wayniac3
Structural
- Jan 13, 2004
- 29
I have a client who wishes to build a crawl space under his home which is currently on a slab on grade. (The house has been flooded twice in the last 3 years.) The house was built in the late 1940's, is a single story structure with a flat roof. The exterior dimensions of the house are 60' x 30'.
He wishes to raise the house approximately 40" (5 courses of c.m.u.). The 16" x 8" c.m.u. piers would be spaced at 6'-0" along a triple 2 x 8 girder and 7'-6" between girders. This corresponds to a 2,250 lb load (10psf Dead and 40 psf Live) at the interior piers. The client would like to place the piers on the existing slab. I am not so sure this is a good idea. How do I get a handle on the allowable load capacity for the slab if I assume it is 4" thick, non-reinforced, and adequately supported by the soils? My initial thought is to cut the slab and pour a footing at each pier, but I would like to hear the input of others for possible solutions/alternatives. Thank you.
He wishes to raise the house approximately 40" (5 courses of c.m.u.). The 16" x 8" c.m.u. piers would be spaced at 6'-0" along a triple 2 x 8 girder and 7'-6" between girders. This corresponds to a 2,250 lb load (10psf Dead and 40 psf Live) at the interior piers. The client would like to place the piers on the existing slab. I am not so sure this is a good idea. How do I get a handle on the allowable load capacity for the slab if I assume it is 4" thick, non-reinforced, and adequately supported by the soils? My initial thought is to cut the slab and pour a footing at each pier, but I would like to hear the input of others for possible solutions/alternatives. Thank you.