cjard
Computer
- Nov 2, 2014
- 4
I'm converting a commercial building into residential. Part of the plan involves creating an opening 4000mm wide in a side wall, directly underneath a high up semi circular window that is also 4000mm at its widest point.
Here's a panoramic shot of the entire building - please note that this building is square, it's just the fishbowl effect that makes it look like the side walls (with the semi circle windows) are not parallel
Under the windows are brick buttresses that project into the building space by about 100mm, here's a slightly less blurry pic:
See full size image
As noted, I want to form a new opening under the semicircle windows in the front part of the building, which would involve . I sent pictures to one SE and asked for a quote to calc the steel beams I'd need as lintels and he said I couldn't form an opening there as it would necessitate removing the buttress, which would destabilize the wall and it would risk collapse.
The buttress is approximately 5m high, 500mm wide and 100mm into the room. The wall construction is engineering brick inner leaf, stone outer. The mortar is lime and the "cavity" is filled with a mix of lime and stone rubble. Every 4th brick course is a header course that laps onto occasional longer stones projecting into the "cavity" from the outside, so the wall seems quite well keyed together. Overall the wall is 450mm thick, 550mm at the buttress. At the highest point, above the window, the wall is 10m high. The ground is boulder clay. On the outside of the wall, coincidental with where the steel columns supporting the roof enter the wall is a larger buttress - the wall at this point is closer to 1 metre thick when the inner and outer buttresses are considered. The building was built in 1926
Now, the SE didn't really go into detail as to why loss of the buttress would be a disaster for the wall, so would some kind soul here be able to provide supplementary info? Do these buttresses under the semi circle windows really have such a huge effect on the stability of the wall?
Regards
CJ
Here's a panoramic shot of the entire building - please note that this building is square, it's just the fishbowl effect that makes it look like the side walls (with the semi circle windows) are not parallel
Under the windows are brick buttresses that project into the building space by about 100mm, here's a slightly less blurry pic:
See full size image
As noted, I want to form a new opening under the semicircle windows in the front part of the building, which would involve . I sent pictures to one SE and asked for a quote to calc the steel beams I'd need as lintels and he said I couldn't form an opening there as it would necessitate removing the buttress, which would destabilize the wall and it would risk collapse.
The buttress is approximately 5m high, 500mm wide and 100mm into the room. The wall construction is engineering brick inner leaf, stone outer. The mortar is lime and the "cavity" is filled with a mix of lime and stone rubble. Every 4th brick course is a header course that laps onto occasional longer stones projecting into the "cavity" from the outside, so the wall seems quite well keyed together. Overall the wall is 450mm thick, 550mm at the buttress. At the highest point, above the window, the wall is 10m high. The ground is boulder clay. On the outside of the wall, coincidental with where the steel columns supporting the roof enter the wall is a larger buttress - the wall at this point is closer to 1 metre thick when the inner and outer buttresses are considered. The building was built in 1926
Now, the SE didn't really go into detail as to why loss of the buttress would be a disaster for the wall, so would some kind soul here be able to provide supplementary info? Do these buttresses under the semi circle windows really have such a huge effect on the stability of the wall?
Regards
CJ