Is this wall load bearing? Blueprints and photos attached





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I would like to remove the highlighted wall on the second floor of my house in order to create a loft area.



Please help me identify if I'm dealing with a load bearing wall.










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  • The wall itself may not be but there are at least two things in the wall that are for sure.

    – DMoore
    2 hours ago


















5















enter image description hereenter image description here



I would like to remove the highlighted wall on the second floor of my house in order to create a loft area.



Please help me identify if I'm dealing with a load bearing wall.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Daniel Caviedes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • The wall itself may not be but there are at least two things in the wall that are for sure.

    – DMoore
    2 hours ago














5












5








5








enter image description hereenter image description here



I would like to remove the highlighted wall on the second floor of my house in order to create a loft area.



Please help me identify if I'm dealing with a load bearing wall.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Daniel Caviedes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












enter image description hereenter image description here



I would like to remove the highlighted wall on the second floor of my house in order to create a loft area.



Please help me identify if I'm dealing with a load bearing wall.







walls load






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Daniel Caviedes is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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edited 16 hours ago







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asked 16 hours ago









Daniel CaviedesDaniel Caviedes

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  • The wall itself may not be but there are at least two things in the wall that are for sure.

    – DMoore
    2 hours ago



















  • The wall itself may not be but there are at least two things in the wall that are for sure.

    – DMoore
    2 hours ago

















The wall itself may not be but there are at least two things in the wall that are for sure.

– DMoore
2 hours ago





The wall itself may not be but there are at least two things in the wall that are for sure.

– DMoore
2 hours ago










6 Answers
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oldest

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14














Disclaimer: I'm not a structural engineer, nor should you believe the word of a internet stranger. Contact a local structural engineer to take a look so you don't bring the house down.



A few details point to the wall visible in the photo being load bearing:



There is a beam in the open bit next to the wall. This implies something is worth supporting up there.



The sloped ceiling implies the roof is right above it. Roofs need supporting.



The blueprints mention a column in the corner instead of just letting them but into each other. This is only needed when that column is supporting a load.



The walls around the closet are unlikely to be load bearing.



Finally the blueprints have that wall shaded like they have the outer walls while the other inner walls are blank. Outer walls are nearly always load bearing, while inner walls rarely are.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thanks so much for your kind response. So you believe that the wall being shaded as the outer walls means it's load bearing? I had also noticed that vertical column in the corner, I was planning on removing the walls but leaving that column untouched.

    – Daniel Caviedes
    14 hours ago








  • 1





    Another beam in line with the existing one would be in order at the very least. (if only for the visual). However I'm not sure you can get enough bearing surface onto that pole to support the second beam. Which would be a question for the engineer.

    – ratchet freak
    14 hours ago











  • @DanielCaviedes Definitely that's a load bearing wall. The 'wraparound' section might not be, but the long wall almost certainly is. Think hard about the open concept kitchen. It's a fad and people are already figuring out it's often a bad idea.

    – J...
    11 hours ago











  • @J That it's the long wall is another clue. It is usually the case that joists/rafters run across the short side of a room and the longer wall is the side the rest on.

    – JimmyJames
    9 hours ago











  • Another point is that the long section of the highlighted wall is in line with another wall. That's a pattern commonly found in load-bearing walls.

    – Mark
    4 hours ago



















2














I'd bet it is bearing.



The picture shows a wall with a large opening and a door. I'll assume the plan view is the second floor plan.



In the picture you can see your knotty pine running parallel with the wall. This typically means that they are secured to the rafters and are perpendicular. The rafters are then resting one end on that wall. This is also why you see the beam spanning the opening - to support the rafters.



In the plan view you can see that the most likely position of the ceiling joists to span is from the outside wall to the wall dividing the bedrooms and again from the dividing wall to the wall you propose to remove. You could verify if you have attic access.






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  • I will see if I can get that far though the attic. Thanks for your guidance. I really appreciate it.

    – Daniel Caviedes
    12 hours ago



















1














You need a layout of the ceiling joists to determined if it is load bearing. However, I would highly lean towards believing that it is a structural support wall. The exposed beam that runs in the span beside it is a good indicator.



Licensed Home Builder
AL HBLB #25782






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    1














    Like most have already said, I also believe it's a load bearing wall.. So for all the clues others have mentioned that it's a bearing wall, I also wanna add, and this may or may not actually be applicable here, but that it's common to hatch shear walls diagonally like the drawings show, so not only is that wall a part of your load bearing system, it may also be a part of your lateral system. I wouldn't touch it haha. If you're dead set on opening this wall up, I believe it can still be done with shoring and doing somewhat of an extension of that beam and adding another column. However, the height of those columns are pretty tall, I don't think the walls are the things bracing it from bucking, I think that's why they kinda "stiffen" it with the metal studs as noted on the drawings, but if it is indeed a part of the lateral system, that'd be really tough. Go find a licensed structural engineer though and they can tell you all the possibilities and costs associated! Structural engineers work for the owner and architect and their jobs are literally to make things work. If internet strangers tell you it's a load bearing wall, that's not necessarily a red light. A good structural engineer will probably tell you the same thing but also follow it up with solutions. Construction won't be cheap though.






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      0














      the wall is load bearing joists run at 90 degrees to the ceiling cladding






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      • 1





        Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We prefer answers to be more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing info. Would you add some texture to your answer? Thanks.

        – Daniel Griscom
        8 hours ago











      • @DanielGriscom Who is “we”? Btw, quantity is not quality. The answer makes sense to me...

        – Lee Sam
        5 hours ago











      • @LeeSam To quote the Help pages: "We don't expect every answer to be perfect, but answers with correct spelling, punctuation, and grammar are easier to read. They also tend to get upvoted more frequently. Remember, you can always go back at any time and edit your answer to improve it." So, that's who "we" are.

        – Daniel Griscom
        4 hours ago











      • @DanielGriscom And where does it say it should be, “more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing”?

        – Lee Sam
        4 hours ago



















      -1














      Agreed, there are indicators it's load bearing, be wise and have a structural engineer confirm....






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      • 2





        Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. What indicators are you talking about?

        – Daniel Griscom
        4 hours ago











      • I recommend checking out the tour and How to Answer pages. You can always edit you answer to add more details.

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        12 mins ago












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      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

      votes








      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

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      14














      Disclaimer: I'm not a structural engineer, nor should you believe the word of a internet stranger. Contact a local structural engineer to take a look so you don't bring the house down.



      A few details point to the wall visible in the photo being load bearing:



      There is a beam in the open bit next to the wall. This implies something is worth supporting up there.



      The sloped ceiling implies the roof is right above it. Roofs need supporting.



      The blueprints mention a column in the corner instead of just letting them but into each other. This is only needed when that column is supporting a load.



      The walls around the closet are unlikely to be load bearing.



      Finally the blueprints have that wall shaded like they have the outer walls while the other inner walls are blank. Outer walls are nearly always load bearing, while inner walls rarely are.






      share|improve this answer
























      • Thanks so much for your kind response. So you believe that the wall being shaded as the outer walls means it's load bearing? I had also noticed that vertical column in the corner, I was planning on removing the walls but leaving that column untouched.

        – Daniel Caviedes
        14 hours ago








      • 1





        Another beam in line with the existing one would be in order at the very least. (if only for the visual). However I'm not sure you can get enough bearing surface onto that pole to support the second beam. Which would be a question for the engineer.

        – ratchet freak
        14 hours ago











      • @DanielCaviedes Definitely that's a load bearing wall. The 'wraparound' section might not be, but the long wall almost certainly is. Think hard about the open concept kitchen. It's a fad and people are already figuring out it's often a bad idea.

        – J...
        11 hours ago











      • @J That it's the long wall is another clue. It is usually the case that joists/rafters run across the short side of a room and the longer wall is the side the rest on.

        – JimmyJames
        9 hours ago











      • Another point is that the long section of the highlighted wall is in line with another wall. That's a pattern commonly found in load-bearing walls.

        – Mark
        4 hours ago
















      14














      Disclaimer: I'm not a structural engineer, nor should you believe the word of a internet stranger. Contact a local structural engineer to take a look so you don't bring the house down.



      A few details point to the wall visible in the photo being load bearing:



      There is a beam in the open bit next to the wall. This implies something is worth supporting up there.



      The sloped ceiling implies the roof is right above it. Roofs need supporting.



      The blueprints mention a column in the corner instead of just letting them but into each other. This is only needed when that column is supporting a load.



      The walls around the closet are unlikely to be load bearing.



      Finally the blueprints have that wall shaded like they have the outer walls while the other inner walls are blank. Outer walls are nearly always load bearing, while inner walls rarely are.






      share|improve this answer
























      • Thanks so much for your kind response. So you believe that the wall being shaded as the outer walls means it's load bearing? I had also noticed that vertical column in the corner, I was planning on removing the walls but leaving that column untouched.

        – Daniel Caviedes
        14 hours ago








      • 1





        Another beam in line with the existing one would be in order at the very least. (if only for the visual). However I'm not sure you can get enough bearing surface onto that pole to support the second beam. Which would be a question for the engineer.

        – ratchet freak
        14 hours ago











      • @DanielCaviedes Definitely that's a load bearing wall. The 'wraparound' section might not be, but the long wall almost certainly is. Think hard about the open concept kitchen. It's a fad and people are already figuring out it's often a bad idea.

        – J...
        11 hours ago











      • @J That it's the long wall is another clue. It is usually the case that joists/rafters run across the short side of a room and the longer wall is the side the rest on.

        – JimmyJames
        9 hours ago











      • Another point is that the long section of the highlighted wall is in line with another wall. That's a pattern commonly found in load-bearing walls.

        – Mark
        4 hours ago














      14












      14








      14







      Disclaimer: I'm not a structural engineer, nor should you believe the word of a internet stranger. Contact a local structural engineer to take a look so you don't bring the house down.



      A few details point to the wall visible in the photo being load bearing:



      There is a beam in the open bit next to the wall. This implies something is worth supporting up there.



      The sloped ceiling implies the roof is right above it. Roofs need supporting.



      The blueprints mention a column in the corner instead of just letting them but into each other. This is only needed when that column is supporting a load.



      The walls around the closet are unlikely to be load bearing.



      Finally the blueprints have that wall shaded like they have the outer walls while the other inner walls are blank. Outer walls are nearly always load bearing, while inner walls rarely are.






      share|improve this answer













      Disclaimer: I'm not a structural engineer, nor should you believe the word of a internet stranger. Contact a local structural engineer to take a look so you don't bring the house down.



      A few details point to the wall visible in the photo being load bearing:



      There is a beam in the open bit next to the wall. This implies something is worth supporting up there.



      The sloped ceiling implies the roof is right above it. Roofs need supporting.



      The blueprints mention a column in the corner instead of just letting them but into each other. This is only needed when that column is supporting a load.



      The walls around the closet are unlikely to be load bearing.



      Finally the blueprints have that wall shaded like they have the outer walls while the other inner walls are blank. Outer walls are nearly always load bearing, while inner walls rarely are.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered 15 hours ago









      ratchet freakratchet freak

      4,86611117




      4,86611117













      • Thanks so much for your kind response. So you believe that the wall being shaded as the outer walls means it's load bearing? I had also noticed that vertical column in the corner, I was planning on removing the walls but leaving that column untouched.

        – Daniel Caviedes
        14 hours ago








      • 1





        Another beam in line with the existing one would be in order at the very least. (if only for the visual). However I'm not sure you can get enough bearing surface onto that pole to support the second beam. Which would be a question for the engineer.

        – ratchet freak
        14 hours ago











      • @DanielCaviedes Definitely that's a load bearing wall. The 'wraparound' section might not be, but the long wall almost certainly is. Think hard about the open concept kitchen. It's a fad and people are already figuring out it's often a bad idea.

        – J...
        11 hours ago











      • @J That it's the long wall is another clue. It is usually the case that joists/rafters run across the short side of a room and the longer wall is the side the rest on.

        – JimmyJames
        9 hours ago











      • Another point is that the long section of the highlighted wall is in line with another wall. That's a pattern commonly found in load-bearing walls.

        – Mark
        4 hours ago



















      • Thanks so much for your kind response. So you believe that the wall being shaded as the outer walls means it's load bearing? I had also noticed that vertical column in the corner, I was planning on removing the walls but leaving that column untouched.

        – Daniel Caviedes
        14 hours ago








      • 1





        Another beam in line with the existing one would be in order at the very least. (if only for the visual). However I'm not sure you can get enough bearing surface onto that pole to support the second beam. Which would be a question for the engineer.

        – ratchet freak
        14 hours ago











      • @DanielCaviedes Definitely that's a load bearing wall. The 'wraparound' section might not be, but the long wall almost certainly is. Think hard about the open concept kitchen. It's a fad and people are already figuring out it's often a bad idea.

        – J...
        11 hours ago











      • @J That it's the long wall is another clue. It is usually the case that joists/rafters run across the short side of a room and the longer wall is the side the rest on.

        – JimmyJames
        9 hours ago











      • Another point is that the long section of the highlighted wall is in line with another wall. That's a pattern commonly found in load-bearing walls.

        – Mark
        4 hours ago

















      Thanks so much for your kind response. So you believe that the wall being shaded as the outer walls means it's load bearing? I had also noticed that vertical column in the corner, I was planning on removing the walls but leaving that column untouched.

      – Daniel Caviedes
      14 hours ago







      Thanks so much for your kind response. So you believe that the wall being shaded as the outer walls means it's load bearing? I had also noticed that vertical column in the corner, I was planning on removing the walls but leaving that column untouched.

      – Daniel Caviedes
      14 hours ago






      1




      1





      Another beam in line with the existing one would be in order at the very least. (if only for the visual). However I'm not sure you can get enough bearing surface onto that pole to support the second beam. Which would be a question for the engineer.

      – ratchet freak
      14 hours ago





      Another beam in line with the existing one would be in order at the very least. (if only for the visual). However I'm not sure you can get enough bearing surface onto that pole to support the second beam. Which would be a question for the engineer.

      – ratchet freak
      14 hours ago













      @DanielCaviedes Definitely that's a load bearing wall. The 'wraparound' section might not be, but the long wall almost certainly is. Think hard about the open concept kitchen. It's a fad and people are already figuring out it's often a bad idea.

      – J...
      11 hours ago





      @DanielCaviedes Definitely that's a load bearing wall. The 'wraparound' section might not be, but the long wall almost certainly is. Think hard about the open concept kitchen. It's a fad and people are already figuring out it's often a bad idea.

      – J...
      11 hours ago













      @J That it's the long wall is another clue. It is usually the case that joists/rafters run across the short side of a room and the longer wall is the side the rest on.

      – JimmyJames
      9 hours ago





      @J That it's the long wall is another clue. It is usually the case that joists/rafters run across the short side of a room and the longer wall is the side the rest on.

      – JimmyJames
      9 hours ago













      Another point is that the long section of the highlighted wall is in line with another wall. That's a pattern commonly found in load-bearing walls.

      – Mark
      4 hours ago





      Another point is that the long section of the highlighted wall is in line with another wall. That's a pattern commonly found in load-bearing walls.

      – Mark
      4 hours ago













      2














      I'd bet it is bearing.



      The picture shows a wall with a large opening and a door. I'll assume the plan view is the second floor plan.



      In the picture you can see your knotty pine running parallel with the wall. This typically means that they are secured to the rafters and are perpendicular. The rafters are then resting one end on that wall. This is also why you see the beam spanning the opening - to support the rafters.



      In the plan view you can see that the most likely position of the ceiling joists to span is from the outside wall to the wall dividing the bedrooms and again from the dividing wall to the wall you propose to remove. You could verify if you have attic access.






      share|improve this answer
























      • I will see if I can get that far though the attic. Thanks for your guidance. I really appreciate it.

        – Daniel Caviedes
        12 hours ago
















      2














      I'd bet it is bearing.



      The picture shows a wall with a large opening and a door. I'll assume the plan view is the second floor plan.



      In the picture you can see your knotty pine running parallel with the wall. This typically means that they are secured to the rafters and are perpendicular. The rafters are then resting one end on that wall. This is also why you see the beam spanning the opening - to support the rafters.



      In the plan view you can see that the most likely position of the ceiling joists to span is from the outside wall to the wall dividing the bedrooms and again from the dividing wall to the wall you propose to remove. You could verify if you have attic access.






      share|improve this answer
























      • I will see if I can get that far though the attic. Thanks for your guidance. I really appreciate it.

        – Daniel Caviedes
        12 hours ago














      2












      2








      2







      I'd bet it is bearing.



      The picture shows a wall with a large opening and a door. I'll assume the plan view is the second floor plan.



      In the picture you can see your knotty pine running parallel with the wall. This typically means that they are secured to the rafters and are perpendicular. The rafters are then resting one end on that wall. This is also why you see the beam spanning the opening - to support the rafters.



      In the plan view you can see that the most likely position of the ceiling joists to span is from the outside wall to the wall dividing the bedrooms and again from the dividing wall to the wall you propose to remove. You could verify if you have attic access.






      share|improve this answer













      I'd bet it is bearing.



      The picture shows a wall with a large opening and a door. I'll assume the plan view is the second floor plan.



      In the picture you can see your knotty pine running parallel with the wall. This typically means that they are secured to the rafters and are perpendicular. The rafters are then resting one end on that wall. This is also why you see the beam spanning the opening - to support the rafters.



      In the plan view you can see that the most likely position of the ceiling joists to span is from the outside wall to the wall dividing the bedrooms and again from the dividing wall to the wall you propose to remove. You could verify if you have attic access.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered 13 hours ago









      Fresh CodemongerFresh Codemonger

      3317




      3317













      • I will see if I can get that far though the attic. Thanks for your guidance. I really appreciate it.

        – Daniel Caviedes
        12 hours ago



















      • I will see if I can get that far though the attic. Thanks for your guidance. I really appreciate it.

        – Daniel Caviedes
        12 hours ago

















      I will see if I can get that far though the attic. Thanks for your guidance. I really appreciate it.

      – Daniel Caviedes
      12 hours ago





      I will see if I can get that far though the attic. Thanks for your guidance. I really appreciate it.

      – Daniel Caviedes
      12 hours ago











      1














      You need a layout of the ceiling joists to determined if it is load bearing. However, I would highly lean towards believing that it is a structural support wall. The exposed beam that runs in the span beside it is a good indicator.



      Licensed Home Builder
      AL HBLB #25782






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      William Payne is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.

























        1














        You need a layout of the ceiling joists to determined if it is load bearing. However, I would highly lean towards believing that it is a structural support wall. The exposed beam that runs in the span beside it is a good indicator.



        Licensed Home Builder
        AL HBLB #25782






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        William Payne is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.























          1












          1








          1







          You need a layout of the ceiling joists to determined if it is load bearing. However, I would highly lean towards believing that it is a structural support wall. The exposed beam that runs in the span beside it is a good indicator.



          Licensed Home Builder
          AL HBLB #25782






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          William Payne is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.










          You need a layout of the ceiling joists to determined if it is load bearing. However, I would highly lean towards believing that it is a structural support wall. The exposed beam that runs in the span beside it is a good indicator.



          Licensed Home Builder
          AL HBLB #25782







          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          William Payne is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.









          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer






          New contributor




          William Payne is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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          answered 10 hours ago









          William PayneWilliam Payne

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          111




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          William Payne is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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          William Payne is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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              Like most have already said, I also believe it's a load bearing wall.. So for all the clues others have mentioned that it's a bearing wall, I also wanna add, and this may or may not actually be applicable here, but that it's common to hatch shear walls diagonally like the drawings show, so not only is that wall a part of your load bearing system, it may also be a part of your lateral system. I wouldn't touch it haha. If you're dead set on opening this wall up, I believe it can still be done with shoring and doing somewhat of an extension of that beam and adding another column. However, the height of those columns are pretty tall, I don't think the walls are the things bracing it from bucking, I think that's why they kinda "stiffen" it with the metal studs as noted on the drawings, but if it is indeed a part of the lateral system, that'd be really tough. Go find a licensed structural engineer though and they can tell you all the possibilities and costs associated! Structural engineers work for the owner and architect and their jobs are literally to make things work. If internet strangers tell you it's a load bearing wall, that's not necessarily a red light. A good structural engineer will probably tell you the same thing but also follow it up with solutions. Construction won't be cheap though.






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                Like most have already said, I also believe it's a load bearing wall.. So for all the clues others have mentioned that it's a bearing wall, I also wanna add, and this may or may not actually be applicable here, but that it's common to hatch shear walls diagonally like the drawings show, so not only is that wall a part of your load bearing system, it may also be a part of your lateral system. I wouldn't touch it haha. If you're dead set on opening this wall up, I believe it can still be done with shoring and doing somewhat of an extension of that beam and adding another column. However, the height of those columns are pretty tall, I don't think the walls are the things bracing it from bucking, I think that's why they kinda "stiffen" it with the metal studs as noted on the drawings, but if it is indeed a part of the lateral system, that'd be really tough. Go find a licensed structural engineer though and they can tell you all the possibilities and costs associated! Structural engineers work for the owner and architect and their jobs are literally to make things work. If internet strangers tell you it's a load bearing wall, that's not necessarily a red light. A good structural engineer will probably tell you the same thing but also follow it up with solutions. Construction won't be cheap though.






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                  1












                  1








                  1







                  Like most have already said, I also believe it's a load bearing wall.. So for all the clues others have mentioned that it's a bearing wall, I also wanna add, and this may or may not actually be applicable here, but that it's common to hatch shear walls diagonally like the drawings show, so not only is that wall a part of your load bearing system, it may also be a part of your lateral system. I wouldn't touch it haha. If you're dead set on opening this wall up, I believe it can still be done with shoring and doing somewhat of an extension of that beam and adding another column. However, the height of those columns are pretty tall, I don't think the walls are the things bracing it from bucking, I think that's why they kinda "stiffen" it with the metal studs as noted on the drawings, but if it is indeed a part of the lateral system, that'd be really tough. Go find a licensed structural engineer though and they can tell you all the possibilities and costs associated! Structural engineers work for the owner and architect and their jobs are literally to make things work. If internet strangers tell you it's a load bearing wall, that's not necessarily a red light. A good structural engineer will probably tell you the same thing but also follow it up with solutions. Construction won't be cheap though.






                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




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                  Like most have already said, I also believe it's a load bearing wall.. So for all the clues others have mentioned that it's a bearing wall, I also wanna add, and this may or may not actually be applicable here, but that it's common to hatch shear walls diagonally like the drawings show, so not only is that wall a part of your load bearing system, it may also be a part of your lateral system. I wouldn't touch it haha. If you're dead set on opening this wall up, I believe it can still be done with shoring and doing somewhat of an extension of that beam and adding another column. However, the height of those columns are pretty tall, I don't think the walls are the things bracing it from bucking, I think that's why they kinda "stiffen" it with the metal studs as noted on the drawings, but if it is indeed a part of the lateral system, that'd be really tough. Go find a licensed structural engineer though and they can tell you all the possibilities and costs associated! Structural engineers work for the owner and architect and their jobs are literally to make things work. If internet strangers tell you it's a load bearing wall, that's not necessarily a red light. A good structural engineer will probably tell you the same thing but also follow it up with solutions. Construction won't be cheap though.







                  share|improve this answer








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                  answered 58 mins ago









                  spolitespolite

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                  111




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                      0














                      the wall is load bearing joists run at 90 degrees to the ceiling cladding






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                      • 1





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                      the wall is load bearing joists run at 90 degrees to the ceiling cladding






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                      • 1





                        Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We prefer answers to be more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing info. Would you add some texture to your answer? Thanks.

                        – Daniel Griscom
                        8 hours ago











                      • @DanielGriscom Who is “we”? Btw, quantity is not quality. The answer makes sense to me...

                        – Lee Sam
                        5 hours ago











                      • @LeeSam To quote the Help pages: "We don't expect every answer to be perfect, but answers with correct spelling, punctuation, and grammar are easier to read. They also tend to get upvoted more frequently. Remember, you can always go back at any time and edit your answer to improve it." So, that's who "we" are.

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                      • @DanielGriscom And where does it say it should be, “more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing”?

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                        4 hours ago














                      0












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                      0







                      the wall is load bearing joists run at 90 degrees to the ceiling cladding






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                      the wall is load bearing joists run at 90 degrees to the ceiling cladding







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                      answered 9 hours ago









                      philip smithphilip smith

                      91




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                      • 1





                        Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We prefer answers to be more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing info. Would you add some texture to your answer? Thanks.

                        – Daniel Griscom
                        8 hours ago











                      • @DanielGriscom Who is “we”? Btw, quantity is not quality. The answer makes sense to me...

                        – Lee Sam
                        5 hours ago











                      • @LeeSam To quote the Help pages: "We don't expect every answer to be perfect, but answers with correct spelling, punctuation, and grammar are easier to read. They also tend to get upvoted more frequently. Remember, you can always go back at any time and edit your answer to improve it." So, that's who "we" are.

                        – Daniel Griscom
                        4 hours ago











                      • @DanielGriscom And where does it say it should be, “more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing”?

                        – Lee Sam
                        4 hours ago














                      • 1





                        Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We prefer answers to be more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing info. Would you add some texture to your answer? Thanks.

                        – Daniel Griscom
                        8 hours ago











                      • @DanielGriscom Who is “we”? Btw, quantity is not quality. The answer makes sense to me...

                        – Lee Sam
                        5 hours ago











                      • @LeeSam To quote the Help pages: "We don't expect every answer to be perfect, but answers with correct spelling, punctuation, and grammar are easier to read. They also tend to get upvoted more frequently. Remember, you can always go back at any time and edit your answer to improve it." So, that's who "we" are.

                        – Daniel Griscom
                        4 hours ago











                      • @DanielGriscom And where does it say it should be, “more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing”?

                        – Lee Sam
                        4 hours ago








                      1




                      1





                      Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We prefer answers to be more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing info. Would you add some texture to your answer? Thanks.

                      – Daniel Griscom
                      8 hours ago





                      Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. We prefer answers to be more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing info. Would you add some texture to your answer? Thanks.

                      – Daniel Griscom
                      8 hours ago













                      @DanielGriscom Who is “we”? Btw, quantity is not quality. The answer makes sense to me...

                      – Lee Sam
                      5 hours ago





                      @DanielGriscom Who is “we”? Btw, quantity is not quality. The answer makes sense to me...

                      – Lee Sam
                      5 hours ago













                      @LeeSam To quote the Help pages: "We don't expect every answer to be perfect, but answers with correct spelling, punctuation, and grammar are easier to read. They also tend to get upvoted more frequently. Remember, you can always go back at any time and edit your answer to improve it." So, that's who "we" are.

                      – Daniel Griscom
                      4 hours ago





                      @LeeSam To quote the Help pages: "We don't expect every answer to be perfect, but answers with correct spelling, punctuation, and grammar are easier to read. They also tend to get upvoted more frequently. Remember, you can always go back at any time and edit your answer to improve it." So, that's who "we" are.

                      – Daniel Griscom
                      4 hours ago













                      @DanielGriscom And where does it say it should be, “more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing”?

                      – Lee Sam
                      4 hours ago





                      @DanielGriscom And where does it say it should be, “more than one sentence long, and with a bit of backing”?

                      – Lee Sam
                      4 hours ago











                      -1














                      Agreed, there are indicators it's load bearing, be wise and have a structural engineer confirm....






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                        Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. What indicators are you talking about?

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                        4 hours ago











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                        – user87417
                        12 mins ago
















                      -1














                      Agreed, there are indicators it's load bearing, be wise and have a structural engineer confirm....






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                      • 2





                        Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. What indicators are you talking about?

                        – Daniel Griscom
                        4 hours ago











                      • I recommend checking out the tour and How to Answer pages. You can always edit you answer to add more details.

                        – user87417
                        12 mins ago














                      -1












                      -1








                      -1







                      Agreed, there are indicators it's load bearing, be wise and have a structural engineer confirm....






                      share|improve this answer








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                      Agreed, there are indicators it's load bearing, be wise and have a structural engineer confirm....







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                      answered 5 hours ago









                      user99448user99448

                      1




                      1




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                      • 2





                        Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. What indicators are you talking about?

                        – Daniel Griscom
                        4 hours ago











                      • I recommend checking out the tour and How to Answer pages. You can always edit you answer to add more details.

                        – user87417
                        12 mins ago














                      • 2





                        Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. What indicators are you talking about?

                        – Daniel Griscom
                        4 hours ago











                      • I recommend checking out the tour and How to Answer pages. You can always edit you answer to add more details.

                        – user87417
                        12 mins ago








                      2




                      2





                      Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. What indicators are you talking about?

                      – Daniel Griscom
                      4 hours ago





                      Hello, and welcome to Home Improvement. What indicators are you talking about?

                      – Daniel Griscom
                      4 hours ago













                      I recommend checking out the tour and How to Answer pages. You can always edit you answer to add more details.

                      – user87417
                      12 mins ago





                      I recommend checking out the tour and How to Answer pages. You can always edit you answer to add more details.

                      – user87417
                      12 mins ago










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