I am trying to write a specification for re-decorating the inside of our Village Hall Annex in order to get quotes. it was built in 2010 and looking a bit tired and there is some settlement cracks, loose plaster around doorways and holes from recent plumbing and wiring changes including surface conduits. Its traditional build of blockwork walls with cement render and plaster skim and plasterboard ceilings.
All surfaces currently have matt emulsion and white gloss woodwork. The architraves and door stops get a real bashing from table and chair trolleys so going to get these replaced with MDF bullnose mouldings so corners don't get split off.
Things have moved on since the days of 1 coat pink lead primer, 1 oil based undercoat and 2 coats oil based gloss that painters and decorators of old used to do.
What should I expect a current day professional painter and decorator using acrylic products to apply?
I was thinking in terms of :-
New woodwork - One coats primer, Two coats undercoat, One topcoat acrylic eggshell
Existing Woodwork - Rub down and fill, 2 coats acrylic undercoat One coat acrylic eggshell
Walls - Fills cracks, rub down, caulk corners and two coats matt emulsion
Ceilings - Drive in protruding plasterboard nails (where bouncing insert a few dry lining screws) fill cracks and nail holes, rub down filler and high spots, caulk corners two coats of matt emulsion
Plastic conduit - 1 coat undercoat, one coat emulsion to match walls
Blown plaster around door frames and cracked render/plaster around tops of walls joining ceiling -
Large areas - Dig out loose plaster and re-skim with bonding and plaster skim (may need a plasterer to do patching) mist coat on new plaster, two or three coats of emulsion
Small areas from settlement - Dig out loose plaster and repair with Easifill or similar, caulk and two coats emulsion
I'm assuming some decorators might be happy to undertake small patching repairs whilst other may wish to get a plasterer in to do patching.
Is this reasonable expectation or should I expect different to the above.
Fozzie
All surfaces currently have matt emulsion and white gloss woodwork. The architraves and door stops get a real bashing from table and chair trolleys so going to get these replaced with MDF bullnose mouldings so corners don't get split off.
Things have moved on since the days of 1 coat pink lead primer, 1 oil based undercoat and 2 coats oil based gloss that painters and decorators of old used to do.
What should I expect a current day professional painter and decorator using acrylic products to apply?
I was thinking in terms of :-
New woodwork - One coats primer, Two coats undercoat, One topcoat acrylic eggshell
Existing Woodwork - Rub down and fill, 2 coats acrylic undercoat One coat acrylic eggshell
Walls - Fills cracks, rub down, caulk corners and two coats matt emulsion
Ceilings - Drive in protruding plasterboard nails (where bouncing insert a few dry lining screws) fill cracks and nail holes, rub down filler and high spots, caulk corners two coats of matt emulsion
Plastic conduit - 1 coat undercoat, one coat emulsion to match walls
Blown plaster around door frames and cracked render/plaster around tops of walls joining ceiling -
Large areas - Dig out loose plaster and re-skim with bonding and plaster skim (may need a plasterer to do patching) mist coat on new plaster, two or three coats of emulsion
Small areas from settlement - Dig out loose plaster and repair with Easifill or similar, caulk and two coats emulsion
I'm assuming some decorators might be happy to undertake small patching repairs whilst other may wish to get a plasterer in to do patching.
Is this reasonable expectation or should I expect different to the above.
Fozzie