Bustercrabb
New Member
Hi guys, hoping for some advice if you’d be so kind....
I’m currently refurbishing a terraced Victorian house a couple of rooms at a time. I’m doing 2 bedrooms first. I’ve had a plasterer in to skim the walls and he seems to have done a good job in general, but when I removed the skirting etc from one of the internal walls I discovered it’s old lath and plaster with quite a lot of movement. I wish I’d insisted that we overboard it but my plasterer convinced me it would be ok to skim as is. I kind of got the impression he couldn’t be bothered with any extra hassle though.
I’m fitting new skirting, door frame, architrave, carpet etc - so if it does need to be overboarded now is the time. And we’re probably going to stay in this house forever so I want to do things right. On the other hand I’ve got a 3 year old sleeping in dining room, pregnant wife sleeping in a single bed in the box room and I’m sleeping in the basement while we finish these rooms, so overboarding a newly skimmed wall and delaying getting everyone back into their bedrooms is the last thing I want to do if the skim on the lath and plaster is likely to hold up ok!
Would really appreciate your advice/opinions on what I should do!
I’m currently refurbishing a terraced Victorian house a couple of rooms at a time. I’m doing 2 bedrooms first. I’ve had a plasterer in to skim the walls and he seems to have done a good job in general, but when I removed the skirting etc from one of the internal walls I discovered it’s old lath and plaster with quite a lot of movement. I wish I’d insisted that we overboard it but my plasterer convinced me it would be ok to skim as is. I kind of got the impression he couldn’t be bothered with any extra hassle though.
I’m fitting new skirting, door frame, architrave, carpet etc - so if it does need to be overboarded now is the time. And we’re probably going to stay in this house forever so I want to do things right. On the other hand I’ve got a 3 year old sleeping in dining room, pregnant wife sleeping in a single bed in the box room and I’m sleeping in the basement while we finish these rooms, so overboarding a newly skimmed wall and delaying getting everyone back into their bedrooms is the last thing I want to do if the skim on the lath and plaster is likely to hold up ok!
Would really appreciate your advice/opinions on what I should do!