this post was submitted on 22 Feb 2024
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~~My advice? Knock that "wall" down and pay a proper carpenter to build a proper one. Your studs are too small, they don't go all the way down, you have no room for insulation, and if you try to hang cabinets on that thing, you're going to kill someone when the whole sumbitch collapses.~~
My bad, I didn't know what I was looking at. See OP's diagram to learn more about this, and ignore my ignorance.
I cant knock that wall down. Its like 40 cm thick.
https://www.wolf-haus.de/ihr-mehrwert/mehr-holz/
Maybe if you see this you can help me :(
So I am attaching 6x6 cm squared timber onto an existing wall that is 40 cm thick
Oh, I see. My apologies, I misunderstood what we were looking at. I thought the framing we see was the entire wall, but it's just non-structural framing on the interior behind the plasterboard to allow space for wiring.
I am not familiar with this style of construction, so I won't guess at best practices for hanging cabinets on it. But I would imagine that as long as the wall we see is sufficiently secured to the structural wall behind it, you should be able to hang cabinets. To be safe, you could anchor into the wall, but I don't know enough to say how to do that without interfering with insulation or vapor barriers.
That link is extremely helpful. It seems like you're fine to attach cabinets to the wall after drywall. The osb is tied into some serious wood framing behind it, and as long as you're using fasteners that reach into the osb, it should be about as solid as you could want.
The kitchen metal grumpydaddy suggested isn't expressly needed here, but that's the most I'd consider doing to it.
It's just a subwall that's adding a thermal break. Presumably it's anchored to the existing wall.
Please have a look at the images he posted, the wall is absolutely fine. The images he posted are just the inner installation layer, the structural wall and insulation are behind that.