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Hi, I have moved into a victorian house which had a dripping stopclock in the cellar, which has been fixed up and has now started to dry out. Now looking at the plaster in the room above it.
I have taken a picture of one of the (Edit: internal brick) walls, that was under the woodchip wallpaper.
At the bottom it has what looks like a cement level with a gypium finish, where the cement is the walls are damp. I've hacked that off in another corner and the bricks feel dry below.
Above that is the original plaster which breaks really easy and flakes if i dust it, with a finish which is rather damaged (i'm not sure of which type, doesn't seem like lime as its not that white, i'm assuming old gypsium?)
Now to my plan which i'm hoping to get a second opinion on from the research i have done.
Planning to hack off the hollow sounding areas and the cement areas. Replacing the backing with hardwall. Once that has set apply a layer of multifinish to the entire wall to smooth it all out.
Thoughts? Is this correct thing to go for?
I have taken a picture of one of the (Edit: internal brick) walls, that was under the woodchip wallpaper.
At the bottom it has what looks like a cement level with a gypium finish, where the cement is the walls are damp. I've hacked that off in another corner and the bricks feel dry below.
Above that is the original plaster which breaks really easy and flakes if i dust it, with a finish which is rather damaged (i'm not sure of which type, doesn't seem like lime as its not that white, i'm assuming old gypsium?)
Now to my plan which i'm hoping to get a second opinion on from the research i have done.
Planning to hack off the hollow sounding areas and the cement areas. Replacing the backing with hardwall. Once that has set apply a layer of multifinish to the entire wall to smooth it all out.
Thoughts? Is this correct thing to go for?
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