PE_JRM
Civil/Environmental
- Mar 20, 2024
- 45
I could use some help from people who design concrete structures every day. I am retired structural engineer and have had an interesting career that was widely varied in nature (marine, oil & gas, research, aerospace, nuclear) but I never did much concrete design work. The current problem I am trying to solve is how to deal with a concrete slab of unknown thickness and unknown reinforcement in an old empty building. I bought a remote cabin (no codes apply) and took on the job of renovating it. It's over 60 years old and built like a rectangular shed (lightweight metal roof, no insulation, no big loads). The slab has lasted all these years with zero cracking. It looks like the slab is just 4" thick at the edges (no thickened, reinforced edge detail). The slab was done by amateurs and the concrete does not appear to be well consolidated or level or flat. The top of the slab is also a few inches below grade (gotta fix that).
My first order of business will be to get an idea of the contour of the slab using a water level and then maybe taking a few cores or drilling some holes to determine the thickness.
Anyhow, my current plan involves "sort of" abandoning the slab and building a wood framed floor above it. A single course of CMUs or a poured curb around the perimeter would get the framing above grade. This plan will result in much larger edge loads (floor + roof) than the slab currently experiences. This will also result in a distributed load down the center of the building (load path for the floor framing). The slab essentially would become the floor in a crawl space. In this scenario it doesn't matter much if the slab cracks. It just needs to transfer the loads to the soil evenly.
Another idea is to pour a new reinforced slab on top of the old one. This could be accomplished fairly easily but it doesn't really solve the improperly done existing slab completely since the edges are still under reinforced (probably). A 4" overlay will take about 8 cubic yards (a truck load)and the site is a little inaccessible so this idea would be difficult to implement. However, its worth considering as it may be the best option.
For what its worth I'm in the deep South and there is no frostline although its generally considered to be 12" or so below the surface.
Any ideas you might have will be appreciated. My budget is small so whatever I do needs to address the problems and be structurally sound but it doesn't have to be perfect.
My first order of business will be to get an idea of the contour of the slab using a water level and then maybe taking a few cores or drilling some holes to determine the thickness.
Anyhow, my current plan involves "sort of" abandoning the slab and building a wood framed floor above it. A single course of CMUs or a poured curb around the perimeter would get the framing above grade. This plan will result in much larger edge loads (floor + roof) than the slab currently experiences. This will also result in a distributed load down the center of the building (load path for the floor framing). The slab essentially would become the floor in a crawl space. In this scenario it doesn't matter much if the slab cracks. It just needs to transfer the loads to the soil evenly.
Another idea is to pour a new reinforced slab on top of the old one. This could be accomplished fairly easily but it doesn't really solve the improperly done existing slab completely since the edges are still under reinforced (probably). A 4" overlay will take about 8 cubic yards (a truck load)and the site is a little inaccessible so this idea would be difficult to implement. However, its worth considering as it may be the best option.
For what its worth I'm in the deep South and there is no frostline although its generally considered to be 12" or so below the surface.
Any ideas you might have will be appreciated. My budget is small so whatever I do needs to address the problems and be structurally sound but it doesn't have to be perfect.