Planethill
Member
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2015
- Messages
- 6
Hey everyone!
After ten long years at our house with no garage we are in the process of having one built! The 24'x28' monolithic slab is poured and the walls are up...roof trusses come soon.
My question to you all is about the slab. It isn't level. It rained hard the other day and water puddled in the rear 1/3 of the garage. Probably close to an inch of standing water at the back wall while the front 2/3 were bone dry. Now, obviously I have no roof so this is an extreme circumstance. But what about when I drive snow covered cars into the garage? Wouldn't the melt-off run to the back and collect right where my work benches will be, etc?
The job forman is telling me it isn't a big deal and that the slab is within spec/tolerance. I said "Yes, but when you gave me the choice of a slab pitched towards the door, or flat, I went with flat assuming flat = level. Had I known it would be like this I would have gone with pitched!"
To add insult to injury, the cement sub put the bolts in the wrong place for about a 10 foot section of the rear wall. I know mistakes happen, but I am really starting to think the cement sub crew were slackers. I think they overworked the slab with the power trowel in the now low-lying area (it was a very hot day when they poured). They even left some faint boot prints in the slab! They are going cut those bolt off, then drill and anchor new ones...but still. Slack.
SO! Am I making a mountain out of a molehill? Being a "Karen"?
And even so, how would it be fixed? Self leveling cement on top of the slab? That seems like just more problems.
I am going to cover it all with Race Deck anyway, but still. When you are paying someone $40,000, you want things done properly! I'm so bummed.
After ten long years at our house with no garage we are in the process of having one built! The 24'x28' monolithic slab is poured and the walls are up...roof trusses come soon.
My question to you all is about the slab. It isn't level. It rained hard the other day and water puddled in the rear 1/3 of the garage. Probably close to an inch of standing water at the back wall while the front 2/3 were bone dry. Now, obviously I have no roof so this is an extreme circumstance. But what about when I drive snow covered cars into the garage? Wouldn't the melt-off run to the back and collect right where my work benches will be, etc?
The job forman is telling me it isn't a big deal and that the slab is within spec/tolerance. I said "Yes, but when you gave me the choice of a slab pitched towards the door, or flat, I went with flat assuming flat = level. Had I known it would be like this I would have gone with pitched!"
To add insult to injury, the cement sub put the bolts in the wrong place for about a 10 foot section of the rear wall. I know mistakes happen, but I am really starting to think the cement sub crew were slackers. I think they overworked the slab with the power trowel in the now low-lying area (it was a very hot day when they poured). They even left some faint boot prints in the slab! They are going cut those bolt off, then drill and anchor new ones...but still. Slack.
SO! Am I making a mountain out of a molehill? Being a "Karen"?
I am going to cover it all with Race Deck anyway, but still. When you are paying someone $40,000, you want things done properly! I'm so bummed.

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