I was called to a residence to look at reasons for water pouring into the basement. Got that solved, but in that process, we discovered that the foundation was like nothing I'd seen before. The original home was built in the 1960s and the room I was looking at was added somewhere in the 70s, we think. From the outside in, there's a CMU wall that goes about 5' below grade, then stops on a small concrete footing; then about 1' wide of dirt topped with gravel, just to the top of the small footing; then there's an interior CMU wall about 3' tall that makes the total room height about 8'. This condition exists on all three exterior sides of the addition - both on the high retaining side and the low walkout basement side. The exterior and interior walls were definitely built by different masons; the exterior is a bit haphazardly mortared with no joint tooling and the interior is gorgeous. The floor level of the addition matches the level in the original.
See attached sketch.
So why on earth was this built like this? Has anyone seen this before?
cheers!
See attached sketch.
So why on earth was this built like this? Has anyone seen this before?
cheers!