I'm a real amateur in terms of building and construction. The last two houses I owned (current and previous) have had cavernous lofts. That is to say you go through the hatch and can walk freely end to end. First house was a 1960s brick build 2-up-2-down typical 60s british now-ex-local-authority.
Current house is 1930s suburban detached. Massive cavernous loft. It's a shame I never got to do anything with it-- I would have liked to.
Anyway, we're currently in the process of moving. The house we're buying is an early-1990s four-bed detached, with (when facing the house), the left side is a front-thrust (so basically an L-shaped house). This weekend we popped over to take some measurements and when I went up to the loft I found it was end-to-end filled with beams in a "W" shape from floor to roof. Is that typical, or should I be worried that there was some work done to prop the roof up? If it is simply the building style at the time (perhaps because interior walls are all drywall?) then I'll live with that if all the houses of the period are like that.
If that is the standard construction style, how does that affect converting the loft? Surely if the beams are situated in that way, it's integral in terms of holding the roof up?
Current house is 1930s suburban detached. Massive cavernous loft. It's a shame I never got to do anything with it-- I would have liked to.
Anyway, we're currently in the process of moving. The house we're buying is an early-1990s four-bed detached, with (when facing the house), the left side is a front-thrust (so basically an L-shaped house). This weekend we popped over to take some measurements and when I went up to the loft I found it was end-to-end filled with beams in a "W" shape from floor to roof. Is that typical, or should I be worried that there was some work done to prop the roof up? If it is simply the building style at the time (perhaps because interior walls are all drywall?) then I'll live with that if all the houses of the period are like that.
If that is the standard construction style, how does that affect converting the loft? Surely if the beams are situated in that way, it's integral in terms of holding the roof up?