Forum search & shortcuts

DIY - Painting inte...
 

DIY - Painting internal brick

 DT78
Posts: 10066
Free Member
Topic starter
 

its rendered in the loft and then outside is redbrick

i would hope it has some sort of support as when we first moved in the supporting wall this would have been part of had been completely removed to make a big kitchen. we actually have put a stud wall in beneath it

anyway ill find out tomorrow lunch


 
Posted : 10/12/2024 9:27 pm
Posts: 248
Full Member
 

if it’s for a couple of months I wouldn’t even bother with plasterboard and I’d probably keep the wife happy and paint it with masonry paint and worry about it in the new year

on the roof work depending where you are scaffolding is about a grand so I’d imagine another grand on that?


 
Posted : 11/12/2024 10:34 am
Posts: 17870
Full Member
 

We had a chimney removed from our house in March 2022.

It was all the way down to ground level & terminated with a floor to ceiling brick-built cupboard that housed the original oil-fuelled boiler (and subsequently the CH gas boiler). We'd already had a new boiler relocated to the airing cupboard on the landing.

The cupboard had an internal 6" concrete plinth that the chimney & flue sat on, roughly at eye level. Above that was non-accessible (just brickwork to the ceiling) and below it was open cupboard space.

Anyway - total cost to remove all the way down from roof level, including making good the roof, floors, plastering & adding some new electrical sockets was ~£3.5k. We had full scaffolding up to the chimney level.


 
Posted : 11/12/2024 11:07 am
 nbt
Posts: 12523
Full Member
 

Going back a bit, the hatch is indeed an access panel for cleaning the chimney from back in the day. You can even sometimes see them on the outside of the house.

Looks like a liner has been droped in more recently though, the original chimney wouldn't have had one of those obvs.


 
Posted : 11/12/2024 11:16 am
Posts: 14293
Free Member
 

depending where you are scaffolding is about a grand

Mate had a simple tower up just to drop a flue liner in and that cost £1k - so probs a bit more to go over the roof and around the chimney.

I've just had scaff all around the house for £4k but that was mates rates and should have been £6k.

OP, I supply an app to a number of scaffolding companies and can maybe recommend someone near you.


 
Posted : 11/12/2024 12:07 pm
Posts: 13092
Free Member
 

OP, I supply an app to a number of scaffolding companies and can maybe recommend someone near you.

Is it a cocaine hook up app?


 
Posted : 11/12/2024 1:46 pm
 DT78
Posts: 10066
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Southampton.

Tbh the whole exterior needs sorting too, soffits, guttering, its on its original 100 year old roof to (which touch wood) is still fine

I have good and bad news:

https://flic.kr/p/2qzaR5U

https://flic.kr/p/2qzgKtZ

There is steelwork, one RSJ picking up the wall that was removed, and it looks like they bolted 2 small steels to pick up the chimney leafs the one side I have access to is 40cm long.  but, its not supported at one end, and has dropped about 5mm - that would explain the cracking in the chimney above it.  There is no evidence of any support or fixing on the end of the stubby bit so I assume its as designed.   The outer leaf is on a wooden joist.  I would have expected the steel to be fixed to joist or something else at the end not just left even if its short

No evidence the movement is recent, and given the evidence was the plaster had been repaired several times above the chimney I reckon it was settlement relatively soon after the lower stack was removed.

Needs to come out soon though.

Should have just painted over the wall paper

*looks like the block work to the side of the chimney was built to hide the flue as it comes from the corner of the room across to the stack.  why its built out of solid brick I don't know if it was just built to hide the flue bend


 
Posted : 11/12/2024 2:04 pm
Posts: 14293
Free Member
 

Is it a cocaine hook up app?

I wish it was.... it would be an easier sell!

[maybe I could integrate that as an additional upgrade?]


 
Posted : 11/12/2024 2:59 pm
Posts: 14293
Free Member
 

Tbh the whole exterior needs sorting too, soffits, guttering

Best do everything at once - the scaffolding is a major part of the cost - you don't really want to put it up twice.

I reckon it was settlement relatively soon after the lower stack was removed.

Makes absolute sense.

Should have just painted over the wall paper

Well, durr!

why its built out of solid brick I don’t know if it was just built to hide the flue bend

Because it's single skin flue and will get hot, a wooden enclosure would be a bad idea and against building regs.


 
Posted : 11/12/2024 3:08 pm
 vaux
Posts: 11
Free Member
 

I'm intrigued, how did you get on?


 
Posted : 02/01/2025 10:04 am
 DT78
Posts: 10066
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Not too bad, went the plasterboard route.  The plastering is ok from a distance, filler can be seen if you look close, but to be honest its in a better state than the rest of the room.   I kind of like the slightly battered look  - soon as something is perfect it makes everything else look rubbish.

One extra fun thing is that the essential central support part of that ikea bed is not included, i mean wtf, which lead to a panic drive to ikea and picking it up on the day guests were turning up.

It was a bit like one of those interior design tv programmes against the clock....back to work now for a rest

https://flic.kr/p/2qDb1HK


 
Posted : 02/01/2025 1:18 pm
kimbers, bruneep, kimbers and 1 people reacted
Posts: 10765
Full Member
 

You made a nice job of that. It's always good to feel your guests have somewhere comfortable.

I too was working to the last minute getting both a bathroom and spare bedrooms ready. Moving sockets so they had USB ports and lamps next to the bed was the final touch.


 
Posted : 02/01/2025 1:40 pm
 DT78
Posts: 10066
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Its good to have a deadline, it means you get on with it.  My stairs are still in the undercoat I did about 8 years ago (!)

with more time I would have moved the sockets, and the woodwork ideally needed more than one coat, also would have taken the rad off and removed the paper from behind it / painted properly.  But had to prioritise!

Quite surprised my wife has yet to suggest getting on with the hallway now I have all the brushes to hand!  There was mention of the floor needing doing during NYE but I'll pretend I'd had too much to drink and hadn't heard 🙂


 
Posted : 02/01/2025 1:58 pm
 vaux
Posts: 11
Free Member
 

Brilliant job, well done!


 
Posted : 02/01/2025 2:15 pm
 DT78
Posts: 10066
Free Member
Topic starter
 

cheers, amazing what a bit of paint can do 🙂


 
Posted : 02/01/2025 5:55 pm
Posts: 14293
Free Member
 

Nice job {thumbs up}


 
Posted : 02/01/2025 8:15 pm
Page 2 / 2