Renovation or evacuation

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We live in an old stone built farmhouse in S W France, thought l would decorate the room we use as an office. Stripped off the old wallpaper and revealed this !
Fill it and forget it or move house ? :whistle:
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briantrumpet

Legendary Member
Location
Devon & Die
We live in an old stone built farmhouse in S W France, thought l would decorate the room we use as an office. Stripped off the old wallpaper and revealed this !
Fill it and forget it or move house ? :whistle:
View attachment 788536

View attachment 788536

If it's like my French stone house, the walls are about 3ft thick, and that's a century of settling. I see some houses with entire walls strapped on with iron bars to prevent them toppling over. I've got a few small cracks on the walls, but nothing that a bit of polyfilla and white emulsion won't hide until I'm too old to care. (My guess is that a French builder with experience of old houses wouldn't call it a crack unless you can get at least a finger or two well into it).

Back in Devon, I had a structural engineer come to look at my cob house, as there are some cracks, but he was happy that it was settling/compression rather than shearing - that's the one you have to look out for in cob.

tl;dr - cover it up and pretend you never saw it!!
 
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Electric_Andy

Heavy Metal Fan
Location
Plymouth
Is that plaster/render? I would cut a V in the cracks and see how far down they go. You'll have to fill it anyway so it's not like you're wrecking the finish. Hopefully just cracked plaster so you can fill and cover. If it's anything more serious, I doubt you'd want to cover it up and cross your fingers
 

si_c

Guru
Location
Wirral
It's old plaster - looks as though it's shrunk over time and with the settling of the house a few cracks have formed. As noted above you can fill it and it should be fine - but worth checking whether it's lime plaster or not, if it is then you're better using a lime filler rather than polyfilla.
 

briantrumpet

Legendary Member
Location
Devon & Die
It's old plaster - looks as though it's shrunk over time and with the settling of the house a few cracks have formed. As noted above you can fill it and it should be fine - but worth checking whether it's lime plaster or not, if it is then you're better using a lime filler rather than polyfilla.

Yeah, I had the front of my house re-rendered in lime wotsit & then whitewashed, so the cob/stone can still breathe.
 

Pat "5mph"

A kilogrammicaly challenged woman
Moderator
Location
Glasgow
@woodbutchmaster that's nothing: all houses or flats I've lived here in Glasgow, if you take wallpaper down the whole plaster coat comes down with it!
Right down to the bricks! :laugh:
 
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