Mr_Mickey_D
Member
Evening folks,
I've been a long-term lurker here, getting inspired to get back to my woodworking roots (apprentice cabinetmaker some 20 yrs ago..) and build some furniture for our home. My workshop is shocking though; its too small, lets in water, cold, dark, over run with mice and last winters weather made a right mess of the roof so i'm tearing it down and replacing with a new timber framed/clad workshop, sat on a 4" blockwork plinth, on a conc slab foundation. I'm comfortable with the timber framing work (thanks MikeG for the very helpful guide!) and poured a few slabs in my time, but i'm unsure on this part...
The site is sloping, with the current building built up on the downhill end to minimise the dig into the slope at the other end. I'm looking to improve internal head height without increasing overall height and would like to do away with the steps up into the building, so looking to dig the far end into the slope to a depth of about 750mm, to make the downhill end sit at (about) ground level. The block work plinth would be a single course high at the downhill end and built up to four blocks high at the "dug in" end to form a retaining wall. Retaining wall will be about 4m long, so i'll build up a pier in the middle. The length into the slope will be 5.5m.
I'll add a sketch when i figure out how to...
What i'm struggling with is waterproofing.
I was thinking i'd bring the visqueen from under the slab up the end/sides of the blockwork to above ground level, install a 4" perforated pipe along side the slab and back fill to ground level with a permeable fill material e.g. gravel (with a permeable geotextile around the pipe to stop fines blocking the perforations?).
Is this going to be enough to keep the blockwork & inside of the building dry? I've seen bituminous paint on the back of blocks used before, even a rubberised sheet instead of bringing the visq. up - should i be doing something like this too? Any particular products or specifications to be aware of?
Any other water proofing ideas you could suggest for me?
Advice gratefully received.
Mick
I've been a long-term lurker here, getting inspired to get back to my woodworking roots (apprentice cabinetmaker some 20 yrs ago..) and build some furniture for our home. My workshop is shocking though; its too small, lets in water, cold, dark, over run with mice and last winters weather made a right mess of the roof so i'm tearing it down and replacing with a new timber framed/clad workshop, sat on a 4" blockwork plinth, on a conc slab foundation. I'm comfortable with the timber framing work (thanks MikeG for the very helpful guide!) and poured a few slabs in my time, but i'm unsure on this part...
The site is sloping, with the current building built up on the downhill end to minimise the dig into the slope at the other end. I'm looking to improve internal head height without increasing overall height and would like to do away with the steps up into the building, so looking to dig the far end into the slope to a depth of about 750mm, to make the downhill end sit at (about) ground level. The block work plinth would be a single course high at the downhill end and built up to four blocks high at the "dug in" end to form a retaining wall. Retaining wall will be about 4m long, so i'll build up a pier in the middle. The length into the slope will be 5.5m.
I'll add a sketch when i figure out how to...
What i'm struggling with is waterproofing.
I was thinking i'd bring the visqueen from under the slab up the end/sides of the blockwork to above ground level, install a 4" perforated pipe along side the slab and back fill to ground level with a permeable fill material e.g. gravel (with a permeable geotextile around the pipe to stop fines blocking the perforations?).
Is this going to be enough to keep the blockwork & inside of the building dry? I've seen bituminous paint on the back of blocks used before, even a rubberised sheet instead of bringing the visq. up - should i be doing something like this too? Any particular products or specifications to be aware of?
Any other water proofing ideas you could suggest for me?
Advice gratefully received.
Mick