...I don't want to, so I'm thinking of checking if someone can give me a "go" to start sawing.
I want more freedom of movement in the attic when I'm installing FTX.
Green is some kind of beam, doesn't go all the way, so it feels unnecessary?
Red is some "stick" going up to the roof truss, can hardly help anything (if it should, every truss would have one)?
Blue: Board that someone didn't bother to remove when the house was built, wasn't it easier to place it all the way?


I want more freedom of movement in the attic when I'm installing FTX.
Green is some kind of beam, doesn't go all the way, so it feels unnecessary?
Red is some "stick" going up to the roof truss, can hardly help anything (if it should, every truss would have one)?
Blue: Board that someone didn't bother to remove when the house was built, wasn't it easier to place it all the way?
The green beam is probably the only thing you can't remove. You likely have a dormer supported by these. It's needed when a truss has been cut. The sheathing has just been left in place, and the red stick is probably nothing to worry about.
A new load-bearing question.

Can you kind of put a horizontal rule below (was thinking of making the valve larger and more centered) This is the inside of a wooden house with a brick facade, as you can see.
Can you kind of put a horizontal rule below (was thinking of making the valve larger and more centered) This is the inside of a wooden house with a brick facade, as you can see.
Currently removing topsoil and a roughly 20 cm high cemented stone wall to create a parking space on the property. However, it seems like there's extra cement underneath this (more than you'd typically expect for keeping a wall in place). Could this have some connection to the pillar that supports a balcony (which is not visible in the picture), or is it just that they used to make solid foundations even for low walls in the past? It feels like the foundation right under the pillar should be sufficient (seems to be poured first).

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