point? What's the best approach to deal with that?
That bit will also stand proud of the cement, so I think I'd need to look at taking the top 3 cms off it somehow.
If I were to get that down to the same sort of level as the cement slab, I think I'd still end up with bridging between that bit and everything else. So, unless anyone can point me in a different direction, as I'm writing this, I think I'm going to have to see if I can remove that stone (or at least the top layer of concrete on it).
All advice gratefully received.
Thanks,
Tony