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floor bowing in cottage repair
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a cottage had problems with upstairs floor and there is a large 's' bolt that holds the house together....
anyone know what this is and how bad it is?
TIA
anyone know what this is and how bad it is?
TIA
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by sunflower71. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Our cottage has a large bolt through it and bowed upstairs floors. I have to hoover uphill in the bedrooms!!
As far as I know it has been like this for at least 80/100 years and is approximately 200 years old. We also have no foundations. You will find thousands of old cottages just like this!! At some time in the past the walls have obviously started to move and crack due to earth movement. That is why the large bolts were put through.
How bad is it? Well, our cottage will probably still be here in another 100 or so years which is more than you can say for houses built in the 60's or 70's.
Unless you are still finding movement in the walls and cracks that are getting wider then I wouldn't worry!
As far as I know it has been like this for at least 80/100 years and is approximately 200 years old. We also have no foundations. You will find thousands of old cottages just like this!! At some time in the past the walls have obviously started to move and crack due to earth movement. That is why the large bolts were put through.
How bad is it? Well, our cottage will probably still be here in another 100 or so years which is more than you can say for houses built in the 60's or 70's.
Unless you are still finding movement in the walls and cracks that are getting wider then I wouldn't worry!
Hi Sunny..................the S thingy will be connected to a steel rod that goes through the wall and is tied to the floor joists. It might even go right through to another S on the opposite side of the building. They aren't used to "correct" a building - you could only do that by rebuilding :o)
They are there to stop any further movement. They are often fitted even today. Roughly speaking - a building can be all sorts of shapes (within reason) - as long as it can't go anymore it's OK.
Hope that makes sense.
They are there to stop any further movement. They are often fitted even today. Roughly speaking - a building can be all sorts of shapes (within reason) - as long as it can't go anymore it's OK.
Hope that makes sense.
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