Submitted by Ad-Nauseam91 t3_z82h4d in DIY
Hey all - as the title says i'm planning on embarking on some DIY framing of part of my unfinished basement as i'm moving my small workshop into the basement. Scouring the interwebs has left me with more questions than answers and hoping some folks with real life experience doing this can help shine some light on my questions.
Some quick background, i live in New England (so i have big temperature swings throughout year if that matters) and my house was build in 1985 (heard that could matter for sealed foundation or not?). I have never had water in the basement and did the test with the sheet of plastic and all looks dry.
- I see conflicting information on framing the exterior walls of the basement. Some show studs set off the wall and a sheet of material stapled to backside to let air flow, and i see others attach foamboard insulation directly to foundation then use strips of wood to drywall too... the airflow makes sense to me, but i'm an amateur, are their pros and cons of going directly onto the foundation vs. leaving a gap?
- I'm planning on only framing out half the basement, are their risks of not doing the interior wall portion (outside of dust, etc.). I was thinking of just doing the 3 outer edges half way through the basement, then not put the divider wall up so its easier to get to the other side of basement.
- After deciding the framing technique, can i just leave the bare concrete floor or do i need to vapor barrier/floor it? Since its just a woodshop i don't mind the concrete floor but not sure if that creates any unintended imbalances.
Thanks to anyone who read this lengthy post!
strongmans t1_iy9ubxx wrote
Use High Density Foam attached to the concrete walls and tape the seams. This is your vapor barrier. Now stud a wall up as normal with sill gasket on the bottom of the wall to prevent the wood from touching the concrete. You can insulate the 2x4 walls as well but do not add another vapor barrier (plastic).
The floor is fine as is.