Can somebody help me sort out my blockwork heights?
In my new house that I am about to build the load bearing internal walls will be built of solid blockwork. I know the finished floor level of the first intermediate floor so I know that the top of the TJI floor joists will be approx. 22mm below this. The ffl is 99.0 m based on the site datum so the top of the joists needs to be at 98.98 m.
Am I right in thinking that if I am using masonry joist hangers then the top of the relevant row of blocks must be at 98.98m, i.e. the top of the joists must line up with the top of a course of blocks?
Some of the internal walls are two stories high and some are only one story. For the two story ones I will be using masonry joist hangers for the TJI joists for the intermediate floor. The walls for some of the rooms on the ground floor, however, are only one story high and the joist plan shows the joists resting on the top of these walls. (For example, a TJI joist is planned to run from one side of a two story load bearing internal wall across to an external wall passing across the top of the study wall.
The TJI joists are probably going to be 241 mm deep. What is confusing me is that if I set the foundation height to make the top of a course of blockwork match up exactly with the top of the TJI joists for the intermediate floor, then the top of the course of blockwork below that will be 16mm too high for the TJI joist to rest on in the study wall.
If I replace one course of standard blocks in the study wall with two courses of coursing blocks, then that would be 59mm too short. Is there a common way round this?
Hope this makes sense.
In my new house that I am about to build the load bearing internal walls will be built of solid blockwork. I know the finished floor level of the first intermediate floor so I know that the top of the TJI floor joists will be approx. 22mm below this. The ffl is 99.0 m based on the site datum so the top of the joists needs to be at 98.98 m.
Am I right in thinking that if I am using masonry joist hangers then the top of the relevant row of blocks must be at 98.98m, i.e. the top of the joists must line up with the top of a course of blocks?
Some of the internal walls are two stories high and some are only one story. For the two story ones I will be using masonry joist hangers for the TJI joists for the intermediate floor. The walls for some of the rooms on the ground floor, however, are only one story high and the joist plan shows the joists resting on the top of these walls. (For example, a TJI joist is planned to run from one side of a two story load bearing internal wall across to an external wall passing across the top of the study wall.
The TJI joists are probably going to be 241 mm deep. What is confusing me is that if I set the foundation height to make the top of a course of blockwork match up exactly with the top of the TJI joists for the intermediate floor, then the top of the course of blockwork below that will be 16mm too high for the TJI joist to rest on in the study wall.
If I replace one course of standard blocks in the study wall with two courses of coursing blocks, then that would be 59mm too short. Is there a common way round this?
Hope this makes sense.