Here is my problem: I have an old house - nearly 100 years old - that I need to insulate but I have a few problems and concerns I need to deal with. The walls are essentially stone and an old kind on solid cement block.

I’ve been looking into the insulation solutions available in my market and it is basically a matter of gluing thick boards of styrofoam-like material to the walls.

On the outwalls this is not feaseable as the house faces a road with no sidewalk, so I’d be encroaching onto the road. Inside, adding 5cm of insulation would make small rooms smaller to the point some would be, for all practical purposes, rendered into generous pantries.

Because I live in a somewhat rural area, mice and rodents are a concern, so adding materials they can chew through makes no sense. It would be like supplying an easy to move through medium to run the entire house. I have seen houses and buildings with this kind of insulation chewed into, the moment the smallest of pieces of the hard plaster gets cracked, which is very easy. The added fire hazard is a concern as well, I’ll admit.

I’ve already seen cork insulation but the base color is always brown and does not deal well with being painted on.

What other options may I look into? I’m in southern Europe but in an area with harsh winters.

  • towerful@programming.dev
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    10 months ago

    You could put lining paper over the cork, so you have a paintable surface.
    My flat has plaster render over brick for internal walls (external walls are lath & plaster).
    My hallway has a styrofoam backed wallpaper. It gets damaged SO easily, and I haven’t found a decent way to repair it. I presume at some point, I just need to repaper it.
    I think cork is a bit hardier than styrofoam, but just a heads up for high traffic areas

    • qyron@sopuli.xyzOP
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      10 months ago

      The cork I’ve been able to find specifically warns against painting it or covering it in any fashion. I could go for an accent wall on it but it is not a material easy to match and the texture is just off.

      I may use cork liner on the floor before setting down wood pavement (I intend to reuse every piece of wood I can manage to salvage) but not on the walls.

      And yes, styrofoam is horrendously fragile. At some point you may have to consider replacing parts of it, which apparently is very easy, but just putting up such a fragile material doesn’t make sense for me.