soiset
Civil/Environmental
- Apr 16, 2002
- 49
I'm working on an innovative basement design for existing homes, with an emphasis on speed and economy of construction, in addition to long-term performance. The basement floor will bear on competent grey limestone, and will support interior columns, but will not support the perimeter walls. Support for the outer building walls will be outside of the basement and vapor barrier.
I'm trying to design a wood-framed floor over the competent rock, that will provide a strong, level floor, with solid anchoring for the columns and interior load-bearing walls. The system must also provide drainage and a vapor barrier.
The traditional approach would be to put down 3" of drain rock, a vapor barrier on top of that, then a 4" concrete slab over that. At the columns, concrete pedestals would be poured directly on the rock.
With rock below, the load-distributing effect of a rc slab is redundant, so I'm looking for a way to eliminate it entirely, with a system that is cheaper and faster, while still being highly reliable.
Ideas?
I'm trying to design a wood-framed floor over the competent rock, that will provide a strong, level floor, with solid anchoring for the columns and interior load-bearing walls. The system must also provide drainage and a vapor barrier.
The traditional approach would be to put down 3" of drain rock, a vapor barrier on top of that, then a 4" concrete slab over that. At the columns, concrete pedestals would be poured directly on the rock.
With rock below, the load-distributing effect of a rc slab is redundant, so I'm looking for a way to eliminate it entirely, with a system that is cheaper and faster, while still being highly reliable.
Ideas?