mehr27
Structural
- Dec 18, 2001
- 27
I am investigating a house in Central Texas built in 1959 with a slab on expansive clays. Over time the house settled down towards one corner as much as 7 inches. The owner installed hydraulically driven steel piers (Perma Jack system) around the perimeter to stabilize the foundation roughly twenty years ago and did not raise the slab at all (most likely did not want to do the interior piers). Recent investigation has shown no further movement. The new owner is interested in raising the slab to make the house level and this will mean interior piers.
Does anyone have experience with the Perma Jack system or driven steel piers? I'm curious if the existing 20-year-old system can still be utilized to raise the slab and if a differential of 7 inches from one corner to the other is a concern, even with installing interior piers at 7 to 8 foot spacing. Or should they scrap the existing system and go with an entirely new plan?
Thanks for your time.
Does anyone have experience with the Perma Jack system or driven steel piers? I'm curious if the existing 20-year-old system can still be utilized to raise the slab and if a differential of 7 inches from one corner to the other is a concern, even with installing interior piers at 7 to 8 foot spacing. Or should they scrap the existing system and go with an entirely new plan?
Thanks for your time.