Due to the large expense and permanent changes after this is done; I want to double check something before moving forward. As part of our fire rebuild, we ran into a dilemma. We have a four car garage but half was part of an addition. We wanted to replace one slab which was cracked and heaved (original portion of the garage) since the house was emptied out due to the fire. The County said we could not replace it since there is no 6" gas curb into the home. Well, I figured I can kill two birds with one stone and replace both slabs while lowering them 12" which would give me room to stack cars on a lift and then comply with the newer gab curb code.
Fast forward...Both slabs are currently removed and the garages have been dug out to the necessary depth. One thing I did not think in my head, not anticipate, was that there would be a foundation wall under the front of the slabs where the overhead garage doors are. In Chicagoland area, I imagine this wall was four feet down. I came home yesterday and the concrete contractor notched out the sides with a concrete saw and then busted up roughly 12" of that wall so the new slabs will now be 12" lower and fit OVER the old foundation wall. Any structure concerns from this? Heaving concerns? Keep in mind the yard slopes away from the front of the garage.
This will be a typical floating slab pour (4" concrete over 4" gravel, #10 welded wire mesh and 6 mil vapor barrier). We may toss PEX tubing in there in case we heat it later. I have a picture which I can try to upload if that helps.
Fast forward...Both slabs are currently removed and the garages have been dug out to the necessary depth. One thing I did not think in my head, not anticipate, was that there would be a foundation wall under the front of the slabs where the overhead garage doors are. In Chicagoland area, I imagine this wall was four feet down. I came home yesterday and the concrete contractor notched out the sides with a concrete saw and then busted up roughly 12" of that wall so the new slabs will now be 12" lower and fit OVER the old foundation wall. Any structure concerns from this? Heaving concerns? Keep in mind the yard slopes away from the front of the garage.
This will be a typical floating slab pour (4" concrete over 4" gravel, #10 welded wire mesh and 6 mil vapor barrier). We may toss PEX tubing in there in case we heat it later. I have a picture which I can try to upload if that helps.

