JohnnieMo raised his two car garage two feet, surely your builder can do this ?
http://garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=283853
http://garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=283853
You are all a wealth of knowledge, thank you. I've let the builder know it's up to them to make it right, fix it or provide enough money for me to have it done by qualified contractors. The building contractor told me they are not qualified to raise the building, and they don't do concrete.
I'm so jealous of you who live in communities that allow 12' and greater walls, we can only do 9' from grade. That means 4" max from where it is now.
Cement, foundation and block are a different contractor. It's a 42 x 12 foundation, with CMU above that. With a 13" slope from side to side, the foundation top is below grade on the high side and above on the low. Pad will come nearly to the top of the lower block if it's sloped to the driveway and be 1-2" above grade at the garage door. That seems like the minimum above grade to avoid water.
We decided having a full 6' 8" attic was more important than a lift, especially for the truck. I don't think I'll be raising the roof in 1-2 years, maybe asking about how to redo the truss bottom chord [emoji3], outside height is the maximum we can do already, unless it's attached to the house. Hmmmm…
Putting in a shorter header also means less room for garage door springs. There are rear spring mounts and low headroom tracks adding more costs to deal with the screwup.
For those who think I can't read a blueprint attached is the gable end drawing from the permit package. Feel free to ask if a poster is sure that's what the drawing or contract says, but don't assume a lack of posted proof means anything. I also asked for the upper level to extend a foot over the lower, they built a roof overhang. Looking at the drawings, they built what they drew, my bad. This is a forum not a court. I'm not here to argue if there is legal recourse, trying to see if there are good ideas to solve this, and discover unintended consequences of the available options. So many have brought up things I would not have thought of. Thank-you!
As I'm reading this, I get a slight bit confused.
Is you peak of the building at the highest it can be per code or can you raise the building to gain the appropriate wall/door height ?
If you can raise the entire building and add another course or so of block, I'd make one suggestion if it were mine. If it's not done yet, I can't really tell from the pictures, I'd pour the floor. Once the floor is poured you have a static place to take measurements from for the height of the raise.
If you go ahead with the raise and then pour the floor, I'd hate to see your contractor come back with an "aw ****" and tell you the building still isn't high enough after it is set back down.
@joes169 your right, starting the concrete at 8" down at the OH door sloping to 4-5 at the man door allows a 7' 6" OH door. Some regrading on the driveway would allow water to flow around and down to the sidewalk and ditches. Figure I'll have to add drainage pipe on the high side to protect that foundation and direct water to the gable end.
The 6" block, its 6" square, right? Meaning the inside of the garage has 2" less block? Do you leave the door opening 2" wider as well? A picture would help. I'm sharing that with my concrete guy, good idea for him to adopt.
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Drill down into the existing CMU grouted cells, clean thoroughly (blow, brush, blow, etc, till dust free) and epoxy in hooked bars (a candy cane) or threaded rod.
Lay up the next course, including 2 horizontal bars at the top, anchor bolts and grout it all solid.
Or drill and epoxy the anchor studs AFTER the grout has cured.
Typical epoxy like Simpson SET are good for 1300 lbs minimum in tension and 1300 lbs in shear with the correct spacing and end distances.
https://embed.widencdn.net/pdf/plus/ssttoolbox/c55pts3yzn/C-A-2016_p102-121.pdf?u=noypdr
see page 111
The repair would be far stronger than the rest of the building.![]()
I agree, that's a simple, proven repair "IF" there are grouted cells. If not, they can be poured completely to the footing when the wall is opened up.
That said, laying a course of block under an existing building is far more miserable than 90% of people here will ever understand, unless you get the garage up a foot or two higher than it needs to be. I know I wouldn't be in a hurry to do the job because the carpenters screwed up........
6" wide, 8" highSo the 12" height math still works.
I had not noticed the roof shingle issue when I posted my first response and it only reinforces my first comment of "tear it down and start over." Even if you get the blocks added or dig the floor deeper to fix the door and ceiling height, your contractor needs to fix the roof or you will be calling him in a year or so to replace rotted rafters or lost shingles from a storm.
Shouldn't there also be a 2"h curb around the perimeter of the floor inside? I know that codes around here requires it but your codes may very.
I know this all ***** but best to deal with it now rather than later. Hope it all works out for you.
Please explain how the shingles being nailed from the sloped portion of the roof to the almost vertical portion will be prone to leaking.


Builder agreed to build the staircase, put in flood and walls for the garage and build us a 10x12 Shed to match. They are just about done with Friday bushing the garage.
We poured the slab 76" from the header, allowing a 7' 3" door for my truck, which fits easily.
I will ask the obvious though. Why didn't they just unbolt and haul away the "incorrect" kit and bring you a "correct" kit?The building is prefabricated, what you see is three days work....
Just wondering....Do you have the plans and agreement in writing..a hard copy ?
If so ...Make the idiot builder pull it all down and build it right. Stuff lifting it, that will make it "wrong" for the rest of your life. Make that builder pay for his stupid mistake.
Could you post some photo's of the exterior "flood walls"? Curious as to how that was done?
Sorry, apple autocorrect got me again. It was the attic floor and walls. The plan was to finish that work ourselves.
So did they excavate the entire interior and then re-compact the base to give you the slab thickness that you specified originally?
I'm glad it worked out for you Sir - sounds like you made the best of what could have been a testy situation.
I will ask the obvious though. Why didn't they just unbolt and haul away the "incorrect" kit and bring you a "correct" kit?
Then they would have the standard kit to sell to the next customer.

on raising the building. Make the contractor hire a mover to raise it then add a couple of courses of block. Also make sure the foundation anchors are to code after the lift.
'bout the only other proper fix would be to tear it down & rebuild.
What was the outcome of the shingles install having no starter course and at the transition of the two pitches?
To the original poster. I think you did ok and probably healthier to put it behind you. Building looks nice.
That's easy for you to say, and maybe you're good with halfass. But there are actually folks and I'm one, that expect to get what they pay for. BTW that is not an unreasonable attitude to have.
"Building looks nice" what good is that? I see a lot of nice looking hookers but wouldn't want to marry one.
Greg
Just ignore it?
Forgot to respond to this one. There is a starter course of roll roofing like ice shield, but it does not come down to completely cover the drip edge trim.
That's easy for you to say, and maybe you're good with halfass. But there are actually folks and I'm one, that expect to get what they pay for. BTW that is not an unreasonable attitude to have.
"Building looks nice" what good is that? I see a lot of nice looking hookers but wouldn't want to marry one.
Greg
They have a crew just to verify everything is done right, that crew spent a few days correcting missing studs, headers to short, improperly attached framing and anchors etc.
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That's a great question, after talking with the repair team they don't build many gambrel style garages. I know they crunched the numbers and came to the conclusion the attic floor, stairs and shed were cheaper than my other kind offers to resolve.
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They have a crew just to verify everything is done right, that crew spent a few days correcting missing studs, headers to short, improperly attached framing and anchors etc.
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Will it leak there....maybe, maybe not. I have seen gambrels leak there before, but not due to nails like that. The issue is the contractor did not do an approved flashing detail there, nor did he do one at the edge.
#1 problem with nailing thru the shingle like that, aesthetics. If I was paying a small fortune for a building, I do not care if its a garage or a house or a bird house, I would want it looking as nice as possible, plus done properly.
#2 Issue with nailing thru the shingle like that, the shingles will break down faster there, I have seen it first hand.
The other problem with the edge detail is the potential for the first course to come off during a wind storm (which it will) and potentially peeling more courses off.
To the OP, I would maybe get a second opinion as to this guys work (meaning call someone out to physically look at it, ie another contractor, the building inspector, etc) and see what they say. But if your contractor can not follow simple plans and details, I wonder what else is messed up.
