B
Big Tone
My friend has had an offer accepted on a house and just had an RICS HomeBuyer Report back. I’ve done a search on a term they have used, (below), but cannot find this thing about a “masonry inner leaf”.
I get the inner leaf bit and can see how it could be brick or breezeblock etc. but exactly what is this masonry leaf? It’s standard construction, or so I assume from all the others in the road, but masonry sounds like big slabs of not-standard construction concrete for all I know. When I've heard non-standard mentioned, AFAIK it always relates to the outside wall anyway I think, which is definately bricks here. House build is estimated at 1950. Here’s the paragraph they mention...
"The walls which are approximately 275mm (11”) thick have a masonry inner leaf and an outer skin of brick with the two leaves being separated by an air gap."
In their report, they seem concerned about high levels of damp but the house has been vacant for weeks, or months, and we’ve just had the wettest winter on record. Also, can whatever this double wall is be cavity filled?
I get the inner leaf bit and can see how it could be brick or breezeblock etc. but exactly what is this masonry leaf? It’s standard construction, or so I assume from all the others in the road, but masonry sounds like big slabs of not-standard construction concrete for all I know. When I've heard non-standard mentioned, AFAIK it always relates to the outside wall anyway I think, which is definately bricks here. House build is estimated at 1950. Here’s the paragraph they mention...
"The walls which are approximately 275mm (11”) thick have a masonry inner leaf and an outer skin of brick with the two leaves being separated by an air gap."
In their report, they seem concerned about high levels of damp but the house has been vacant for weeks, or months, and we’ve just had the wettest winter on record. Also, can whatever this double wall is be cavity filled?