Cladding of niche with revision door?

  • Erstellt am 2020-09-04 07:32:18

quattro123

2020-09-04 07:32:18
  • #1
Hello everyone,

In my current shell construction, which is still unplastered, I have a niche in the Poroton walls at the house entrance in the hallway, which will measure 1.1 x 0.8 m after plastering and screed. At this location, the water meter and the MSH will be installed. From there, electrical and water connections run under the screed into the utility room (don't ask why ). See picture.

I am looking for a way to "nicely" hide/cover the whole thing, and it should also be possible to open it.

I find various inspection doors made of metal online. Question: Is there something like this in the size of about 1.1 x 0.8 meters in a version that can be plastered over? I really can't find anything and have been searching for days. Maybe you have ideas on how to elegantly disguise/hide something like this?

Maybe I am simply missing the right "search term." I always search for inspection door.

I would be very grateful for any tip!

Best regards and have a nice weekend already
 

K1300S

2020-09-04 07:40:42
  • #2
Whether the inspection doors come in that size, I cannot say, but that reminds me of the dimensions of typical distribution boxes for underfloor heating. There should then be a roughly fitting one - without internal components - that can be installed flush.
 

quattro123

2020-09-04 08:00:07
  • #3
The idea is not bad, but the niche is 20 cm deep and the distribution boxes for underfloor heating are often only 10 cm. I will keep looking!
 

kbt09

2020-09-04 09:49:35
  • #4
It depends on the floor plan, but one could also simply place a suitable dresser in front of it and just a cover plate directly over the hole. Then you can really access it at any time. Because plastering a door there is not so access-friendly.
 

quattro123

2020-09-04 09:54:03
  • #5
I was thinking of a UP door whose cover can be plastered over or painted over. Of course, I do not want to plaster it completely, that would not make any sense.
 

K1300S

2020-09-04 10:15:52
  • #6
Then you simply cut out the back panel. Presumably, nothing needs to be attached to it.
 

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