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Brian Gaff Brian Gaff is offline
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Default Can a stud wall ever be load-bearing?

I think I'd want a signature of an expert on a bit of paper first here.
Somebody in Kingston did something like this, then went on holiday and the
whole insides collapsed when they were away.

Unless one is sure of the history of a property, never expect people to do
the sensible thing!
Brian

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"Dan S. MacAbre" wrote in message
...
harry wrote:
On Friday, 5 April 2019 12:39:27 UTC+1, Dan S. MacAbre wrote:
I doubt it, but I want to saw a big hole in one, so I need to ask. Our
stairs go up the middle of the house, at 90 degrees to all the beams.
There is a breeze block wall on one side, and a stud wall on the other,
which continues down into the kitchen. I'd like to open up the space
under the stairs a bit by removing a big chunk of the stud wall. In the
void, above this wall is a larger-than-the-others beam at 90 degrees to
all the others, and fastened to another very large one in the region of
the top of the stairs by a metal bracket. The beams in one upstairs
room are similarly fastened to this first large beam, so they are
aligned with all the others. I'm assuming that the paramount (I think
it is called) board, and the vertical bits of wood that hold it in place
(about an inch and a half square section) are not supporting this large
beam; but before I start sawing through it all, I'd like to hear some
opinions :-)

I know this description probably doesn't help at all, but is it ever the
case that a paramount board stud wall can support a beam going across
the top of it? I mean, if it ever got wet, it would be catastrophic :-)


Yes they often are load bearing even in traditional houses.
Timber frame houses have all load bearing walls "stud".


I'm afraid it's a very boring breezeblock and brick 1980's cube house.