This may be the wrong section.
Anyways, I'm in design phase of my shop/garage.
Initial build will be unheated until funds arrive for HVAC equipment and insulation.
My local government stipulates frost protected footings with stem walls for buildings this size (planning on a 24x40).
My plan is to keep the slab floating within the stem walls.
this means pouring the slab within the stem walls after their completion. It also means separate pours at the man door and over head door thresholds so the slab doesn't sit on those two stem walls.
This also means in addition to the frost protected strip footing at the perimeter, I will need frost protected isolated spread footings with their own individual stem walls located within the interior of the building perimeter to carry point loads of the 1st floor ceiling/loft floor at the stair opening.
I am curious then is if it's a good idea to pour frost protected footings for the mid stair landing and the bottom of the stringer for the first set of steps?
My thinking is if the goal is to allow the slab to do its own thing while a frost protected footing/stem wall is ideally remaining static, if I mount my stairs and stair landing to the slab, this creates a chance for either upward or downward slab movement and thus stair movement in relation to the rest of the structure.
if I was heating from day 1 then I probably would just do conventional thickened slab details for the point loads and no footing for the stairs or stair landing.
thoughts?
Anyways, I'm in design phase of my shop/garage.
Initial build will be unheated until funds arrive for HVAC equipment and insulation.
My local government stipulates frost protected footings with stem walls for buildings this size (planning on a 24x40).
My plan is to keep the slab floating within the stem walls.
this means pouring the slab within the stem walls after their completion. It also means separate pours at the man door and over head door thresholds so the slab doesn't sit on those two stem walls.
This also means in addition to the frost protected strip footing at the perimeter, I will need frost protected isolated spread footings with their own individual stem walls located within the interior of the building perimeter to carry point loads of the 1st floor ceiling/loft floor at the stair opening.
I am curious then is if it's a good idea to pour frost protected footings for the mid stair landing and the bottom of the stringer for the first set of steps?
My thinking is if the goal is to allow the slab to do its own thing while a frost protected footing/stem wall is ideally remaining static, if I mount my stairs and stair landing to the slab, this creates a chance for either upward or downward slab movement and thus stair movement in relation to the rest of the structure.
if I was heating from day 1 then I probably would just do conventional thickened slab details for the point loads and no footing for the stairs or stair landing.
thoughts?

