Link to todays posts Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Creating a doorway in a stone wall

Whilst the guys have been working on replacing the slate roof I have been bashing a hole through a thick stone wall to make a doorway between the future kitchen and sitting room.

Hole through stone wallAll the walls in the cottage, like the majority of old Breton houses, are built with stone and mud and range from about 60cm to 80cm thick. They are amazing sturdy and robust.

Before starting, workout were you want the hole and markout the size plus a bit extra for the width. I used orange fluo spray and made the opening 10cm wider each side than I wanted. The reason is that the stone overlaps quite a bit and often there is a really large stone right where you want the edge. It pays to have a little flexibility.

Unfortunately I forgot my camera yesterday so you'll have to visualise what I'm talking about. Obviously to stop the wall collapsing on your head it needs some support, so start by making a smallish hole, or holes, above the proposed lintel height to slide a heavy duty bit of wood through. In my case I only made one hole for a 1m wide opening because I also had two existing beams set into the wall. Usually the beams go most of the way into the wall so I used them and the extra central prop. Use some spare planking and big nails to 'lock' the whole lot together to prevent twisting. Also nail the acro props top and bottom. A little errant driving later with a wheelbarrow full of concrete could spell disaster.

Support for wall above Once everything is secure it's time to start tunneling through. It is a bit scary and stuff does just suddenly drop down from above, so basically take care. The hole will end up being a lot bigger than you expect because of the nature of the stone wall. Once you have made the initial hole a crowbar and a lump hammer should be sufficient to excavate the whole thing.

Don't be surprised about how much stone and mud comes out of the wall. A little tip, during demolition take the stones, especially the larger ones, out by hand and toss them to the side. If you let everything fall to the floor at you feet it's a pain later on as you work down the wall to clear up the mess, especially if your acro props are too close and you forgot to put some old board down to make shoveling up easier. Note how the wall 'collapses' in a triangle shape.

Shuttering holeOnce the hole was opened up to the correct size and all the rubble was cleared up it was time to repair the damage. Using an old door and some planks, I clamped some vertical supports each side of the wall to the required finished size of the opening. These vertical bits of wood are used to nail the shuttering on to so we can backfill with concrete. I'm using concrete because the wall is going to be plasterboarded later. Starting at the bottom (!) nail short bits of planking, one or two at a time, to the vertical pieces and pour in the concrete and some old bits of rubble to pad it out a bit. Basically work your way up each side a few planks at a time tamping down with a stick to ensure the mix gets into all the crevices.

With several barrow loads of concrete behind the shuttering I made sure the planks did not 'pop' off by adding some bracing between each side of the door to hold the shuttering in place.

By the end of the day I had managed to shutter up to about 1m 50cm on each side and decided to leave the whole lot to set for a day or two before tackling the lintel. Hopefully things should go smoothly.

|   9:01:46 PM  Use this to link to this item Creating a doorway in a stone wall   
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These are my experiences of renovation and running a gite business in Brittany, France. A gite is the French equivalent of a country holiday cottage. French culture, language, taxes and bureaucracy. Find out about our gites using the links on the LHS. Stories about the road to this point will be added in due course. Renovation nightmares, builders, stress, etc. Stay tuned.



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