I recently had the concrete replaced in my garage. The cinder blocks shifted with the breaking up of the old concrete. The pic is the backside of the garage wall. Advice? Suggestions? Isn’t this something that the concrete company should pay for?
I can't tell extent but exterior photo shows 3 or 4 blocks pushed out. Remove them and replace with 6" or 4" blocks, and parge foundation might look and perform fine. Still too many unknowns to be sure.Well, that looks pretty unrepairable.
It’s the whole backside of that wall and left of door as well. The whole back wall.Trying to understand if just the blocks "slid" out or if wall is also bowed or somehow did not move with blocks.
Just that one section or all the way around?
Looks like the new floor has already been poured. Did you point it out to the contractor before they poured it.Make them aware. Probably shoving the blocks back into place prior to pouring the concrete would be fine. If they were not cored with concrete, and there are no anchors in them you may be able to re mortar them.
I didn’t catch that last picture.Looks like the new floor has already been poured. Did you point it out to the contractor before they poured it.
Is this an attached or freestanding garage?
That wall is supporting the whole roof load…I doubt the contractor will be of much use here. Generally I would say this is a case where you stabilize it where it is rather than try to move it back to where it was. There isn't much load on that wall unless you live in a snow area but your location is not specified.
Did the wall move with the blocks?
yes, it is but you could make it look better, i would break out the block face, add a 2x10 and filled with concrete, as far as concrete company paying, not going happen, they will claim you was gc and they was just laborWell, that looks pretty unrepairable.
Time for the structural P.E. to render a solution. I am not one.I definitely would have waited and not let them pour that new floor until the block situation was corrected. Like another guy posted I'd jack the garage and fix the wall properly then drop it
No, it is supporting half of the roof (or even less because it looks like a hip roof), but even if it were the entire roof that isn’t very much, absent snow load. That structure can be stabilized without bringing in the Corps of Engineers.That wall is supporting the whole roof load…
We didn’t know it was like that until AFTER we had the garage epoxyed. We had the back of garage loaded with cabinets etc, covered with tarps while the garage was being finished. So concrete was completed as well as the epoxy. You couldn’t tell from the inside of garage that this even happened.Looks like the new floor has already been poured. Did you point it out to the contractor before they poured it.
Is this an attached or freestanding garage?
Good question, looks like I might have to make a call to them as well.what does your homeowners insurance cover in this situation?
We live in michigan…lots of snow! Ugh.That wall is supporting the whole roof load…
Ten dollars to a donut says the wall was pushed during the removal of the old floor.Who did that?I recently had the concrete replaced in my garage. The cinder blocks shifted with the breaking up of the old concrete. The pic is the backside of the garage wall. Advice? Suggestions? Isn’t this something that the concrete company should pay for?
Well, that looks pretty unrepairable.
If anyone’s insurance is paying it’s the contractors.Good question, looks like I might have to make a call to them as well.
Good point. And as previously mentioned whomever played those blocks certainly didn't do any favors. Likely been loose forever.I looked at the picture & I don't see any stray mortar or chips of blocks. I would have expected to see some debris from the blocks shifting. are you sure it wasn't like that already?
It is more likely that the block was pushed out during demo of the old concrete when the contractor was scooping out debris with a loader. But I haven't seen where the OP said when he noticed the damage. Not enough info.Isn't it that the new floor pour pushed-out an inadequately-anchored at-grade block wall which provided the sill plate for the frame walls above it?
