Elevated walkway, looking for ideas (materials to use)

Elevated walkway, looking for ideas (materials to use)

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TonyRPH

Original Poster:

13,307 posts

183 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
We have an elevated walkway which is currently plain wood decking which is rotting.

I've looked at composite decking, but looking for ideas for other materials.

The walkway has a steel sub structure, but it's not strong enough to support concrete slabs for example.

Does anyone have any other suggestions?

There are two areas, one is long and narrow (approx. 25m x 1m) - the other is a square area approx 25sqm.


sherman

14,381 posts

230 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Pictures ?

TonyRPH

Original Poster:

13,307 posts

183 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
sherman said:
Pictures ?
Two views - side on and underside.




Doofus

30,659 posts

188 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Perforated steel will be noisy. I'd go with more timber and a ten year replacement plan, or composite. Both quick and both relatively inexpensive.

sherman

14,381 posts

230 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Hardwood like teak or composite.
It will allbe down to price.

RATATTAK

15,162 posts

204 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
I would recommend Accoya

Aluminati

2,888 posts

73 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Might want to check fire regs requirements for that one.

TonyRPH

Original Poster:

13,307 posts

183 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Aluminati said:
Might want to check fire regs requirements for that one.
Good point - I should have added in my OP that any material needs to be fire resistant as a minimum.


RATATTAK

15,162 posts

204 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
TonyRPH said:
Aluminati said:
Might want to check fire regs requirements for that one.
Good point - I should have added in my OP that any material needs to be fire resistant as a minimum.
What's the situation at present with regard to fire regs ? I understood the present material is timber.

TonyRPH

Original Poster:

13,307 posts

183 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
RATATTAK said:
What's the situation at present with regard to fire regs ? I understood the present material is timber.
Yes, the existing decking is timber - very old timber (12 years or so) and I suspect not very fire resistant at all (there's even some doubt as to how this got building sign off but that's a whole other story!).

But we want to fit something that's as fire resistant as possible - nothing that I've looked at so far seems to be guaranteed fire proof.


andye30m3

3,488 posts

269 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
I'd look at something like https://www.alideck.co.uk/

Cow Corner

543 posts

45 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
andye30m3 said:
I'd look at something like https://www.alideck.co.uk/
This or Ryno deck, which is available in aluminium or composite. They are non-combustible and very low maintenance.

You will obviously need to confirm loadings and suitability for your particular project.

OutInTheShed

11,250 posts

41 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
In my world, the most reliable low maintenance 'decks' are GRP.

I'd imagine there are systems tailored for the OP's purpose?

dhutch

16,304 posts

212 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
My gut feeling is that composite/grp/plastic decking will be worse for fire rating that wood, which actually takes quite a while to catch light, and burns in a reasonable controlled fashion with not too much smoke, no dripping of hot flaming material, etc.

Just go like for like every ten years? Maybe look at a copper based pressure treated timber.

Cow Corner

543 posts

45 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
dhutch said:
My gut feeling is that composite/grp/plastic decking will be worse for fire rating that wood, which actually takes quite a while to catch light, and burns in a reasonable controlled fashion with not too much smoke, no dripping of hot flaming material, etc.

Just go like for like every ten years? Maybe look at a copper based pressure treated timber.
As my comment above, there are specific alu/composite options which are A1 fire rated and designed for this type of installation. They will be more expensive than timber, but are non-combustible and require minimal maintenance in their design life (circa 60 years for a product we are installing on a current large project).

Given this does not look like a domestic setting, the OP will need to seek advice to make sure he is compliant.


TonyRPH

Original Poster:

13,307 posts

183 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
Thanks everyone - we've not been able to find a tradesman who can offer this sort of advice.

I had looked at aluminium decking previously, however some reviews suggested it was noisy with footfall, and also noisy with heavy rain.

As was suggested, this is not a domestic setting - and I'm aware we need to get this right.


hidetheelephants

30,121 posts

208 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
They put composite grating on oil rigs, it's available in fire-rated variants.

Aluminati

2,888 posts

73 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
C deck will meet your requirements.

https://www.firedeck.uk/cdeck-fibre-cement/

TonyRPH

Original Poster:

13,307 posts

183 months

Friday 20th June
quotequote all
Aluminati said:
C deck will meet your requirements.

https://www.firedeck.uk/cdeck-fibre-cement/
This looks ideal, although I note is 3x heavier than typical decking boards.

I'll need to get an engineer in to establish if our existing steel structure can handle the additional load or if it requires reinforcement.

Fortunately, I believe the company that originally constructed it is still in business.

wolfracesonic

8,179 posts

142 months

Friday 20th June
quotequote all
Be interesting to see what a specialist in the field advises, as I guess as well as a landing it is also a fire escape. Those cement boards whilst not being combustible, I wonder if they maintain their integrity when subject to high temperatures?