Having spent nearly 2 years building my 2 storey extension myself, it's finally time to do a knock out inside. It's the pretty common scenario of an existing cavity wall being knocked out to form an open plan kitchen diner. 2 pairs of steels each side of a 600mm ish pillar of existing wall kept in the middle.
Never done this before (I've put steels in but only on a new build where there's nothing above to prop up) so I'm after some tips or a sanity check of what I'm planning
- prop up inside with acrows and scaffold planks up against the joists which run into the wall, about 2 foot back from the wall
- prop up outside with strongboys above where the steel's going in
- use a stihl saw to cut the outside brickwork out
- knock the inside brickwork out level with the bottom of the joists
- push the new steel on the inner leaf up against the bottom of the joists with more acrows
- put the padstones in, let it go off
- pack with slate or shims on the outside to make sure no gaps and point up, let it go off
- take out all the props
- can you do inside leaf completely before starting outside, to save on the number of acrows you need?
Sorry, that's a bit of a ramble, but any critique of it very welcome as always!
Cheers
John
Never done this before (I've put steels in but only on a new build where there's nothing above to prop up) so I'm after some tips or a sanity check of what I'm planning
- prop up inside with acrows and scaffold planks up against the joists which run into the wall, about 2 foot back from the wall
- prop up outside with strongboys above where the steel's going in
- use a stihl saw to cut the outside brickwork out
- knock the inside brickwork out level with the bottom of the joists
- push the new steel on the inner leaf up against the bottom of the joists with more acrows
- put the padstones in, let it go off
- pack with slate or shims on the outside to make sure no gaps and point up, let it go off
- take out all the props
- can you do inside leaf completely before starting outside, to save on the number of acrows you need?
Sorry, that's a bit of a ramble, but any critique of it very welcome as always!
Cheers
John