David51 wrote:Yes, don't worry, I take your advice into consideration, so much so that I have abandoned my basic project to turn to the one recommended here.
But before I start, given the little space I have, and the not unlimited means, I really want to be 100% sure.
On this subject, there are still three last points on which I would like to have your opinion, and I think I'll get started:
1) The vertical uprights on which the walls are scoured, we agree that at the bottom they are fixed to cleats screwed in the floating concrete slab, but at the top, I also fix them to cleats fixed on my concrete ceiling, or I fix them to a kind of frame detached from the ceiling (I think it's more logical no, but the rigidity of the whole doesn't seem to be very good, hence my question)? (cf the two pictures 1 and 2)
2) For the cleats screwed to the floor on the slab, do I leave a space with the acroteria (5cm type), or can I glue them to the acroteria (let's say I screw them 1cm from the acroteria so that they are not in direct contact), knowing that they are insulated from my foundations by an insulating material? (see the two images 3 and 4). Because the more I move them away, the more I lose in surface....
3) Finally, for my staircase, it doesn't matter if there is a cut-out in my stall for access, and I just insulate the access hatch? because I won't be able to have a door in my stall otherwise I lose a monstrous surface area.
Thank you in advance for your answers.
The new ceiling timbers (joists) will rest on your new walls top plates, ideally exactly above the upright timbers (studs). Screw/nail them or use joist hangers. Make sure there is a gap between the new ceiling and your concrete ceiling. As big a gap as you are willing to lose. Same for your new walls.
You could also build the whole thing inside out, which would mean your new framing will have the plasterboard on the outside, rather than the inside. Then you can use the open spaces between the timbers for acoustic treatment. This will save space, but decrease your isolation... swings and roundabouts.
I do not understand what you mean when you say
"For the cleats screwed to the floor on the slab, do I leave a space with the acroteria (5cm type), or can I glue them to the acroteria (let's say I screw them 1cm from the acroteria so that they are not in direct contact), knowing that they are insulated from my foundations by an insulating material? (see the two images 3 and 4). Because the more I move them away, the more I lose in surface...."
I don't think you mean an acroteria... that is an ornamental piece placed on a plinth of monuments or important buildings.
Perhaps you mean a plinth? A concrete "lip" ? and why are cleats needed?
Whatever it is you mean, just keep it simple: the bottom plates of the new walls just need to be bolted straight down into your concrete floor. Use caulk/rubber under them before you bolt them down and then seal along the edges with caulk. You may have used some insulation between the old concrete and the walls and the new concrete, but it is not decoupling the new concrete floor, just treat your existing concrete walls and the whole floor as one single connected shell. As I said, it does not matter that the new walls are built on top of your concrete slab because the concrete slab is very very dense and damped by the earth.
Regarding the stair case and the hatch... what do you mean by stall?
Je parles un petit peu français, mais je pense que ce sera plus difficile pour moi de comprendre le vocabulaire en français, qu'en anglais, desolé!
Paul