phamENG
Structural
- Feb 6, 2015
- 7,267
The title is a little misleading. This is a house design I'll have coming up. Located in the coastal Mid-Atlantic. It's in a flood zone and requires the house to be elevated several feet above grade. As a result, the design calls for it going all the way up to fit a garage underneath with a "crawl space" throughout the rest of it...though there's no need to crawl with 8' of head room.
Everyone loves to hate a crawl space these days, but given the height and proper detailing, it seems like it should be a non-issue. Clean, poorly graded sand to an elevation higher than the exterior to prevent ponding, vapor barrier, and adequate ventilation should be fine. Anyone have any doubts?
There's also a desire to use trusses on the first floor. If this were 2 or 3 feet above grade I'd say no, but again...8' above grade...I'm not really concerned.
What does everyone think? Am I being too cavalier? Should I be more concerned about this? Peak equilibrium moisture content in the area is 14.9% in August. So even if it's slightly higher under this house, I have a pretty sizeable margin to get to 19% and start worrying about wet service.
Thanks for the sanity check.
Everyone loves to hate a crawl space these days, but given the height and proper detailing, it seems like it should be a non-issue. Clean, poorly graded sand to an elevation higher than the exterior to prevent ponding, vapor barrier, and adequate ventilation should be fine. Anyone have any doubts?
There's also a desire to use trusses on the first floor. If this were 2 or 3 feet above grade I'd say no, but again...8' above grade...I'm not really concerned.
What does everyone think? Am I being too cavalier? Should I be more concerned about this? Peak equilibrium moisture content in the area is 14.9% in August. So even if it's slightly higher under this house, I have a pretty sizeable margin to get to 19% and start worrying about wet service.
Thanks for the sanity check.