Contraflexure74
Structural
- Jan 29, 2016
- 147
Hi All,
I've been asked to take a look at an alternative to traditional underpinning to an old semi detached house to increase the floor to ceiling height in an existing cellar.
Currently the floor to ceiling is 1.8m high and the client is looking for 2.3m. Typical underpinning will be slow and expensive and the attached sketch shows what is being proposed as a possible cheaper solution.
The building is 2 storey with a cellar under ground floor. The building is circa 100 years old and constructed in rubble stone with no foundations. The building is attached to another similar house on one side, is retaining a trafficked street to the front, has a yard to the rear (so yard will drop also) and a sloping access drive on the other side. All walls are 600mm thick with the exception of the front wall which is 1m due to retaining the street.
So basically what is being proposed is to construct a RC concrete ledge inside the load spread zone of the existing walls, reducing the internal floor space of the cellar.
I have the following concerns:
Will this actually work?
If ground water is present buoyancy could be an issue for the new dropped slab, but I guess a floor drain can be installed to relieve any water build up at slab level.
Any thoughts would be welcome, has anyone done something like this before?
regards,
John.
I've been asked to take a look at an alternative to traditional underpinning to an old semi detached house to increase the floor to ceiling height in an existing cellar.
Currently the floor to ceiling is 1.8m high and the client is looking for 2.3m. Typical underpinning will be slow and expensive and the attached sketch shows what is being proposed as a possible cheaper solution.
The building is 2 storey with a cellar under ground floor. The building is circa 100 years old and constructed in rubble stone with no foundations. The building is attached to another similar house on one side, is retaining a trafficked street to the front, has a yard to the rear (so yard will drop also) and a sloping access drive on the other side. All walls are 600mm thick with the exception of the front wall which is 1m due to retaining the street.
So basically what is being proposed is to construct a RC concrete ledge inside the load spread zone of the existing walls, reducing the internal floor space of the cellar.
I have the following concerns:
Will this actually work?
If ground water is present buoyancy could be an issue for the new dropped slab, but I guess a floor drain can be installed to relieve any water build up at slab level.
Any thoughts would be welcome, has anyone done something like this before?
regards,
John.