ong
worked mainly on large blocks of flats and one off houses now and again.the floors were usually ducon slabs that rested on the ring beam on the top course, sitting about halfways onto the 8 inch or 12 inch block, we then ran a course of narrower blocks-4 0r 6 inch blocks- outside this. concrete then poured on ducon slab up to level of ouside block. then started next floor with the 8 or 12 inchs blocks which rested half on ouside block and half on the poured concrete. the internal load bearing walls were built with u blocks on the last course which were rebarred and filled with concrete tied into the external ring beam,usually all poured together for strength.
the poroton block is a standard building system through out europe. I know of one large property built with the poroton block. This is stone clad exterior directly onto the poroton.
Not an expert but the poroton block is 'breathing' system and is usually used ith specialist plaster. I know there have been damp issues with the poroton block/ stone walls. House owner is having to repoint walls to try and resole the problem.
Suggest if you want to use the poroton block go and look at some actual house builds!!!!!!!
never saw any settlement cracks or otherwise on german sites.
noticed that a lot of celtic tiger blocklayers lay on the mortar beds incredibly big which might contibute to water ingress in that poroton build john 1957 mentioned.
who kmows?
I've only done preliminary investigations on this as a build method.Is it cost effective? when you take into consideration all the different factors that go into the normal cavity block method.
Is it difficult to use to construct with - I remember reading that if not used exactly correctly it can leak etc.
There are thermal bridges - esp. at lintols etc.. It is better than some forms of construction regarding "claimed" U value compared to "actual" U value - with the caveats about air tightness.Is it true that it gives a very good u-value which is definite and not at the mercy of insultation being inserted correctly? and there are no thermal bridges etc?
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it is more expensive, but i read somewhere that all houses are to be built to passive house standard by 2016.
agree that a well built timber frame is an alternative.
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