Modern Jess
Well-known member
Those last two posts were excellent! Thanks for the detail, and I'd like to cast my vote for continuing to post. I'm very eager to follow along.
Really glad you liked them and found them useful !Those last two posts were excellent! Thanks for the detail, and I'd like to cast my vote for continuing to post. I'm very eager to follow along.
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Labor
Myself + 1 helper for 3 months at $20/hour...
I can't help but notice that I'm no where near $200 or $300,000.
I can't help but notice you're nowhere near reality.
You cleverly edited it out.
"Quote:
Originally Posted by someguy11 View Post
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Labor
Myself + 1 helper for 3 months at $20/hour...
I can't help but notice that I'm no where near $200 or $300,000."
You + 1 helper for 3 months? Just laffin'.
So here's a little twist. If you can build an underground insulated structure for $66 a square foot, imagine what cost you could do on a garage rebuild. I bet you could do it a lot cheaper than $50 per ft. Not having the garage in the way might bring down the cost of your basement a bit too.
We are planning 2 windows in window wells where the basement meets the house. I haven't shared all the details of the design.I could see the bunker as a pass through and storage. But as living space? I am thinking at least a window and maybe a door unless you like caves.
My structural engineer says the walls will be standard 8" reinforced concrete walls.I wonder if ICF walls will be the best choice for supporting the concrete roof beams?
You could get pre stressed panels that could be craned into position once the blocks have cured and spread the load.
It would speed up the construction as you could start building on top sooner. Time is money. There are wall panels that are preinsulated and go in fully cured in a day.
Very interesting build. One thing you mentioned was being unsure of heating and cooling the underground space maybe think about putting pex in the floor for future heating. Also, I did a project similar but much smaller 2 years ago I rebuilt my back porch and put a room under it I sealed the deck by laying rubber roofing material on the deck and repouring another layer of concrete over that no leaks yet(was suggested by a friend who owns a large concrete construction company).
For sure I'm going to run pex in the bunker floor. I can't believe how comfortable the basement is in our house due to floor heat. Its the first time I've ever owned a house with a heated basement floor. I wouldn't own another one without it.Very interesting build. One thing you mentioned was being unsure of heating and cooling the underground space maybe think about putting pex in the floor for future heating.
There is so much prep to do to pull this off, its going to be very tight to get started in September. My family expects me to take holidays this summer !I look forward to this project progressing. September seems like a long way off!
I'm not sure if its allowed to put a sealant between the layers of concrete. I think doing that decreases the strength of the slab because the top layer can slip against the bottom layer. Its stronger when they can't slip against each other.
My family expects me to take holidays this summer !
But if the soil conditions are good we should be able to do it with a skid steer, leaving the garage in place.
For sure I'm going to run pex in the bunker floor. I can't believe how comfortable the basement is in our house due to floor heat. Its the first time I've ever owned a house with a heated basement floor. I wouldn't own another one without it.
Having said that, I'm not sure I need that level of comfort in the bunker ? I'll prep it for it, not sure I'll install the boiler and circulation pumps.
Basement floor heat is excellent for keeping a space warm, but it doesn't react heat the air above it quickly. What I typically do in our house is turn on the floor heat for a day and then turn it off. Once the floor is heated up, it stays warm for a couple weeks. Its amazing. Our house basement has forced air ducting from the main floor furnace. I'll probably install a small direct vent natgas furnace in the bunker with some minimal ducting to handle warming the air. I could duct some of the warm air up into the garage space to heat it too.
I'm still working out the details. As long as I properly prep the space for various options, I can decide this stuff after the bunker is built.
Reading through this, IMO the critical issue is going to be the stability of the soil (during winter). The decision of how to deal with the garage depends very much on the soil conditions.
For example what's the plan for shoring the soil during excavation? If none, have you planned for a 45* slope from the finished footprint?
Even 'if the soil conditions are good' it seems little has been considered regarding safely excavating 9' in tight quarters.
I would make this a top priority, the floor heat will help keep things dry. I really do not like radiant heat in a shop space, because when I open the big door, the heat is gone so quickly and it takes forever to recover. One of my Dad's shops was that way, we ended up adding forced hot air in that bay as well, just to keep things on an even keel.
Just to clarify, the floor heat would be in the bunker floor, not the garage floor (aka bunker roof). The garage floor is a stressed member and from what I understand we don't want plastic pipe floating around in that concrete making it weaker. The garage is going to have to use forced air heating. Luckily I can locate the furnace in the basement.
Planning to excavate to the property line is a mistake or possibly a disaster in the making, IMHO. (I'd also ditch the idea of increasing the garage footprint, the extra few feet isn't worth it).If we excavate to the property line, there is no opportunity to do any benching.
Find the geotech engr for that and hire them next.FWIW, 2 infill houses were build across the street from mine in the last year. Both had 9' or deeper basements. Both were built next to existing houses. Neither excavation used shoring or benching. Not saying that made it a safe work situation, just saying that is what happened.
My point is that the soil conditions may make the go-nogo decision as well.I'll comment more on this once I have a geotechnical engineer on site. At the moment I'm spending as little as possible until I know the funding is in place to do this project this fall. I bought a few hours of structural engineering because I needed to know a few of the concrete parameters in order to get a rough estimate of building costs, in order to finalize a go/no go decision from the construction point of view.
I thought this was going to be workspace or man space, not storage, did I miss something?
Soil conditions can vary designs huge. I do towers and if we have sand it could be three times the amount of concrete because the sand offers no real resistance like gravel or clay would. If the engineer is worth anything, he will have soil borings taken so you know what you have. They probably won't be that expensive to do, they will be cheaper than the engineer, that is for sure.
Infill designs/issues are VERY different than what you have. Erase those from your head.
3 feet.What's the setback for the houses (yours and neighbor) which both have full basements?
My garage has a frost wall and is 3 feet back. I don't know what my neighbors garage has. It is actually encroaching and illegal. He is about 2' back.I'm guessing the slab garages you both have are 3' back?
