Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
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Posted By: mattrgeeWould you recommend laying a DPM over the joists and insulation and using tape to seal it behind the skirting boards?
Posted By: mattrgeeis there any possibility of warm air from an adjacent room, passing under the floor and condensing in the floor space of the insulated living room floor?
Posted By: lineweightMy understanding, which might be a misunderstanding, was that the building regs don't allow you to insulate under the joists, because of 4.13 in Approved document C, which says
Any suspended timber floor next to the ground will meet the requirement if:
a. the ground is covered so as to resist moisture and prevent plant growth; and
b. there is a ventilated air space between the ground covering and the timber; and
c. there are damp-proof courses between the timber and any material which can carry moisture from the ground.
Posted By: lineweightYes, I agree, it's guidance and it's the green box text that ultimately you have to comply with - however it all depends a bit on the building control inspector; if you are stuck with a cautious one
One reading would be that 'between the ground covering and the timber" means that *all* that space must be ventilated.
The latter reading would allow you to put anything in between the joist-bottoms and the ground, including something that prevented ventilation to the joists, and that's why I've been inclined to assume that the former reading is the one intended.
Posted By: djhPosted By: lineweightYes, I agree, it's guidance and it's the green box text that ultimately you have to comply with - however it all depends a bit on the building control inspector; if you are stuck with a cautious one
But that's the point of the current regime. You aren't stuck with a cautious one - you chose to have a cautious one if that's what you have.
Posted By: lineweightIt's not always the case that the designer is the person who pays for or chooses the BCI.
Nor is it always the case that when you choose the BC company, you know everything about the attitude of the person who is then assigned to the job.
Posted By: lineweightthere are all sorts of reasons why jobs end up in a situation where the pragmatic route to getting things done is to do them in a way that can be easily shown to follow the guidance in the ADs
If you're a specifier or designer who feels they want to do the best that is reasonably possible in whatever you're working on
Posted By: djh
... then you have to fight your corner sometimes. So I'd argue that you should specify or design what is sensible and be prepared to explain it to the paymaster if necessary, and discuss the point with building control if necessary, and if that fails there's always:
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