StructuralEskimo
Structural
- Mar 16, 2011
- 2
Hi Guys,
Newly poured residential foundation wall (9ft high) was poured out of plumb between 1" and 3" over about 25ft (leaning into the house) due to poor workmanship. House is about to be framed, joists rest on wall...so in this case they would overhang/cantilever. I think I can get the numbers to work as the 4" portion is immediately at a corner so there some additional strength...however the owner may still want replaced for interior fit up and aesthetics.
Two questions:
1. If replacing the section of wall (approximately 20ft of wall), I was thinking of saw cutting vertically, installing water stop and dowels into adjacent wall and re-pouring. Any other considerations?
2. If filling in the void on the exterior, what would actually stick and survive winter cycles. I was considering an epoxy product to build out to plumb. Mainly for aesthetics.
Newly poured residential foundation wall (9ft high) was poured out of plumb between 1" and 3" over about 25ft (leaning into the house) due to poor workmanship. House is about to be framed, joists rest on wall...so in this case they would overhang/cantilever. I think I can get the numbers to work as the 4" portion is immediately at a corner so there some additional strength...however the owner may still want replaced for interior fit up and aesthetics.
Two questions:
1. If replacing the section of wall (approximately 20ft of wall), I was thinking of saw cutting vertically, installing water stop and dowels into adjacent wall and re-pouring. Any other considerations?
2. If filling in the void on the exterior, what would actually stick and survive winter cycles. I was considering an epoxy product to build out to plumb. Mainly for aesthetics.