Hello,
We wish to remove a wall in the house to add more space to our kitchen. The wall currently creates a passageway which is also a waste of space - here are comments on this-
1. In the crawlspace, there is nothing below the wall - no supporting structure. The support is on the opposite wall (steel beam) with a steel pipe into the ground. This wall is also the same main wall upstairs.
2. The wall itself has regular joists, but the one corner on the column has 3 joists/2 by fours nailed together.
3. The column has a HVAC exhaust running up inside. Not sure if I can move this to another location. The solution (if it cannot be rerouted) is to purchase a more asthetically pleasing column (a round column) and have the exhaust run within that. If the wall in NOT load bearing, I can have the column split and joined around the hvac exaust. If the wall IS load-bearing, then I will have to either move the HVAC exhaust or try and feed the exhaust through a load-bearing column.
4. The wall contains a hvac OUT vent (push air) which feeds upstairs. This is tricky - if I move it to the opposite wall I will have to run it up the opposite wall and through the ceiling to match up with the existing flow upstairs.
I have attached two photos. These show the wall structure from front and passage angles. I can send more photos if needed.
Any assistance with be greatly appreciated...
thanks
Andy
We wish to remove a wall in the house to add more space to our kitchen. The wall currently creates a passageway which is also a waste of space - here are comments on this-
1. In the crawlspace, there is nothing below the wall - no supporting structure. The support is on the opposite wall (steel beam) with a steel pipe into the ground. This wall is also the same main wall upstairs.
2. The wall itself has regular joists, but the one corner on the column has 3 joists/2 by fours nailed together.
3. The column has a HVAC exhaust running up inside. Not sure if I can move this to another location. The solution (if it cannot be rerouted) is to purchase a more asthetically pleasing column (a round column) and have the exhaust run within that. If the wall in NOT load bearing, I can have the column split and joined around the hvac exaust. If the wall IS load-bearing, then I will have to either move the HVAC exhaust or try and feed the exhaust through a load-bearing column.
4. The wall contains a hvac OUT vent (push air) which feeds upstairs. This is tricky - if I move it to the opposite wall I will have to run it up the opposite wall and through the ceiling to match up with the existing flow upstairs.
I have attached two photos. These show the wall structure from front and passage angles. I can send more photos if needed.
Any assistance with be greatly appreciated...
thanks
Andy
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