House Pictures Chat Corner - Show off your house pictures!

  • Erstellt am 2015-11-25 10:27:31

annab377

2020-10-25 21:32:12
  • #1
Ah okay, thanks. And what is the foundation standing on? On XPS boards or is that just for decoupling? And is the one next to it a wastewater pipe for the washing machine?
 

annab377

2020-10-26 06:10:17
  • #2


"Unwanted swimming pool owners hate this trick" Since the KG ceiling is not closed thanks to the stairwell, water constantly runs back into the basement level when it rains. And you know the changeable, partly wet weather of the last few days. And the basement is made of waterproof concrete (WU concrete).

In rooms with a drain it's okay because you can sweep it out, but in rooms without one it's a pretty annoying thing with a dustpan and so on.

Another question: I always thought that WU concrete doesn't absorb water at all. Apparently not, because you can clearly see moist, darker concrete areas just above the floor on the exterior walls. That is where the water stands. How far does the water "travel" in the WU concrete?
 

Bookstar

2020-10-26 07:00:43
  • #3
 

11ant

2020-10-26 13:29:06
  • #4
I would have rather assumed an element ceiling here based on the appearance. Can you show the crop of the image in a larger context?
 

guckuck2

2020-10-26 14:15:36
  • #5
Filigree ceiling is like a Tempo tissue and refers to an element ceiling.
 

11ant

2020-10-26 14:39:23
  • #6
Although filigree slab, like Tempo, Tesa, and incidentally also Isokorb, suffers from the fact that brand awareness leads to it being used synonymously as a generic term, a precast slab also exists in the form of elements prefabricated ready for installation in full thickness (e.g., in the width equal to the spacing between the joists of a wooden ceiling). A filigree slab, on the other hand, refers to a method of manufacturing a slab in the dimensions of whole ceiling panels, combined from prefabricated and cast-in-place layers. From below, therefore, you cannot see the difference between a filigree slab and a classic cast-in-place shuttered slab, and it typically has no joints within a room. Precast slabs exist both completely prefabricated and with a cast-in-place layer (but then not in panel sections).
 

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