Beam and Block Ground Floors: Standard and Wide Blocks, Sleeper Walls, Insulation Layer and Part A Structural Requirements

Quick Answer: Beam and block floors consist of pre-stressed concrete T-beams at 600mm centres with concrete infill blocks (typically 100mm or 150mm thick) spanning between them. They must be designed to support the imposed floor loads specified in BS EN 1991-1-1 (typically 1.5 kN/m² for residential) and must incorporate a minimum 150mm ventilated void, DPC under all bearings, and comply with Building Regulations Part A (Structure) for beam bearing lengths and support. Insulation (typically 100mm PIR board) is laid on top of the beams and blocks before the screed.

Summary

Beam and block suspended ground floors are one of the most popular ground floor solutions in modern UK extensions and new builds. They offer significant advantages over solid concrete slabs: they span across ground that may be unstable, soft, or contaminated; they create a ventilated void beneath the floor that prevents ground moisture rising into the structure; and they are faster to construct than a traditional oversite concrete slab on hardcore.

For extensions, beam and block is particularly advantageous when the site has made ground (disturbed or filled ground that isn't suitable as a bearing for a solid slab), poor soil conditions, or when matching floor levels with a suspended timber floor in the existing house. The system is also increasingly used for garden rooms and outbuildings where longevity and moisture resilience are important.

Building control requires structural justification for the beam selection, which typically comes from the pre-stressed concrete beam manufacturer's span tables or a structural engineer's calculations. Part A of the Building Regulations covers structural performance, and the Building Control surveyor will want to see evidence that the beam and block system is appropriate for the span, spacing, and imposed loads.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Span (clear between supports) Typical Beam Type Block Depth Approx. Beam Weight Notes
Up to 2.0m Light T-beam (e.g., 150mm depth) 100mm ~45 kg/m Small extensions, narrow spans
2.0–3.5m Standard T-beam (175mm depth) 100mm ~55 kg/m Most common domestic application
3.5–5.0m Medium T-beam (200–225mm depth) 100mm ~75 kg/m Wider spans
5.0–6.5m Deep T-beam (250–300mm depth) 100mm or 150mm ~100 kg/m Requires structural engineer sign-off
Over 6.5m Specialist design required Structural engineer essential

Detailed Guidance

Beam Selection and Span Tables

Pre-stressed concrete T-beams are selected from the manufacturer's span tables, which give the permissible span for a given beam section under the design imposed load. For domestic residential floors, the design imposed load is typically 1.5 kN/m² (uniformly distributed) under BS EN 1991-1-1, plus the self-weight of the screed and insulation (typically 1.5–2.0 kN/m²). The manufacturer's span table will account for both when recommending the beam section.

When ordering beams:

Most UK beam manufacturers provide free technical support for beam selection, and many offer a proprietary span table available online or via their technical team.

Important: where the beam and block floor is at risk of upward loading (e.g., in high-water-table areas where groundwater could push up against the void membrane), the manufacturer must be consulted on the appropriate beam design. Standard span tables assume downward loading only.

Sleeper Walls and Intermediate Supports

Where spans exceed approximately 4–5m, intermediate sleeper walls are introduced to reduce the effective span of each beam. Sleeper walls are typically:

Sleeper wall design:

Insulation and Part L Compliance

Building Regulations Part L (Conservation of Fuel and Power) requires ground floors in extensions to achieve a maximum U-value of 0.25 W/m²K (as of the 2022 revision for extensions). Achieving this with beam and block requires:

Insulation thickness calculation:

U-value = 1 / (Ri + Rinsulation + Rblock + Rscreed + Rsurface)

For 100mm PIR (0.022 W/mK): R = 100/0.022 = 4.55 m²K/W For 65mm screed (0.41 W/mK): R = 65/0.41 = 0.16 m²K/W Standard surface resistances: Rsi = 0.17, Rse = 0.17

Total R ≈ 4.55 + 0.16 + 0.17 + 0.17 + beam/block layer = approx. 5.2 m²K/W U-value ≈ 1/5.2 ≈ 0.19 W/m²K — comfortably within Part L limit

For new extensions, aim for 0.20–0.25 W/m²K minimum. For energy-efficient extensions, 0.15 W/m²K is achievable with 150mm PIR.

Cold bridging at perimeter: insulation boards on the beam and block surface must be turned up at the perimeter and connect with the cavity wall insulation to avoid a thermal bridge at the floor/wall junction. Typically achieved with 100mm × 25mm PIR perimeter strip bonded to the inner leaf of the cavity wall before the screed is poured.

Void Ventilation and Moisture Control

The ventilated void is essential to prevent moisture accumulation. Requirements:

Where the site is in a radon-affected area (South West England, Northamptonshire, Derbyshire, and other designated areas), a radon barrier (1200-gauge polyethylene with lapped and taped joints) and provision for a radon sump extraction system may be required under Building Regulations Part C and the NHBC Radon guidance.

Part A Structural Requirements

Building Regulations Part A covers structural stability. For beam and block floors, Building Control typically requires:

For straightforward domestic extensions with spans under 4m and standard residential loading, most building control surveyors will accept manufacturer's span table selection without a structural engineer. For complex spans, concentrated loads, or unusual conditions, a structural engineer's sign-off is expected.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use beam and block on sloping sites?

Yes, and it is often the ideal solution on sloping ground because the void can be stepped to follow the slope while maintaining the required 150mm minimum clearance under all beams. The perimeter walls effectively become retaining walls on the uphill side — ensure the structural engineer confirms wall design for the retained earth pressure and that damp-proofing is adequate.

Do I need a DPC under the blocks as well as the beams?

The DPC is required under the bearing points of the beams on the masonry walls. Infill blocks sit between the beams and do not bear onto the walls — no DPC is required under the blocks themselves. However, the outer leaf of the cavity wall and any masonry below the floor level must be DPC protected in the normal way.

Can underfloor heating be installed on beam and block?

Yes. Electric UFH mats or warm water UFH pipework can both be incorporated into the screed layer on top of the insulation. For warm water UFH on beam and block: lay 100mm PIR insulation (foil-faced), clip UFH pipework to the insulation, then pour a minimum 65mm liquid screed or sand/cement screed over. The UFH circuit design must account for the screed covering the pipework.

What is the typical construction programme for beam and block?

For a standard single-storey extension (30–50m²):

Regulations & Standards