SteveInVt
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 29, 2006
- 2
Hi folks,
I'm somewhat out of my element and need help. I'm a small contractor doing residential work here in Vermont. Currently working on removal and replacement of a failing foundation on an addition. Roof area of the addition is 400sq ft. Soil is sand and it drains very nicely. The main house has a full basement and it is always dry. The addition had some old interior floor drains leading to a sump which appears to have been abandoned. Since we're opening the outside anyway, I was planning to run perimeter drains to a dry well and use a gravity approach instead of a sump pump. The dry well is to be sited at the far end of the lot and away from any structures of abutters.
I was just about to open the ground and have just been asked by the local building official to submit a plan for the drainage and dry well. I don't believe he's expecting anything formally engineered, given the small size of the project. I understand the construction part of the drainage system. So, using some conservative assumptions on rainfall (such as 1.25" per 2hr storm) and soil absorption rates, I'm looking for some general calculations that will give me the cubic feet requirements of the well.
Many thanks in advance.
-Steve
I'm somewhat out of my element and need help. I'm a small contractor doing residential work here in Vermont. Currently working on removal and replacement of a failing foundation on an addition. Roof area of the addition is 400sq ft. Soil is sand and it drains very nicely. The main house has a full basement and it is always dry. The addition had some old interior floor drains leading to a sump which appears to have been abandoned. Since we're opening the outside anyway, I was planning to run perimeter drains to a dry well and use a gravity approach instead of a sump pump. The dry well is to be sited at the far end of the lot and away from any structures of abutters.
I was just about to open the ground and have just been asked by the local building official to submit a plan for the drainage and dry well. I don't believe he's expecting anything formally engineered, given the small size of the project. I understand the construction part of the drainage system. So, using some conservative assumptions on rainfall (such as 1.25" per 2hr storm) and soil absorption rates, I'm looking for some general calculations that will give me the cubic feet requirements of the well.
Many thanks in advance.
-Steve