Rusty Wrench
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2021
- Messages
- 190
Hi,
I had a two level deck where one level was attached to the house and the other half was free standing. The free standing portion was undermined by chipmunks so that it sunk about 5 inches closest to the house. All of it was built around 1988 and was pretty ratty so I tore it out.
Now I'm making an attempt at a 12 x 24 ft. deck design. I've read a bunch and to start I've calculated footing size based on a ledger at the house, 5 piers, and 1500 lbs/sf soil bearing capacity.
Using a designer program at decks.com calculates a square footing of 22 x 22 inches (484") per pier. The programs notes the calc is based on 1500 lbs/sf capacity. I calulate a pier size of 1.2 sq ft (173") by a tributary of 36 sf x 50 lbs load / 1500 lbs/sf soil capacity. About a third of what the program calculated!
Am I missing something in the calculation? Thanks.


I had a two level deck where one level was attached to the house and the other half was free standing. The free standing portion was undermined by chipmunks so that it sunk about 5 inches closest to the house. All of it was built around 1988 and was pretty ratty so I tore it out.
Now I'm making an attempt at a 12 x 24 ft. deck design. I've read a bunch and to start I've calculated footing size based on a ledger at the house, 5 piers, and 1500 lbs/sf soil bearing capacity.
Using a designer program at decks.com calculates a square footing of 22 x 22 inches (484") per pier. The programs notes the calc is based on 1500 lbs/sf capacity. I calulate a pier size of 1.2 sq ft (173") by a tributary of 36 sf x 50 lbs load / 1500 lbs/sf soil capacity. About a third of what the program calculated!
Am I missing something in the calculation? Thanks.




