berean315
Electrical
- Oct 30, 2001
- 2
Hello,
We are buidling a new home which is pretty much complete except for final inspections. In doing a walk-through we noticed 4 cracks in the concrete on the covered veranda at the back of the house (veranda is about 40 ft by 8 ft). The cracks are running the 8 ft. length. The covered veranda was poured together with the rest of the foundation, and it is a structurally engineered pier and beam slab. At first it looked like someone dribbled some black paint on the concrete, but in further inspection they are small cracks. The cracks are about 3 - 4 ft long and there are 4 such cracks spaced across the veranda. The builder says that it's the nature of concrete to crack some, and the cracks have to reach a certain width before there is a concern. I could hardly feel anything when I rubbed my fingernail across the crack so the cracks aren't wide. If they are just surface cracks I'm not concerned, but how do I tell if they will develop into something more signinficant?
I am thinking about calling the structural engineer who designed and inspected the slab, but I know he will charge to look at it.
Thanks,
We are buidling a new home which is pretty much complete except for final inspections. In doing a walk-through we noticed 4 cracks in the concrete on the covered veranda at the back of the house (veranda is about 40 ft by 8 ft). The cracks are running the 8 ft. length. The covered veranda was poured together with the rest of the foundation, and it is a structurally engineered pier and beam slab. At first it looked like someone dribbled some black paint on the concrete, but in further inspection they are small cracks. The cracks are about 3 - 4 ft long and there are 4 such cracks spaced across the veranda. The builder says that it's the nature of concrete to crack some, and the cracks have to reach a certain width before there is a concern. I could hardly feel anything when I rubbed my fingernail across the crack so the cracks aren't wide. If they are just surface cracks I'm not concerned, but how do I tell if they will develop into something more signinficant?
I am thinking about calling the structural engineer who designed and inspected the slab, but I know he will charge to look at it.
Thanks,