MegaSack DRAW - This year's winner is user - rgwb
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hire a petrol driven stone cutter or big angle grinder with a diamond disk and chop it off a couple of inches from the wall then 'nibble' bits off until it's flush?
(don't stand on top of it whilst doing this).
"In 1972 a crack commando artist was sent to prison by a military court for a crime he didn't commit. This man promptly escaped from a maximum security stockade to the Scottish mountains. Today, still wanted by the government, he survives as a wood cutter of fortune. If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find him, maybe you can hire the McMoonter."
Take off and nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.
pmsl @ cheeseyfeet.......... 😆
1. Remove pole.
2. Wait.
LOL at Cheeseyfeet too.
build a sustaintial scaffold directly beneath the plinth that will save the door, brick work and ground from being damaged by the falling plinth. then attack, as above, attack it with petrol driven stone cutter or big angle grinder, but into smaller segments.
is it acting as the lintel above the door? with caution perhaps
Leave it alone. it's an 'original feature' and as such adds value to your house.
And it's retrotastic 😐
Leave it alone. it's an 'original feature' and as such adds value to your house.
This. But without the value bit.
I'm sick of Victorian and Edwardian housing in this country being held up as the pinnacle of our domestic aspirations. There is some fantastic 60s building out there - all big windows and decent sized plots, but instead we have an obsession with stuff a century old!
Paint the underside pale blue so that when you look up it blends in with the sky.
is it acting as the lintel above the door? with caution perhaps
but if he cuts it flush with the brick work it will still act as a lintel.
I'm with ourmaninthenorth. I'd be more inclined to get rid of the horrible upvc door
I'm with TJ
No guarentees that the porch conc is reinforced into the area above the door - if not then no good as a lintel.
alternatively, support with acros underneath and cut off small sections using disc cutter - a 12" saw will go through in one pass, cut off 6" sections at a time until you are close enough to the wall to determine wether the reinforcement is in situ along the wall. If it is just face off the conc as described above and make good. otherwise using the Acros and strongboys to support the brickwork above the concrete - remove the remainder of the concrete and rplace with a suitable lintel.
Then make good
bishbashbosh 🙂
Then get rid of the plastic door 😉
polish it up and open an outdoor gentlemans club?
Sure you don't want a porch? They're actually quite handy when fumbling for keys in the rain.
May be much easier to keep it, but built a small mansard roof on it to dress it up a bit.
May be much easier to keep it, but built a small mansard roof on it to dress it up a bit.
This. Once you've carved it off the wall, there will still be a rather ugly scar. Perhaps you should consider adding a side wall and new door and turning it into a proper enclosed porch?
Build a termite colony on top of it - they'll eat it away for you..
Must be lots of tinsel and christmas lights going spare now...
quick word of warning cutting it off with grinder or stone saw will create plenty of sparks due to renforcement plastic windows/doors dont react well to showers of sparks
THERMITE!
THERMITE!
Yep, that'd do it, get cracking with that immediately - and VIDEO IT!
Cut a hole in it and fit a skylight.
Depends if you want to do it properly or not.
Depends if you want to do it properly or not.
Yes please, explain.....
Sure you don't want a porch? They're actually quite handy when fumbling for keys in the rain. May be much easier to keep it, but built a small mansard roof on it to dress it up a bit.
Plan is to then fit a veranda with a glass roof along that wall so it has to go.
If you don't know how to do it then call a builder, because its not an easy job with out the right kit
If you don't know how to do it then call a builder
but then life would be dull and i'd be skint
because its not an easy job with out the right kit
i can hire the right kit
A veranda
Oh get you 😉
Do you really want to take it out?
You need to determine the construction and how it was constructed.
By this and from the photo I can see a steel perimeter section. Looks like a channel? Cast concrete in steel?
The support post. How is this fixed? No visible supports? No bolted plate to the underside?
So could the post and channel be a frame and the concrete an infill? Can you see any formwork marks on the underside? (it's quite small so the formwork may have been one piece)
Does the channel go through the outer leaf of the building? Looks like it does.
What you need to do is determine how far the concrete goes in? My guess would be to the inner leaf, probably sits on it, and acts also as a lintel over the door. (Not too worried about cold bridging in those days).
You still want to remove it?
Remove locally external stonework around the canopy. Support your roof internally. Remove the blockwork internally over the concrete, break out the concrete, carefully over the door, reinstall new lintel over door , reconstruct the blockwork internally. Reconstruct the stonework externally, provide an external stone lintel over the door and window were the existing is (looks like) rebated. Make good including refixing door / mastic and internal finishes.
Hence the original question.
light a bonfire on top of it
What pjm said
Hiring all the right kit might cost you nearly as much as a builder would charge you ?
like i said its not an easy job
Ok, cheers (pjm84) all, some food for thought. It's gotta go sometime, butt ugly and hindering our veranda plans.
If you do it yourself or a pro does it as mentioned above cover all doors windows and glass. There will be steel reinforcing and the sparks will mark plastic and glass you'll have the only plastic doers windows that rust. If you do it yourself as alpin said build support scaffold underneath and cut it up. Do you not know anyone in the trade that can advise by having a look for the price of a couple of pints?
Normally I'd say yeah just get on with it, but it's carrying a fair bit of weight if it projects onto the inner leaf due to the two slopes of roof. First job for me would be pop up on top and slide a few tiles back to see it this is the case. Then back down rub chin drink tea and ponder!
disc cutter will not allow you to cut up to brickwork you are going to be left with about a 4" overhang, to be honest if you think it looks bad now wait till you have removed it. have you looked to remove the pole and replace with possible a timber support paint concrete black so as to reduce the impact. but a cheap diy removal would be the last thing i would think of (no plastic door comment 😯 )
in the words of wee kev clerws.........JOOST BASHIIT

