watercop
Electrical
- Feb 3, 2005
- 7
I'm having a two story ICF house built into the side of a hill near Jacksonville, FL. It will have a drive out basement. Geo engineer cored and tested soil and determined allowed bearing of 2500 pcf on a conventional shallow spread footer. Soil is mostly sandy but with some clay layers. Structural engineering is done with the requirement that positive drainage system be provided so as not to hydroststically load walls, but gives no details.
I want a dry habitable basement using a system which will last a long long time. We are planning to use Polyguard membrane on the ICF walls to waterproof and provide code-required termite barrier.
Questions:
1) We plan a perforated pipe and gravel perimeter drain system which will be able to slope to daylight on two sides I certainly won't use the cheap black corrugated stuff. What I think I'd really like is 4" sch 40 perforated PVC pipe, but I can't find it anywhere. I've come across a thin wall PVC pipe...should I settle for that or plan to drill a thousand holes in 200' of schedule 40 myself? I've seen a spec claiming 3000 LB crush strength but I can easily compress the stuff with one hand. I want the pipe to be crush resistant and able to endure being snaked out if needed...suggestions?
2) Does the pipe need to slope or can it be level? If I slope it it won't be at the bottom of the footer in some areas. Is there any standard reference I can view or buy for designing these systems? Basements are very uncommon in Florida so I feel like I'm on my own.
3) How do I ensure using the correct geotextile fabric for my soil? I see some at HomeDepot but is it right for my application?
4) I've bought loads of both 57 and 67 gravel for other uses. 57 stones seem a bit big for drainage, but 67 might be too small assuming 1/2" perforations. One alternative might be 57 around the pipe and then 67 on top of it.
5) Structural engineer spec'd only 6 mil polyeth barrier on compacted fill - no mention of any subslab gravel or waterproofing. Will that suffice to produce a dry basement and garage? It isn't a true basement - one side is completely above grade - the driveout side.
6) Should I ask the geo engineer for specific recommendations or do I need yet another engineer? I'm an engineer myself, but not trained in any of this. I don't want to go overboard but want to get it right given cost and inconvenience of later mitigation.
Thanks!
wc
I want a dry habitable basement using a system which will last a long long time. We are planning to use Polyguard membrane on the ICF walls to waterproof and provide code-required termite barrier.
Questions:
1) We plan a perforated pipe and gravel perimeter drain system which will be able to slope to daylight on two sides I certainly won't use the cheap black corrugated stuff. What I think I'd really like is 4" sch 40 perforated PVC pipe, but I can't find it anywhere. I've come across a thin wall PVC pipe...should I settle for that or plan to drill a thousand holes in 200' of schedule 40 myself? I've seen a spec claiming 3000 LB crush strength but I can easily compress the stuff with one hand. I want the pipe to be crush resistant and able to endure being snaked out if needed...suggestions?
2) Does the pipe need to slope or can it be level? If I slope it it won't be at the bottom of the footer in some areas. Is there any standard reference I can view or buy for designing these systems? Basements are very uncommon in Florida so I feel like I'm on my own.
3) How do I ensure using the correct geotextile fabric for my soil? I see some at HomeDepot but is it right for my application?
4) I've bought loads of both 57 and 67 gravel for other uses. 57 stones seem a bit big for drainage, but 67 might be too small assuming 1/2" perforations. One alternative might be 57 around the pipe and then 67 on top of it.
5) Structural engineer spec'd only 6 mil polyeth barrier on compacted fill - no mention of any subslab gravel or waterproofing. Will that suffice to produce a dry basement and garage? It isn't a true basement - one side is completely above grade - the driveout side.
6) Should I ask the geo engineer for specific recommendations or do I need yet another engineer? I'm an engineer myself, but not trained in any of this. I don't want to go overboard but want to get it right given cost and inconvenience of later mitigation.
Thanks!
wc