Hi,
I am hoping someone will put my mind at ease.
I have had a load bearing wall removed today (by professionals not myself). The job has been done properly, plans, calculations, building control application etc...
The wall removed was a single skin wall, and the opening is 2m wide. The RSJ required and fitted was a beam 152 x 89 with 220mm load end bearings on 3 course of engineering bricks.
Building control have been today and 'inspected' (if thats what you call it) and have said it all looks fine, but when I inspected the beam tonight I noticed there is a tiny air gap (and by tiny I mean 1 mm maximum) between the beam and the padstones. Now the beam is still acro'ed up, so is this normal? Or should the padstone be uptight against the beam already? Obviously my concern is when the arco's are taken out in 48 hours the beam level will drop 1mm, and this will cause structural damage to the house?
I should add that the beam is fitted up against the timber joist (which may has some flex?) as this is a 1930's house and the wall upstairs is offset from the load bearing wall downstairs.
I am hoping someone will put my mind at ease.
I have had a load bearing wall removed today (by professionals not myself). The job has been done properly, plans, calculations, building control application etc...
The wall removed was a single skin wall, and the opening is 2m wide. The RSJ required and fitted was a beam 152 x 89 with 220mm load end bearings on 3 course of engineering bricks.
Building control have been today and 'inspected' (if thats what you call it) and have said it all looks fine, but when I inspected the beam tonight I noticed there is a tiny air gap (and by tiny I mean 1 mm maximum) between the beam and the padstones. Now the beam is still acro'ed up, so is this normal? Or should the padstone be uptight against the beam already? Obviously my concern is when the arco's are taken out in 48 hours the beam level will drop 1mm, and this will cause structural damage to the house?
I should add that the beam is fitted up against the timber joist (which may has some flex?) as this is a 1930's house and the wall upstairs is offset from the load bearing wall downstairs.