adrien02
Mar 31, 2008, 10:51 AM
Hello, I have a 1960's tri-level. The Lower level is 25' x 25' on slab and block. A ledge steel beam divides the room that run perpendicular to the floor joists support by a steel column (in the middle) and block on the ends that supports the upstairs wall. I want to remove 13' of a 25' wall that runs parallel to floor joists and perpendicular, which is located in the center of the room joists are 2 x 10, 16 OC.
I had 3 contractors look at it and they all said it wasn’t load bearing. I was all set to signed a contract when, the last contractor told me that it was load bearing, because there is a wall on top of it. One contractor said since I was building a 12' wall under the steel beam that wall would become a load bearing wall. At this point, I'm totally confused. I don't know if it is worth it to get a structural engineer or not. Because if is load bearing, I don't want to put in a header (basement already have low ceilings).
All walls that have a wall on top load bearing. Instead of adding a header, could the existing beam be replace with a steel beam that is Support on each end. How would the wall be supported while doing this (it is running parallel to the wall that I want to replace?
Thanks
I had 3 contractors look at it and they all said it wasn’t load bearing. I was all set to signed a contract when, the last contractor told me that it was load bearing, because there is a wall on top of it. One contractor said since I was building a 12' wall under the steel beam that wall would become a load bearing wall. At this point, I'm totally confused. I don't know if it is worth it to get a structural engineer or not. Because if is load bearing, I don't want to put in a header (basement already have low ceilings).
All walls that have a wall on top load bearing. Instead of adding a header, could the existing beam be replace with a steel beam that is Support on each end. How would the wall be supported while doing this (it is running parallel to the wall that I want to replace?
Thanks