MushCreek
Well-known member
I'm planning to build an open-sided carport for parking. I plan to build it out of heavy timbers, and a tin roof to match the house. What I'm wondering about is how much trouble to go to anchoring it to the ground. Just about everyone around here (upstate SC) has a cheap metal carport. Some are on concrete slabs; some aren't. What I don't know is how they're anchored from blowing away. My parking space won't have a slab, so I need footings of some kind.
I'm from FL, where code requires as much up-lift resistance as they do downward force. Where I am now, high winds are rare, but not non-existent. I figure an open carport is a pretty good sail if the wind kicks up, and the idea is to protect the car, not damage it. I'm just wondering how big/deep to make the footings. They make forms called Bigfoot, that are bigger at the bottom so that the footing itself won't pull out of the ground. It would be a lot of digging, though, and our clay-based soil is tough digging. Thoughts?
I'm from FL, where code requires as much up-lift resistance as they do downward force. Where I am now, high winds are rare, but not non-existent. I figure an open carport is a pretty good sail if the wind kicks up, and the idea is to protect the car, not damage it. I'm just wondering how big/deep to make the footings. They make forms called Bigfoot, that are bigger at the bottom so that the footing itself won't pull out of the ground. It would be a lot of digging, though, and our clay-based soil is tough digging. Thoughts?

