Hi folks,
I'm planning to insulated the inside of this wall (in photo) with insulated plasterboard. The main thing I'm concerned about is how to deal with this 'feature' - the stone lintel protrudes out through the existing plaster into the room.
For context, this room wall originally an outhouse ), and the previous owner knocked the kitchen wall out to join the two together to make a larger kitchen. The walls are about 30cm thin solid stone Edinburgh sandstone with plaster (in good condition) applied directly to the stone.
The window itself isn't great (it's an older sash window cut down to fit!), we've secondary glazed it so it's ok thermally but, but if it's wise to get the window and the lintel replaced that's an option.
I was planning to use something like celotex pl4000 and 'dot and dab' attach to the existing wall.
I can loose a bit of space, but not too much. This wall also has sinks, gas boiler and hot water tank! But we're getting the gas boiler replaced with an air source heat pump at some point, so I was hoping to use this chance to do the wall - eg the plumbers/gas engineer rip out the old stuff, I'll then add the new board, then they can install the new stuff
Any advice welcome
I'm planning to insulated the inside of this wall (in photo) with insulated plasterboard. The main thing I'm concerned about is how to deal with this 'feature' - the stone lintel protrudes out through the existing plaster into the room.
For context, this room wall originally an outhouse ), and the previous owner knocked the kitchen wall out to join the two together to make a larger kitchen. The walls are about 30cm thin solid stone Edinburgh sandstone with plaster (in good condition) applied directly to the stone.
The window itself isn't great (it's an older sash window cut down to fit!), we've secondary glazed it so it's ok thermally but, but if it's wise to get the window and the lintel replaced that's an option.
I was planning to use something like celotex pl4000 and 'dot and dab' attach to the existing wall.
I can loose a bit of space, but not too much. This wall also has sinks, gas boiler and hot water tank! But we're getting the gas boiler replaced with an air source heat pump at some point, so I was hoping to use this chance to do the wall - eg the plumbers/gas engineer rip out the old stuff, I'll then add the new board, then they can install the new stuff
Any advice welcome