Hi, my house is 1900 Victoria terrace with a ground floor passage ginnel on one side.
I have a tiny single brick room on the second floor. The brick is old stock I think and is very soft. The mortar is lime and the original plaster was lime. Someone has skimmed over the plaster with a cement based plaster. The room is very cold and the walls feel damp.
Is there any way to better insulate the room and reduce damp without loosing internal space? I was wondering if I could get the external face of the wall rendered or insulated? My understanding is that cement based plasters are bad for this type of brick and won't let them breath? If I removed plaster and redid with lime plaster would the added breathability reduce the damp level significantly?
Downstairs there is a similar situation but I have space to insulate internally. The walls have again been skimmed with cement based blaster. The damp is especially bad along the ginnel side. The wall is solid single brick and has been rendered on the outside (inside the ginnel). What would be the best solution downstairs keeping in mind that the brick is soft and a lime plaster was originally used? Do you think replastering with lime plaster would add back enough breathability and therefore solve the damp? If I plasterboard on the inside would I still need to use a lime based plaster skim to maintain breathability? I've read a foam backed plasterboard might be an option...?
I have a tiny single brick room on the second floor. The brick is old stock I think and is very soft. The mortar is lime and the original plaster was lime. Someone has skimmed over the plaster with a cement based plaster. The room is very cold and the walls feel damp.
Is there any way to better insulate the room and reduce damp without loosing internal space? I was wondering if I could get the external face of the wall rendered or insulated? My understanding is that cement based plasters are bad for this type of brick and won't let them breath? If I removed plaster and redid with lime plaster would the added breathability reduce the damp level significantly?
Downstairs there is a similar situation but I have space to insulate internally. The walls have again been skimmed with cement based blaster. The damp is especially bad along the ginnel side. The wall is solid single brick and has been rendered on the outside (inside the ginnel). What would be the best solution downstairs keeping in mind that the brick is soft and a lime plaster was originally used? Do you think replastering with lime plaster would add back enough breathability and therefore solve the damp? If I plasterboard on the inside would I still need to use a lime based plaster skim to maintain breathability? I've read a foam backed plasterboard might be an option...?
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