20turbo
Mechanical
- Mar 22, 2010
- 3
Hi, I'm planning on building a detached garage. I started with a floor plan from an internet site and drew up a rough set of plans for a basic 30' wide X 44' deep building. Facing the front of the garage, my lot slopes down to the right and down to the back. The front left corner will be closest to grade. So, in order to maintain footings below frost depth, I was planning on a stepped footing arrangement, following the grade. The stepped footers would have a stem wall poured on top. The back right corner would be almost 8' unbalanced and I've learned that I can't just fill this big box with fill, compact it and pour a slab on top. My calculations show I need something like 375 cubic yards of fill. I've attached a picture, viewed from the right, rear corner.
So, my problem is that I don't think this will work. Compacting the fill inside the garage will bulge the walls. Not compacting the fill will allow my slab to settle. Using something else for fill (sand, aggregate, etc.) is going to cost a fortune. Although honestly, I don't see this arrangement as much different than my house foundation except the open space/soil is reversed. Maybe the difference is I'm not compacting the back fill against my foundation.
My background is mechanical engineering, so I'm not a civil or geotech. But I know enough that I know I need some help. My current plans are to talk to my geotechs/civils and let them see my plans and come up with an affordable solution. Prior to our meeting, I'd like to get some ideas from you folks.
My building site and proximity to future house don't really allow me to compact and build-up a pad site and have balanced fill on both sides of my foundation walls. So, I' really like to keep my current thought process and come up with a solution that meets my needs and budget. My thoughts for "solutions":
1. Shrink the overall size of the building and put in a full basement with steel I-beams supporting a concrete slab. Concrete slab above would need to support vehicles, max load of 5,000 lbs etc. This would be complicated as I want to put a car lift in and that would be difficult on a suspended slab I think. Also, I know steel prices and they're not bad, but the engineering for such an arrangement and the decking to pour the slab over the steel don't have a good feel for cost.
2. Keep the current arrangement and fill with something that doesn't exert horizontal force on the walls. Sand? Flowable fill? No idea of this cost or if this would agree with the building officials (not strict here, but not stupid).
3. Engineered slab with some grade beams that doesn't require compacted fill underneath. No idea of cost. Maybe pour two piers down to virgin soil with independent footings to support each side of my car lift.
4. Compact up a pad with slopes on each side and then cut it down to size to make an "earth plug." Pour my footings on virgin material and fill the gap between the compacted plug and the poured walls with sand or aggregate. I still think I need to compact these, so this probably won't work either. I have my own backhoe, so some of the dirt work is low cost and basically just diesel.
5. Engineering foundation walls that would withstand the fill would get really expensive I think and be much thicker than the 8" wall I'm planning.
So, for a homeowner (i.e. residential dollars, not commercial), what do you guys/gals think for a best course of action? There may be something I haven't though of. Thanks a lot. I enjoy this forum--lot's of smart folks on here.
-Matt
(located in central VA)
So, my problem is that I don't think this will work. Compacting the fill inside the garage will bulge the walls. Not compacting the fill will allow my slab to settle. Using something else for fill (sand, aggregate, etc.) is going to cost a fortune. Although honestly, I don't see this arrangement as much different than my house foundation except the open space/soil is reversed. Maybe the difference is I'm not compacting the back fill against my foundation.
My background is mechanical engineering, so I'm not a civil or geotech. But I know enough that I know I need some help. My current plans are to talk to my geotechs/civils and let them see my plans and come up with an affordable solution. Prior to our meeting, I'd like to get some ideas from you folks.
My building site and proximity to future house don't really allow me to compact and build-up a pad site and have balanced fill on both sides of my foundation walls. So, I' really like to keep my current thought process and come up with a solution that meets my needs and budget. My thoughts for "solutions":
1. Shrink the overall size of the building and put in a full basement with steel I-beams supporting a concrete slab. Concrete slab above would need to support vehicles, max load of 5,000 lbs etc. This would be complicated as I want to put a car lift in and that would be difficult on a suspended slab I think. Also, I know steel prices and they're not bad, but the engineering for such an arrangement and the decking to pour the slab over the steel don't have a good feel for cost.
2. Keep the current arrangement and fill with something that doesn't exert horizontal force on the walls. Sand? Flowable fill? No idea of this cost or if this would agree with the building officials (not strict here, but not stupid).
3. Engineered slab with some grade beams that doesn't require compacted fill underneath. No idea of cost. Maybe pour two piers down to virgin soil with independent footings to support each side of my car lift.
4. Compact up a pad with slopes on each side and then cut it down to size to make an "earth plug." Pour my footings on virgin material and fill the gap between the compacted plug and the poured walls with sand or aggregate. I still think I need to compact these, so this probably won't work either. I have my own backhoe, so some of the dirt work is low cost and basically just diesel.
5. Engineering foundation walls that would withstand the fill would get really expensive I think and be much thicker than the 8" wall I'm planning.
So, for a homeowner (i.e. residential dollars, not commercial), what do you guys/gals think for a best course of action? There may be something I haven't though of. Thanks a lot. I enjoy this forum--lot's of smart folks on here.
-Matt
(located in central VA)