bigd99
Chemical
- Sep 4, 2005
- 4
I was hoping someone here could point me in the right direction. Our company has built a walkout residential foundation. The site was stripped of native soil and filled with gravel (compacted in lifts). The gravel base was built with two steps with a 4' difference in height. This allows us to pour the foundation / frost walls in one pour. The frost wall extends 16' in the long wall of a 24 x 40' foundation. The problem arises with the footers (which puzzles me because the bldg. dept. inspected the footer forms and gave an ok to pour!) which are essentially two separate footer units on two levels. An 6" gap was left in the frost wall where it meets the footer of the upper wall. The inspector hates this gap in the wall but can't point to anything in the code that prevents a small gap in a frost wall. The foundation was over-engineered for a residential strucure: 24 x 40', 10" wall, 3000psi 3/4" aggregate, horizontal # 5 continuous bars every 2', vertical # 5 bars every 6'. It seems like this would be similar to the gap left for a bolt on bulkhead. Can anyone give me a good (or bad) justification for the inspectors month long investigation?