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Garage addition / slab question

Blue Seducer

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Feb 7, 2006
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77
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N.O La.
Ok guys, my 24 x 40 garage is full. I am planning to grab the back and stretch it 36' which will make it 24 x 76. The existing slab is post tension. Should I stick with that design for the addition or just go with rebar and wire. The new slab will be tied into the old with dowels. :beer:
 
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Blue Seducer

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 7, 2006
Messages
77
Location
N.O La.
The original design was for a two story structure plus the weight of a 28' offshore powerboat with twin i/o chevy v8's carring 150 gals. of fuel. The boat & trailer package weight is about 10k lbs. I also have two cars in there as well. The new structure will be the same design as original. The house was built with post-tensioned slab as well. :beer:
 
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PAToyota

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Jan 20, 2006
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South Central Pennsylvania, USA
Around here, post-tensioned concrete construction for residential (as well as most small commercial) is not the usual course of action - that is why I asked. I've designed commercial truck garages with standard tied rebar reinforcing.

Even with the loads you describe, unless there are certain soil bearing conditions that predicate it I would say that the post-tensioning is overkill and you could likely get away with normal reinforcing.
 
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Jaguar Fan

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Park City for Ski Season; Las Vegas for Poker Seas
Around here, post-tensioned concrete construction for residential (as well as most small commercial) is not the usual course of action - that is why I asked. I've designed commercial truck garages with standard tied rebar reinforcing.

Even with the loads you describe, unless there are certain soil bearing conditions that predicate it I would say that the post-tensioning is overkill and you could likely get away with normal reinforcing.

I was pretty surprised. In the Las Vegas area, even production tract houses in large developments are all post-tensioned, and you'd think they would go with the cheapest construction method. And, of course, they are all stamped with a warning "post-tensioned concrete. Do not cut, core, or drill". Even being post-tensioned, there are large control joints required based on typical residential loads.
 

PAToyota

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South Central Pennsylvania, USA
Hmmm... Learn something new everyday...

To me, post-tensioned concrete is nearly always used in applications requiring the slab to span over something - either poor soil conditions in slab-on-grade or elevated slabs. Especially for slab-on-grade, a heck of a lot cheaper to just lay the rebar down and pour over it than go to the trouble of coming in with all the hydraulic equipment to tension the cables.
 

Wardster

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Mar 28, 2008
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372
Location
Kingston, Ohio
We post-tension the hell out of precast (and even some cast-in-place) concrete when building bridges. PT on a residential slab is a first for me too, but I can see where it could be beneficial.

-Wardster
 
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