nierozumiem: Does anyone have the answer to Randal's question. Besides some of the obvious benefits like sound and fire proofing, why is this done, and is it mandated by building codes? I have a 120 yr old house in Poland, single floor, with a massive beautiful loft above me which I would like to convert to living space within the next few years. The existing loft floor is supported by huge wooden beams, which may require some reinforcing, but would certainly be adequate to support a living area. I've had discussions with a few different Polish builders about the conversion process, and the first thing that always comes up is how I will put the concrete floors in. They cannot not get their heads around my "WHY?" question. [Guest #15 back again ] Why concrete, I don't know. However ... a family friend (who is a builder himself) has recently built a house with concrete floors upstairs :D ... in NIreland One guess I have is from observing the whole "house build" mental attitude here. What I see is people going for the 'best' in every part of the process ... they are building their palace, and only the best ideas / construction / finish will do. In direct contrast to this, I grew up in the UK and people economised where they could. (Or should I say, the builders economised ...)
As for the wooden approach -- I wouldn't even start with a 'normal' builder (whose comfort zone will involve lots of concrete). How about finding people in your area who already have wooden homes? There are people who sell old wooden homes from eastern areas -- for dismantling and reconstruction somewhere else. People who do that have to be comfortable with what wood can do. I know a family in my area (Trojmiasto) who have such a home -- two old homes from way east of here, joined together. They work with a carpenter who is comfortable with wooden-house building.
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