Poorly insulated 60's house with 80's front extension
Posted: Thu Sep 08, 2022 3:36 pm
Hi All,
I have a ~1960s house with a ~1980s small front porch extension (downstairs toilet / bigger hallway), which gets really cold in the winter - especially draughts from downlights in the toilet. Access is very limited without making a big hole (just looking through downlight at the moment) but I think what I have is the image on the left. There's nothing between the rafters, some kind of plastic sheet (vapour barrier?) above those, then an unknown amount of fibreglass insulation...
At some point the soffits have been replaced with vented uPVC ones (no idea what they would have been originally), and what I think is happening is the cold air comes in / warm air goes out through the vents and UNDER the insulation, so it's effectively useless!
What I'm thinking of doing is removing the ceiling to gain access, taking out the vapour barrier and old insulation, replacing with plenty of new stuff, right down to the (new) plasterboard and out to the wall cavity.
Does this sound like a reasonable idea? Do I need to replace the vapour barrier, or would that be redundant in this setup? Do I need to vent at the top? (The sloped roof extends above the front of the garage to one side, which is completely uninsulated - not sure how much space there is above the side wall between the two... maybe this is a big enough 'vent'?)
Apologies for the double question, but the original front wall of the house (based on others in the road) was tiled above the front door to under the window above, so I'm assuming there's no proper cavity wall here (I can't see until I rip things out). I think that's contributing to the room above being cold - can I just slap a board of celotex over that area from within the roof void, or do I need to do something more advanced?!
Image attached to hopefully explain what I mean....
Thanks in advance for any advice / suggestions!
Ian
I have a ~1960s house with a ~1980s small front porch extension (downstairs toilet / bigger hallway), which gets really cold in the winter - especially draughts from downlights in the toilet. Access is very limited without making a big hole (just looking through downlight at the moment) but I think what I have is the image on the left. There's nothing between the rafters, some kind of plastic sheet (vapour barrier?) above those, then an unknown amount of fibreglass insulation...
At some point the soffits have been replaced with vented uPVC ones (no idea what they would have been originally), and what I think is happening is the cold air comes in / warm air goes out through the vents and UNDER the insulation, so it's effectively useless!
What I'm thinking of doing is removing the ceiling to gain access, taking out the vapour barrier and old insulation, replacing with plenty of new stuff, right down to the (new) plasterboard and out to the wall cavity.
Does this sound like a reasonable idea? Do I need to replace the vapour barrier, or would that be redundant in this setup? Do I need to vent at the top? (The sloped roof extends above the front of the garage to one side, which is completely uninsulated - not sure how much space there is above the side wall between the two... maybe this is a big enough 'vent'?)
Apologies for the double question, but the original front wall of the house (based on others in the road) was tiled above the front door to under the window above, so I'm assuming there's no proper cavity wall here (I can't see until I rip things out). I think that's contributing to the room above being cold - can I just slap a board of celotex over that area from within the roof void, or do I need to do something more advanced?!
Image attached to hopefully explain what I mean....
Thanks in advance for any advice / suggestions!
Ian