Green Building Forum - Walls and walling - major feature - in 'Green Building' magazine Tue, 19 Dec 2023 05:58:50 +0000 http://www.greenbuildingforum.co.uk/newforum/ Lussumo Vanilla 1.0.3 Walls and walling - major feature - in 'Green Building' magazine http://www.greenbuildingforum.co.uk/newforum/comments.php?DiscussionID=101&Focus=2464#Comment_2464 http://www.greenbuildingforum.co.uk/newforum/comments.php?DiscussionID=101&Focus=2464#Comment_2464 Tue, 24 Apr 2007 22:32:20 +0100 Guest As an example, suppose 50 years ago, houses were built with solid concrete floors and wooden framed walls with inbuilt plastic membranes to stop condensation in the insulation. We would have had to forego the benefit of PVC wiring (unless surface wired), extention loadspeakers in different rooms, central heating. I suspect the list could go on.
At present the biggest modification that houses will go through will be the "Internet controlled" house, the communications can be wireless, but motors to open/close curtains etc will still be needed and their resulting power supply leads. Also with the falling cost of LED bulbs (and semiconductor light emitters as yet un-invented) low voltage distribution could be required.
So what I am getting around to saying, is that the inner skin of the house should be ameanable to having extra wires/pipes inbedded in them. So the overall spec should include a "wasteable" layer of say 1", where this action can all take place in. Could be 1" of bonding plaster or some light weight concrete layer. It is this layer that will also take the load of things that people nail/screw onto their walls, mirrors, pictures, clocks, barometers....etc.
For the above reasons ( plus the fact that 3" long screws could be used by some numbskull) I would say that the conventional plastered blockwork must be the way to go. Hey , am I designing a house? because the internal blockwork then could take the weight of the roof. The block work could will also add some thermal mass. Build your house of blocks, then spray the walls with a tarry paint that will keep intersticular condensation at bay, and it can't be ripped/rumpled/removed as DPC membranes can. Hang your insulation and clad in any cementatious(Sp.?) panelling of your choice and paint to suit.
Frank]]>