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Garden office
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Chizz said:Rob7Lee said:
I've got better pictures somewhere, but this is what sub £7k bought in 68mm log thickness, 19mm floor and roof, add to that about £450 for electrics, £150 for floor insulation, £1800 for garden clearance and the concrete base, I did the floor internally, about £150 in LVT.
Is it just a single layer of 68mm timber, or do you have insulation in there? And, what is the roof made of? Is it EPDM or shingles? Or... something else?
I did insulate the floor under the floorboards with 50mm kingspan. The roof is shingle, although I did what I've done on previous summer houses, first a thin sheet of roofing membrane/underlay then shingles on top just for that little extra protection. If I was using it every day in winter (or a lot) as an office I'd have insulated the roof as well. The suggestion there is roof as is, but before shingles lay kingspan with boarding on top, then shingles on top of the boards. The roof boards (like the floor) are only 19mm thick.
It doesn't get used much in winter, but when the wife does she puts the little fan heater on for about 5-10 minutes and it's toasty warm for a couple of hours. I'm tempted to put a permanent heater in there, but it really doesn't need much, maybe even an infrared one would do.
Obviously if you go large like TCE's son in law you may need a bit more!2 -
Rob7Lee said:Chizz said:Rob7Lee said:
I've got better pictures somewhere, but this is what sub £7k bought in 68mm log thickness, 19mm floor and roof, add to that about £450 for electrics, £150 for floor insulation, £1800 for garden clearance and the concrete base, I did the floor internally, about £150 in LVT.
Is it just a single layer of 68mm timber, or do you have insulation in there? And, what is the roof made of? Is it EPDM or shingles? Or... something else?
I did insulate the floor under the floorboards with 50mm kingspan. The roof is shingle, although I did what I've done on previous summer houses, first a thin sheet of roofing membrane/underlay then shingles on top just for that little extra protection. If I was using it every day in winter (or a lot) as an office I'd have insulated the roof as well. The suggestion there is roof as is, but before shingles lay kingspan with boarding on top, then shingles on top of the boards. The roof boards (like the floor) are only 19mm thick.
It doesn't get used much in winter, but when the wife does she puts the little fan heater on for about 5-10 minutes and it's toasty warm for a couple of hours. I'm tempted to put a permanent heater in there, but it really doesn't need much, maybe even an infrared one would do.
Obviously if you go large like TCE's son in law you may need a bit more!
I was originally looking at a converted shipping container, which would have been 20ft x 8ft. So that's very roughly the size I will be looking for.0 -
Chizz said:Rob7Lee said:Chizz said:Rob7Lee said:
I've got better pictures somewhere, but this is what sub £7k bought in 68mm log thickness, 19mm floor and roof, add to that about £450 for electrics, £150 for floor insulation, £1800 for garden clearance and the concrete base, I did the floor internally, about £150 in LVT.
Is it just a single layer of 68mm timber, or do you have insulation in there? And, what is the roof made of? Is it EPDM or shingles? Or... something else?
I did insulate the floor under the floorboards with 50mm kingspan. The roof is shingle, although I did what I've done on previous summer houses, first a thin sheet of roofing membrane/underlay then shingles on top just for that little extra protection. If I was using it every day in winter (or a lot) as an office I'd have insulated the roof as well. The suggestion there is roof as is, but before shingles lay kingspan with boarding on top, then shingles on top of the boards. The roof boards (like the floor) are only 19mm thick.
It doesn't get used much in winter, but when the wife does she puts the little fan heater on for about 5-10 minutes and it's toasty warm for a couple of hours. I'm tempted to put a permanent heater in there, but it really doesn't need much, maybe even an infrared one would do.
Obviously if you go large like TCE's son in law you may need a bit more!
I was originally looking at a converted shipping container, which would have been 20ft x 8ft. So that's very roughly the size I will be looking for.1 -
LargeAddick said:We are looking at one from Johnson’s. Parents may be moving in so my wife needs to relocate her craft room so they can have their own lounge.1
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Just be careful with whatever you go for, that it’s 2 metres away from your perimeter fence, so you don’t fall foul of planning application, I may have got the meter age away from the fence wrong, worth checking before you put it there, in case your neighbours aren’t in favour!0
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Mendonca In Asdas said:Just be careful with whatever you go for, that it’s 2 metres away from your perimeter fence, so you don’t fall foul of planning application, I may have got the meter age away from the fence wrong, worth checking before you put it there, in case your neighbours aren’t in favour!1
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Bigfatpete said:LargeAddick said:We are looking at one from Johnson’s. Parents may be moving in so my wife needs to relocate her craft room so they can have their own lounge.
TBF that did include construction, but as that took me and a 75 year old two days I would have thought at worst a few man days for them.
Not wishing to put anyone off them, as the buildings looked perfectly fine, just really pricey for what you were getting. The only bit I thought was better was thicker floor boards (think 28mm rather than 19mm I have). Having gone back after I put mine up I did begin to wonder if they are all produced in the same factory as the windows on the double glazing were exactly the same, hinges, handles, plastic rain run off at the front etc.0 -
Rob7Lee said:Bigfatpete said:LargeAddick said:We are looking at one from Johnson’s. Parents may be moving in so my wife needs to relocate her craft room so they can have their own lounge.
TBF that did include construction, but as that took me and a 75 year old two days I would have thought at worst a few man days for them.
Not wishing to put anyone off them, as the buildings looked perfectly fine, just really pricey for what you were getting. The only bit I thought was better was thicker floor boards (think 28mm rather than 19mm I have). Having gone back after I put mine up I did begin to wonder if they are all produced in the same factory as the windows on the double glazing were exactly the same, hinges, handles, plastic rain run off at the front etc.1 -
Rob7Lee said:Bigfatpete said:LargeAddick said:We are looking at one from Johnson’s. Parents may be moving in so my wife needs to relocate her craft room so they can have their own lounge.
TBF that did include construction, but as that took me and a 75 year old two days I would have thought at worst a few man days for them.
Not wishing to put anyone off them, as the buildings looked perfectly fine, just really pricey for what you were getting. The only bit I thought was better was thicker floor boards (think 28mm rather than 19mm I have). Having gone back after I put mine up I did begin to wonder if they are all produced in the same factory as the windows on the double glazing were exactly the same, hinges, handles, plastic rain run off at the front etc.1 -
Rob7Lee said:guinnessaddick said:Rob7Lee said:R0TW said:Don’t take this to heart, but I can see why the electrician charged you £450
It's the one downside with log cabins, you cannot run in the walls as all solid. Some is run in conduit externally (first picture you can see just a socket).
But critique away..........0 - Sponsored links:
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Mendonca In Asdas said:Just be careful with whatever you go for, that it’s 2 metres away from your perimeter fence, so you don’t fall foul of planning application, I may have got the meter age away from the fence wrong, worth checking before you put it there, in case your neighbours aren’t in favour!1
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Chizz said:Mendonca In Asdas said:Just be careful with whatever you go for, that it’s 2 metres away from your perimeter fence, so you don’t fall foul of planning application, I may have got the meter age away from the fence wrong, worth checking before you put it there, in case your neighbours aren’t in favour!2
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I got 4x3 log cabin mine was from dunster house September 2021 I purchased this. Think everything including electric about 9k
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SouthWest_Addicks said:Really considering having one of these built in the garden within next 18 months as personal office as I WFH permanently.Only issue is that where it would be locate is a sun trap and during the summer months can easily be sun for 14 hours+. Excluding getting an AC unit any idea on whether it is possible to keep these buildings cool in the summer.
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alex23_cafc said:
I got 4x3 log cabin mine was from dunster house September 2021 I purchased this. Think everything including electric about 9k
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Very envious of all of these! I'm moving house next Friday and my initial plan was to get one of these in the garden. Unfortunately there's not going to be room so I will just live through CharltonLife!1
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I bought my house two months ago, and one of the main reasons I really wanted it was because of the outbuilding.Still doing some bits to it, but it’s mostly as I want it now in terms of function. Managed to get a firm in to help install Sky TV and internet so that it works just as it would inside the house too.There are two rooms in there. This is the larger one with jacuzzi and a bar. The ex-ex-owner was a personal trainer so the flooring is kitted out with the sort of rubber material you get in a gym weights room.And then this is the 2nd room. The last owner was into his DJing, so had it built with heavy sound proofing (including double doors). Will come in handy once I get my electric guitars/amps in here.I’m using it as a man cave, but will soon double up as an office too. Got the Charlton game on at the moment!10
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cafctom said:I bought my house two months ago, and one of the main reasons I really wanted it was because of the outbuilding.Still doing some bits to it, but it’s mostly as I want it now in terms of function. Managed to get a firm in to help install Sky TV and internet so that it works just as it would inside the house too.There are two rooms in there. This is the larger one with jacuzzi and a bar. The ex-ex-owner was a personal trainer so the flooring is kitted out with the sort of rubber material you get in a gym weights room.And then this is the 2nd room. The last owner was into his DJing, so had it built with heavy sound proofing (including double doors). Will come in handy once I get my electric guitars/amps in here.I’m using it as a man cave, but will soon double up as an office too. Got the Charlton game on at the moment!7
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Well why else do you think I really wanted it?3
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cafctom said:I bought my house two months ago, and one of the main reasons I really wanted it was because of the outbuilding.Still doing some bits to it, but it’s mostly as I want it now in terms of function. Managed to get a firm in to help install Sky TV and internet so that it works just as it would inside the house too.There are two rooms in there. This is the larger one with jacuzzi and a bar. The ex-ex-owner was a personal trainer so the flooring is kitted out with the sort of rubber material you get in a gym weights room.And then this is the 2nd room. The last owner was into his DJing, so had it built with heavy sound proofing (including double doors). Will come in handy once I get my electric guitars/amps in here.I’m using it as a man cave, but will soon double up as an office too. Got the Charlton game on at the moment!1
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cafctom wins this thread0
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Did you buy it off of Sangaard ?0
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'the flooring is kitted out with the sort of rubber material you get in a wipe down sex dungeon..
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Built with help from the father in law took about two weeks in Summer 2020. Cost about £3.5k.
Inside has changed a lot since the above, outside looks much the same.3