ForestStructural
Structural
- Aug 14, 2024
- 5
I am a structural engineer in Boston and I have a client who didn't follow my Shallow Frost Protected Foundation Wall detail closely and now only has about 6" along the perimeter to embed the downturned slab at the perimeter. They did, however, add approx 18" of compacted crushed stone which is acceptable as a footing for precast foundation walls and wood foundation walls in IRC. The use of compacted crushed stone is not specifically added as a footing type for concrete wall which leads me to conclude that it's not an allowable footing for concrete. Having said that, I have found a lot of anecdotal stories where people have poured walls on gravel footings and been fine. We have a single family 1.5 story home so I'm not overly concerned about the weight along the wall but the inspector (correctly) flagged the insufficient soil cover. If I consider the gravel as the footing then the soil outside of the gravel can be considered as coverage and there's no issue. I should also note that there is ledge below the soil which is the reason why the contractor didn't go 12" below grade everywhere...some areas were higher than others. Can compacted crushed stone be considered a footing for a CONCRETE foundation wall? If you have a code or material guideline reference in support it would be greatly appreciated!