Guyz Im after some advice,
I am refurbishing a detached house which was built in 1960, if you can imagine looking from a plan view above, the house had a cross section formation that split up the lounge - diner - kitchen - hallway.
As you walked in the house the front door was on the right the wall to your left was the main bearing wall, with two doorways in it only with a 6inch brick pillar between them and the wall ran the full length of the house, the plan was to brick up the two door ways which went into the lounge and dining room, then take down the wall which split the lounge diner to make the lounge bigger and replace with a stud wall RSJ to be fitted where the original wall was, the doorway into the kitchen would stay, but the wall which continued thru the kitchen would come down and a new rsj would go in, there would be a new solid block wall built to support the two RSJs.
I found a SE to do the calcs for the job and, he recommend a builder they visited site and the builder asked about wether new concrete pillars needed to go in under the new block wall for support and the engineer said no, it will be fine, all went reasonably smoothly, job completed building control signed it off two weeks ago,
Until Friday I was preparing to take up the quarry tiles in the kitchen which has now been opened up to a kitchen /diner, and where the old doorway was and where the new wall is to support the RSJ, I found found to my horror, that the floor underneath the quarry tiles seems to be a 50mm bed of mortar, our new wall is sitting on this thin floor, area, and this is a main load bearing wall.
I have paid the builder his chq went thru on friday, I feel a bit sorry for the builder, as he only went by what his structural engineer, recommended, the problem I have is the house has just been fully plastered,
I think a section of the floor needs to come up and we will have to put concrete under the new wall, but i cant see us being able to do it without disturbing works completed.
what do you think, should it have been picked up or at least recommended for inspection by The SE to ensure the floor could cope ?
Sorry about the long post Guyz just after some opinions
I am refurbishing a detached house which was built in 1960, if you can imagine looking from a plan view above, the house had a cross section formation that split up the lounge - diner - kitchen - hallway.
As you walked in the house the front door was on the right the wall to your left was the main bearing wall, with two doorways in it only with a 6inch brick pillar between them and the wall ran the full length of the house, the plan was to brick up the two door ways which went into the lounge and dining room, then take down the wall which split the lounge diner to make the lounge bigger and replace with a stud wall RSJ to be fitted where the original wall was, the doorway into the kitchen would stay, but the wall which continued thru the kitchen would come down and a new rsj would go in, there would be a new solid block wall built to support the two RSJs.
I found a SE to do the calcs for the job and, he recommend a builder they visited site and the builder asked about wether new concrete pillars needed to go in under the new block wall for support and the engineer said no, it will be fine, all went reasonably smoothly, job completed building control signed it off two weeks ago,
Until Friday I was preparing to take up the quarry tiles in the kitchen which has now been opened up to a kitchen /diner, and where the old doorway was and where the new wall is to support the RSJ, I found found to my horror, that the floor underneath the quarry tiles seems to be a 50mm bed of mortar, our new wall is sitting on this thin floor, area, and this is a main load bearing wall.
I have paid the builder his chq went thru on friday, I feel a bit sorry for the builder, as he only went by what his structural engineer, recommended, the problem I have is the house has just been fully plastered,
I think a section of the floor needs to come up and we will have to put concrete under the new wall, but i cant see us being able to do it without disturbing works completed.
what do you think, should it have been picked up or at least recommended for inspection by The SE to ensure the floor could cope ?
Sorry about the long post Guyz just after some opinions