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- 16 Jan 2023
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I'm looking to convert our loft in our grade II listed property. My main concerns are around maintaining ventilation and finding an insulation solution.
The loft floor has already been boarded up using loft boards, and they have used 100 mm of wool insulation beneath. There is not enough head height to achieve 270mm insulation for better energy efficiency unless we were to not use the loft as a liveable space.
The pitched roofing tiles were laid over an impervious bitumen based felt sarking. The roof rafters and beams are exposed beneath. The rafters have about 100mm of depth, so again for insulation we wouldn't be able to achieve more than 50mm if we were to leave a 50 mm gap for ventilation. Since the roof is already lined with impervious sarking it is not clear to me if we can maintain breathability and therefore if it is worth using permeable insulation, cork boarding and lime plaster. To maintain ventilation is a 50mm gap enough or do we also need some vent rafters?
From my research, it seems the best solution may be to use a multi foil insulation which is thinner and can be either breathable or non breathable.
We had a building inspection done when we moved in, just over 1 year ago, and he found that the structure is sound and he didn't find dampness in the beams.
Any advice on this?
The loft floor has already been boarded up using loft boards, and they have used 100 mm of wool insulation beneath. There is not enough head height to achieve 270mm insulation for better energy efficiency unless we were to not use the loft as a liveable space.
The pitched roofing tiles were laid over an impervious bitumen based felt sarking. The roof rafters and beams are exposed beneath. The rafters have about 100mm of depth, so again for insulation we wouldn't be able to achieve more than 50mm if we were to leave a 50 mm gap for ventilation. Since the roof is already lined with impervious sarking it is not clear to me if we can maintain breathability and therefore if it is worth using permeable insulation, cork boarding and lime plaster. To maintain ventilation is a 50mm gap enough or do we also need some vent rafters?
From my research, it seems the best solution may be to use a multi foil insulation which is thinner and can be either breathable or non breathable.
We had a building inspection done when we moved in, just over 1 year ago, and he found that the structure is sound and he didn't find dampness in the beams.
Any advice on this?