bb7100
Electrical
- May 13, 2015
- 3
I am trying to understand the differences between a traditional footer, wall and slab pour vs the non-traditional thickened edge slab and wall. This is for a personal garage in my back yard. The garage is 24x24 and it is sunk into the ground 3 feet in most places except at the garage door.
(I put in rebar and drainage in the drawing just to show that it would exist, not to show the proper placement or type).
The benefits of the traditional method that I am aware of are as follows:
[ul]
[li]It makes it possible to install additional thermal barriers between the floor and the outside pours.[/li]
[li]It is possible to replace the floor independently (if it cracks etc).[/li]
[/ul]
The benefits of the non-traditional method that I am aware of are as follows:
[ul]
[li]Could complete in two pours instead of one.[/li]
[/ul]
I don't fully understand the load bearing implications of the 4' wall (with ~3' of gavel/earth back filled). It doesn't make much sense to me that the traditional would be much stronger than the non-traditional.
Can you help me understand why I shouldn't (or should) do the proposed wall on slab?
(I put in rebar and drainage in the drawing just to show that it would exist, not to show the proper placement or type).
The benefits of the traditional method that I am aware of are as follows:
[ul]
[li]It makes it possible to install additional thermal barriers between the floor and the outside pours.[/li]
[li]It is possible to replace the floor independently (if it cracks etc).[/li]
[/ul]
The benefits of the non-traditional method that I am aware of are as follows:
[ul]
[li]Could complete in two pours instead of one.[/li]
[/ul]
I don't fully understand the load bearing implications of the 4' wall (with ~3' of gavel/earth back filled). It doesn't make much sense to me that the traditional would be much stronger than the non-traditional.
Can you help me understand why I shouldn't (or should) do the proposed wall on slab?