|
Posted by John Grabowski on April 10, 2008, 4:48 pm
>
> In the dept. of poured-concrete construction, house-building 101 looks
> something like:
>
> 1.) Dig large rectangular hole in ground.
> 2.) Set concrete forms.
> 3.) Pour footings.
> 4.) Lay drain pipes, etc
> 5.) Pour foundation walls.
> 6.) Pour Basement Floor.
>
> The BF conforms to the shape of the ground at the time poured.
>
> 20-60 years later, the ground under the BF might have shifted, and
> not necessarily uniformly. So the owner, given water problems in the
> basement, considers "waterproofing" the bsmt. with French Drain system
> and sump pump(s).
>
> If FD system is initiated, what guarantees that the BF will not
> shift/tilt when they knock off the concrete around the perimeter
> of the BF, such that what's left of the BF is no longer sitting
> on the footings? Keep in mind that there's no way to know exactly
> how the footings were constructed before beginning the work.
>
> Inquiring minds floggin' well ask potentially dumb questions sometimes.
> :-)
On the French Drains that I have seen installed inside of the basement there
is no destruction of the footings or foundation. Small holes are drilled
into the bottom of the first course of block and the water weeps through
those into the trench.
Please don't abbreviate in the future. I thought BF was your "Boy Friend".
|