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26th May 2005, 04:53 PM #1New Member
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New timber floor + subfloor for 1st floor of terrace. Help needed
Hi everyone
This is my first post in this forum. I have been reading up on many of the existing threads relating to timber floors and subfloors and have found them very helpful. Before I continue, I would like to thank everyone that takes time out to offer their advice and expertise to help out novices such as myself.
I am in the process of renovating a turn of the century victorian italliente terrace. We need to replace the first floor & subfloor due to termite infestation. We are pretty much ripping out everything from the 1st floor so there wont be any problem with access to the joists.
We are however lowering the floor by about 1 metre so I thought Id try and tap into the collective expertise on this forum to find out the best way to go about it.
Also what would be the best way to anchor the new joists to the existing masonary? What products are available?
I am considering using the termite resistant Hybeam joists but I'm not sure of the best way to anchor them.
Any advice would be appreciated
Thanks
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26th May 2005, 04:59 PM #2
To be honest, I would consider getting an engineer in to spec that. If you are putting it through council, they will almost certainly want engineering details for it. If you are not, then for piece of mind alone, I'd still do it.
"I don't practice what I preach because I'm not the kind of person I'm preaching to."
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26th May 2005, 05:07 PM #3Originally Posted by Carved Up!
Sorry I don't have an answer to qour query, although the advice of the silent one sounds worth taking.
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26th May 2005, 05:22 PM #4Senior Member
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Ditto to the above, don't even consider using this forum alone to get your answer. Get an engineer and or draftsmen to do the plans.
As I used the I joists in my house I would highly recommend them, they are light, and once down on level bearers they are true and straight, big spans. In the end you would be mad to go with anything else other than engineered joists wether they are the laminated I joists(lots of different brands) or posi struts or any of the other products out there. In the end it comes down to price and wether or not you want to run pipes, wiring or ducting through the floor, if so I would go with a product such as posi struts where you dont have to drill holes in the joists. If you dont need to run anything through them them the multitude of I joists would be the way to go.
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26th May 2005, 05:23 PM #5New Member
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The building is heritage listed and we have plans in council and while I am waiting for the approval if it ever eventuates I thought I would do a bit of investigating.
The ceilings are fairly high however the reason we are dropping the floor is because we are also .... in the not to distant future building a second floor with a setback roof projecting above the existing parapett.
I am waiting for what seems like an eternity and I thought that while I wait I may as well enquire as to the process involved. If anyone has had a similar experience and if you care to share that would be great .
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26th May 2005, 06:22 PM #6
Love the idea of squeezing in a second storey behind the parapet walls! The best way to anchor the joists is generally joist hangers on the ends if you are attaching them to a wooden ledger. I would also consider using steel posts as stumps and steel angle chemically anchored to the walls as the ledger. Mechanical anchors generally don't grip well in old masonry and the compressive forces can destroy bricks. 12mm threaded rod anchors every 600mm should be enough.
Cheers
Pulse
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26th May 2005, 09:11 PM #7Hammer Head
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As pulse has suggested, chemical anchors would be the go or "frame anchors" by hilti or silmar. If the brick work is a bit old and starting to crumble you may have to build a new dwarf wall on the existing footing to take you I beams.
What amount of clearance do you have from the sub-soil to the under side your new proppossed floor level. And what are the room sizes so that i can give you a rough beam size.
As your structer is load bearing are you only taking the floor load or is there any other load bearing walls for your new extension
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26th May 2005, 11:22 PM #8Originally Posted by Carved Up!Neil____________________________________________Every day presents an opportunity to learn something new
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27th May 2005, 12:14 PM #9New Member
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Originally Posted by dai sensei
The ground floor is a shop of which very little remains of the original heritage components except for the front facade which will remain intact. A couple years ago we had to replace the front timber beam with a steel beam because the termites had feasted on the timber. Also just a couple of months ago, one of the fluro light fittings in the shop had hundreds of white ants, many of them with wings. I removed a piece of the false ceiling and sprayed the hell out of them. The next day the plastic cover was sagging under the weight of the dead bastards. I cant wait to hear back from the council hopefully with the approval cause Im worried the the Units residents are going to come crashing through into the shop.
I was wondering how chemical masonary anchors work. Does anyone have any info about them? :confused:
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27th May 2005, 12:50 PM #10New Member
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Originally Posted by Gaza
The bricks are in very good condition however the mortar is that crumbly sand and lime but quite well preserved due to being covered by render and paint for the last 100 years or so.
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27th May 2005, 09:42 PM #11
chemical anchors
Most chemical anchors come in 2 parts that mix as they are squeezed from the tube. Sika has one for sale at bunnings that will fit it a standard cartridge gun. Ramset has several types, chemset 101 also fits in the gun.
The best type is made of polymethylmethacrylate, which is not adhesive in itself but sets and locks in to the hole. A 12mm threaded rod needs at least a 14 mm hole that is really clean and free of dust.
The ramset website has all the info you need. Some people also use the chemical anchors with mechanical anchors but that seems a bit over the top.
Cheers
Pulse
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28th May 2005, 01:27 PM #12New Member
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Thanks for the info everyone!
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