I've removed a lot of ancient lath and plaster from various stud partition walls in my flat and I'm now about to start replacing it with plasterboard. The original plaster was about 2" thick. The plasterboard I'll be using is 12mm. The walls have to meet up with original cornice work all round the ceiling, and obviously that's going to be a discrepancy of almost 40mm in places. I'd prefer not to have to go around all the stud partitions with fiddly strips of wood to bring the level of the wall out to meet the cornicing, and anyway I would like walls thicker than 12mm plus a topcoat skim, for reasons of heat insulation, noise insulation, and also because I once fell against a plasterboard wall and went right through it!
So...
Can I put a thicker coat of plaster than just a skim onto plasterboard? As in, bonding a couple of cms thick like the way you'd plaster a brick wall? Is that even possible, or is plasterboard only designed to take a thin skim of topcoat?
Or should I put up two layers of plasterboard?
Apologies if either of those notions are dumb, but I've only ever lived in very old properties and this will be the first time I've ever used plasterboard. And I'm not sure exactly what you can and can't do with it!