71corvette
Structural
- Feb 26, 2003
- 105
I'm in the process of designing a new house that will be built in Southern Maine. Winters here can be pretty long and cold. Generally speaking, code requirements in this area specify setting frost walls about 4' below grade.
The house will be set on 8' foundation walls to provide a full basement. An attached garage will be set on 4' frost walls. Attached to the back of the house will be a large covered porch and gazebo as illustrated in the schematic below. The porch will be about 6' wide and the gazebo will be about 20' in diameter. The covered patio and gazebo will be unheated.
At the proposed home site the subsurface soils consist of well drained sandy gravel. The water table is quite deep, at least several feet below the house foundation.
The roof for the porch will be attached to the house, and also to the gazebo, to provide a covered walkway from the home to the gazebo. Normally, I'd simply support the roof for the porch and gazebo on columns founded on sonotubes extending below the frost line. However, a concrete slab on grade is proposed for the floor of the porch and gazebo.
As I think through the details of this configuration I have concerns regarding the durability of the concrete slab which will be adjacent to, and probably in direct contact with, the house and sonotube foundations. I've debated several options but none give me the "warm and fuzzies".
One option is to take advantage of the well drained soil on site (which is minimally frost susceptible) and cast the slab on a 1' thick bed of crushed stone and be done with it. However, there's no place to positively outlet and underdrain which makes me nervous (even though the water table is quite deep).
I've also thought of eliminating the sonotubes and designing this to act as a raft foundation. However, I don't like the idea of differential movement between the porch roof and the house.
At this point I'm open to ideas and suggestions for an effective and cost-conscious solution.
The house will be set on 8' foundation walls to provide a full basement. An attached garage will be set on 4' frost walls. Attached to the back of the house will be a large covered porch and gazebo as illustrated in the schematic below. The porch will be about 6' wide and the gazebo will be about 20' in diameter. The covered patio and gazebo will be unheated.
At the proposed home site the subsurface soils consist of well drained sandy gravel. The water table is quite deep, at least several feet below the house foundation.
The roof for the porch will be attached to the house, and also to the gazebo, to provide a covered walkway from the home to the gazebo. Normally, I'd simply support the roof for the porch and gazebo on columns founded on sonotubes extending below the frost line. However, a concrete slab on grade is proposed for the floor of the porch and gazebo.
As I think through the details of this configuration I have concerns regarding the durability of the concrete slab which will be adjacent to, and probably in direct contact with, the house and sonotube foundations. I've debated several options but none give me the "warm and fuzzies".
One option is to take advantage of the well drained soil on site (which is minimally frost susceptible) and cast the slab on a 1' thick bed of crushed stone and be done with it. However, there's no place to positively outlet and underdrain which makes me nervous (even though the water table is quite deep).
I've also thought of eliminating the sonotubes and designing this to act as a raft foundation. However, I don't like the idea of differential movement between the porch roof and the house.
At this point I'm open to ideas and suggestions for an effective and cost-conscious solution.