LTBGeek:
Can you make some meaningful and helpful distinction btwn. flooring and foundations, by the materials or nature of materials involved. Flooring is usually some kind of walking/moving surface finish, wood flooring, vinyl, cork, rubber tiles, marble, any stone tile, terrazzo, brick and the like, all have some decorative and finished, aesthetic nature; and are usually supported by some structure below them to actually carry the load over soft or low spots. They act o.k. in bearing or compression, within some limits, but not so well in tension or bending (bridging). A slab on grade is the structure to carry the loads from above to the foundation soils below, even though it may have some special architectural (attractive, special ?) finish. It distributes the loads, even heavy concentrated loads, to the soils and bridges soft spots in the soil; while most flooring needs some form of structural support because it can’t tolerate much in the way of a concentrated loading while spanning any distance.
“Foundation… That part of a building which is in contact with the soil. The foundation transfers the weight of the building or structure to the soil and is almost always of concrete. Types of foundations include Footings, Floating Foundations, Belled Piers, and Piles.” From “Illustrated Encyclopedic Dictionary of Building and Construction Terms, by Hugh Brooks, Pub. by Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1981 printing. That seems like a pretty reasonable definition, although not ALL inclusive as to a listing of foundation types, nor is it limiting or excluding any possibilities. That’s where SRE’s suggestions to you come into play. Maybe take a look at the ‘foundation’ definitions in any of our textbooks on the subject. That might give you some quotations and author’s names to hang your hat on. Furthermore, foundations or flooring by any definition must be designed for their loadings and conditions of use. One or the other, as the case may be, they are not designed for an abusive usage or loading way beyond what would normally be assumed in common designs and specs. There are a number of ways to harden, strengthen, thicken or improve a floor, structural component or foundation, but the abusive loading or conditions must be known beforehand for these added conditions to be considered and potentially accounted for in the design.