- Joined
- 18 Feb 2009
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- 125
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Hallo everybody,
Time to bite the bullet and replace the floor in the first floor bathroom. It's very bouncy, dished toward the middle, and, I suspect, rotten in places (haven't lifted the carpet yet but I can feel missing boards in places...).
Anyway, my wife wants a bath in the middle of the floor, and I'd rather it stayed in the bathroom, not descended into the kitchen.
My thoughts were to strip out fittings, lift the boards, knock down the ceiling (probably lath & plaster) and then cut the joists (if they haven't fallen out...).
Then, fit new joists, floor, insulation, heating & tiles. not sure of the best way to fit the joists.
Fitting into the wall seems like a lot of work. Joist hangers seem more straightforward, but can they be used with existing brick walls ? if so, what's the best way - grind/rake out a slot and grout in with mortar ? or remove bricks from the inner wall (9" brick, no cavity) and refix so that the hanger bears on a good brick face ?
I thought about bolting timbers to each wall and hanging the joists of that, but I need to get three wastes & a soil pipe out, so there won't be much timber left.
Any thoughts will welcome, David.
PS thought about reinforcing the joists, but the rest of the first floor seems to be on 5" joists (house built in 1840) so I don't think it's really a starter. Besides, that's not really enough room to run a soil pipe under the floor
Time to bite the bullet and replace the floor in the first floor bathroom. It's very bouncy, dished toward the middle, and, I suspect, rotten in places (haven't lifted the carpet yet but I can feel missing boards in places...).
Anyway, my wife wants a bath in the middle of the floor, and I'd rather it stayed in the bathroom, not descended into the kitchen.
My thoughts were to strip out fittings, lift the boards, knock down the ceiling (probably lath & plaster) and then cut the joists (if they haven't fallen out...).
Then, fit new joists, floor, insulation, heating & tiles. not sure of the best way to fit the joists.
Fitting into the wall seems like a lot of work. Joist hangers seem more straightforward, but can they be used with existing brick walls ? if so, what's the best way - grind/rake out a slot and grout in with mortar ? or remove bricks from the inner wall (9" brick, no cavity) and refix so that the hanger bears on a good brick face ?
I thought about bolting timbers to each wall and hanging the joists of that, but I need to get three wastes & a soil pipe out, so there won't be much timber left.
Any thoughts will welcome, David.
PS thought about reinforcing the joists, but the rest of the first floor seems to be on 5" joists (house built in 1840) so I don't think it's really a starter. Besides, that's not really enough room to run a soil pipe under the floor