Carl-
Thank you for that information. I hadn't considered the strength the side beams will be adding to the structure, but it makes great sense.
There are areas on the old slab where settlememt has taken place, where chunks are missing and where pieces of old foundation walls have been left in place. I am assuming that we will be able to grade the area with fill to keep the thickness of the new slab from variating too greatly over its area. Do you think this is important, and do you think it will work (again the goal is to keep the slab from cracking due to inequalities in thickness).
dik-
a brownfield is an urban parcel that was the former site of some industrial facility. Normally these parcels (to be dubbed brownfields) have undergone some demolition, and an environmental assessment that has characterized the property as a major environmental risk. Often they are cleaned by the USEPA or state agency to some degree of safety but are still difficult properties to redevelop - often because they are located in blighted neighborhoods. Philadelphia, like a lot of large cities has many acres, often hundreds of acres, of these properties available for development. Ironically, agriculture may be one of the best uses of these lots.