Harringay online

Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

does anyone have a recommendation for a builder who can turn an existing basement into a usable room - ie create/ dig a window and make sure its damp proof?

Tags for Forum Posts: basement conversion builder, cellar conversion

Views: 1753

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Hi Paul.   I think every case is so different it’s not so meaningful giving a figure. We had an existing room with a concrete floor and enough head room  we just wanted to put in a small light well and window and damp proofing that wouldn’t fail.  In order to get planning permission it had to meet current building regs (450) so it had to have a new floor and cavity wall drainage and pump.   That also mexnt I needed a structural engineer to design it  (5000)  It also meant I needed to issue party wall notices to neighbours (that ended up costing 3000)  and because it’s a flat I needed a licence for alteration (750)   So you can see that’s about 10k before I’ve done a thing. If you don’t have to do all that it’s much cheaper    If anyone is wanting basement damp proofing I recommend trying AP Gooch first   They seem good to deal with and reasonable price.  If anyone wants more details PM me.  Time frame- design a month. Planning 6 weeks legal paperwork 4-6 weeks. Work  4- 6 weeks I think give or take   And in our case there were delays at everyone of those stages    It’s not intrusive at all because everything is going in and out of the lightwell.  Lovely considerate builders who hire their own loo   They’ve taken care about protecting surfaces.  

as per upthread we used AP Gooch to turn a damp coal cellar into storage.  No party wall, but they dug down a foot or so, (skip to remove excess soil) new floor, including membrane, concrete, drain channels and boarding over. Cavity wall membrane for walls, and pump to remove water from walls to outside drain, including pipework + new cellar staircase and plastering to complete walls.  Just hit the first year anniversary and no issues.

Did that result in sufficient height for a living space or was it just some additional depth to make it less inconvenient for use as storage?

less inconvenient for storage, approx 6 foot, we didn't touch the living room floor or the suspended floor  they sat on.  

Did you do a light well in the front? I'm not really bothered about that myself but my architect seemed to think it was imperative.

RSS

Advertising

© 2024   Created by Hugh.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service