To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Finally dropped trees and broke ground

Steve22629

Member
Joined
Dec 8, 2016
Messages
7
Location
NC Mountains
I have been planning on adding a detached garage to my house. I live in the mountains and the steep slope of the lot has been an issue. My plan is to build a 24’ x 36’ garage/shop with 9’ exterior walls and faulted truss ceiling with 8:12 pitch. Because of the work required for the foundation I knew I would need a contractor. Getting bids was tough. Picked a contractor and finally the work has begun. I will try and keep this updated with the progress, and any input or advise will be appreciated.
 

Attachments

  • E932F251-F894-4C6D-9AA9-C9B69CF40B13.jpg
    E932F251-F894-4C6D-9AA9-C9B69CF40B13.jpg
    154.4 KB · Views: 270
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

JDMopar

Well-known member
Joined
May 6, 2007
Messages
176
Location
Asheville,NC
Welcome from another NC Hillbilly! I live just a few miles west of Asheville, in Candler. Enjoy your build!
 

OptionalStop

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 23, 2018
Messages
128
Location
Rochester NY
Good luck with the build, I broke ground a few weeks ago on my 24' x 36' build. Been too wet though so it's been slow going.
 

Shadowdog500

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 7, 2009
Messages
9,850
Location
Down the shore
Congratulations on the ground breaking! The one word of advise is to make sure your shop is high and dry, and do everything you can to keep the inside dry with a vapor barrier, proper ventilation, insulation etc.

I live on flat ground so it was easy making my shop floor higher than everything around it. I have a friend who built his shop on a hill and the one wall is deluged with what looks like a waterfall every time it rains hard. Between that, no vapor barrier under his concrete, and no insulation in his metal roof, his shop turns everything he puts in it to rusty junk inside of 6 months.

Since you are on a hill I’m sure you have planned so that don’t happen to your shop. Chris
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

MFolks

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 3, 2013
Messages
1,045
Location
Springfield Mo.
Sit,with a big pad of paper,listing all you will and might need,when trenching, install extra PVC pipe, or electrical conduit for burial, for future expansions. The company www.bigassfans.com makes some great air circulators.
 

theoldwizard1

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 22, 2011
Messages
43,155
Location
SE MI
If the garage is downhill from any ground, plan for water flow. Do it NOW before the foundation is in place !
 
OP
S

Steve22629

Member
Joined
Dec 8, 2016
Messages
7
Location
NC Mountains
Things have begun to move along now, once foundation and slab is in the structure part shouldn’t take too long. I will do my best to keep updated.
 

Attachments

  • 53FEA20C-D9E9-4C08-BF23-F008EC94EEA2.jpg
    53FEA20C-D9E9-4C08-BF23-F008EC94EEA2.jpg
    154.4 KB · Views: 103
  • 8488BC0B-1F8E-4C92-B070-D7A77DC304C0.jpg
    8488BC0B-1F8E-4C92-B070-D7A77DC304C0.jpg
    148 KB · Views: 107
  • 8BE9D41E-C94F-468B-909F-877F155E18C7.jpg
    8BE9D41E-C94F-468B-909F-877F155E18C7.jpg
    147.3 KB · Views: 102
  • 117B4903-4076-4284-B0CB-4CF32D85A059.jpg
    117B4903-4076-4284-B0CB-4CF32D85A059.jpg
    153 KB · Views: 103
  • D7B93E21-D0D0-4A05-9E85-95F62CDE1180.jpg
    D7B93E21-D0D0-4A05-9E85-95F62CDE1180.jpg
    147.3 KB · Views: 81

ConCretin

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 20, 2011
Messages
3,378
Location
Central Maine
I assume your last pic is the viewpoint looking at the future garage doors? That is quite a slope and I've been having trouble figuring out the orientation.

As I'm sure you are aware, that is a lot of fill and compaction will be crucial. Even if done perfectly, you will get some amount of settlement and compaction is rarely perfect. I'd suggest isolating the slab from the perimeter walls with an expansion material and using steel reinforcement to hold everything together if you happen to get a crack from differential settlement. There is sometimes a temptation to tie in the slab to help restrain the walls but this is just asking for slab cracking.

While we are on the subject of the walls; I'm more of a concrete wall guy that looks like a lot of fill for a CMU wall....
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom