Sorry for the ramble....
I'm having a house built by a Taylor-Morrison, a major builder here in Arizona (can't see any reason why I'm not allowed to mention their name). It's not custom, just one of 5 floor plans in a planned subdivision.
There is a gap under the slab at the front that is the porch. I can freely move a stick around under it but I couldn't tell you how far back the gap extends
The superintendent seemed very casual when I showed him, as if it's common, and said they will fill it in with dirt when they grade the yard.
Should this be enough? Surely packing in dirt can't really add support.
If it's a post-tension floating slab is the tension rods enough to hold it together?
Could this corner just snap off under its own weight?
I don't want to sound naive, but if Taylor-Morrison builds a thousand homes a year in Phoenix wouldn't they know what they doing and what should be a concern or not?
One foundation guy I spoke to said..
"It needs to be pressure grouted (mud jacked). Packing dirt in there after the fact will not work as nobody knows how big the void really is and you cannot really pack dirt sideways for anything more than a few inches. Yes you should demand that this be done properly. I suggest you contact the structural engineer for the project and get his recommendations."
I'm guessing the I could tell the superintendent that I want to talk to their structural engineer? - but then I'd be trusting him too.
They've got a $6,000 deposit, and I'm not sure how much I can demand they do. I can't afford to walk away from my deposit and prices have gone up a lot recently so I don't want to start a new build. But I can't afford to have the front of my house snap off either.
Am I being too ****, or can I trust that their solution is sound?
I'm having a house built by a Taylor-Morrison, a major builder here in Arizona (can't see any reason why I'm not allowed to mention their name). It's not custom, just one of 5 floor plans in a planned subdivision.
There is a gap under the slab at the front that is the porch. I can freely move a stick around under it but I couldn't tell you how far back the gap extends
The superintendent seemed very casual when I showed him, as if it's common, and said they will fill it in with dirt when they grade the yard.
Should this be enough? Surely packing in dirt can't really add support.
If it's a post-tension floating slab is the tension rods enough to hold it together?
Could this corner just snap off under its own weight?
I don't want to sound naive, but if Taylor-Morrison builds a thousand homes a year in Phoenix wouldn't they know what they doing and what should be a concern or not?
One foundation guy I spoke to said..
"It needs to be pressure grouted (mud jacked). Packing dirt in there after the fact will not work as nobody knows how big the void really is and you cannot really pack dirt sideways for anything more than a few inches. Yes you should demand that this be done properly. I suggest you contact the structural engineer for the project and get his recommendations."
I'm guessing the I could tell the superintendent that I want to talk to their structural engineer? - but then I'd be trusting him too.
They've got a $6,000 deposit, and I'm not sure how much I can demand they do. I can't afford to walk away from my deposit and prices have gone up a lot recently so I don't want to start a new build. But I can't afford to have the front of my house snap off either.
Am I being too ****, or can I trust that their solution is sound?
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