taxrelief
Electrical
- Dec 14, 2004
- 5
I have come across a strange configuration in my first floor joist layout.
1) The joists on each side of the basement stairwell are not doubled. The stairwell parellels the floor joists.
2) Four joists parallel to the stairwell on one side are connected midway to a perpendicular doubled header.
3) The doubled header goes between the (not doubled) joist on the basement stairwell and another not-doubled joist.
4) The full length joists for this part of the structure extend from a center beam, where they are notched and resting on a 2x2 ledger board, to a concrete block outside wall.
5) The spliced joists are also attached to the center beam, are notched and rest on the same 2x2 ledger board. They are attached to the midway header the same way--on both sides--then extend to the same concrete block outside wall.
6) There is a spliced joist next to the single stairwell joist with a poorly constructed supporting (?) wall underneath it, and a wall above it.
7) There is a wall above the midway header, and a wall above the other not-doubled joist, parellel to the stair well.
8) Basement floor is concrete slab.
My question: Is this structurally sound (I doubt it), and what is the best way to resolve the situation without putting a second full length supporting wall.
Thank you.
1) The joists on each side of the basement stairwell are not doubled. The stairwell parellels the floor joists.
2) Four joists parallel to the stairwell on one side are connected midway to a perpendicular doubled header.
3) The doubled header goes between the (not doubled) joist on the basement stairwell and another not-doubled joist.
4) The full length joists for this part of the structure extend from a center beam, where they are notched and resting on a 2x2 ledger board, to a concrete block outside wall.
5) The spliced joists are also attached to the center beam, are notched and rest on the same 2x2 ledger board. They are attached to the midway header the same way--on both sides--then extend to the same concrete block outside wall.
6) There is a spliced joist next to the single stairwell joist with a poorly constructed supporting (?) wall underneath it, and a wall above it.
7) There is a wall above the midway header, and a wall above the other not-doubled joist, parellel to the stair well.
8) Basement floor is concrete slab.
My question: Is this structurally sound (I doubt it), and what is the best way to resolve the situation without putting a second full length supporting wall.
Thank you.