Messedupgarage
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- Sep 7, 2021
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This is because the slab was poured with an overhang as in this picture below.
I think the overhang is there because the mason made the forms wrong. It was not that way in the drawings. That's all I can think of. What you say makes sense to me, and makes this an even bigger problem than I thought.
What are my options for a remedy? The slab is poured. The overhang is there. The building is on top and flush to the outer edges.
I have paid about 10k. I have 15k I am holding. The builder subcontracted out to the mason.The first thing you should do is not pay the contractor a single dime more. ... for anything.
If I were in your situation, I would hire a property lawyer and a local engineer. You will need to pay more up-front here and maybe more overall. The engineer will help you make sure whatever is done is safe and structurally sound. (From what you are describing, the building right now is neither safe, nor structurally sound.) The lawyer will help you get as close as you are going to be to financially whole through whatever happens. (ie: get help and don't trust your contractor's "engineer")
Major work needs to be done and large expenses need to be incurred, if the building is already up and things are deviated from the structural plans. The contractors are going to suggest all sorts of easy fixes to get out of this, but I you are going to need local professional help (beyond what prople on the internet can advise you on) to get in a right place.
I hope there is a way to fix the issue without tearing everything out, but maybe there isn't.
We all, of course, hope you get this worked out. You might consider retaining an attorney if the contractor tries to get away with it. Gook luck, and hang in there!Thanks. It will be inspected this week. I am pretty sure it won't meet code from my discussion with the city, so I am trying to get an idea of what to do after it fails.
I just figured out the extent of this problem this morning. I plan to have the city inspect in two days. I figure it will fail, and then I will go to the builder and discuss how to fix the issues--with the caveat that an engineer needs to sign off on the fix.

Isn't the load of a car driving in/out a concern, or will the slab support that adequately, by itself?I agree with the comments above. I would check the undercut in more places and see how it goes around the entire structure. (That workmanship isn't great and it doesn't look like it would give you the durability your drawings call for, but it isn't as concerning as your original drawing.)
I wouldn't be concerned with the area/undercut beneath the garage door - that area doesn't take any roof/wall loads. (The important walls are the sides of the garage, assuming your eaves run allong the sides.)
The car's tires (being deformable) help distribute the loads tremendously. The wall areas can experience higher loading with structure, snow, wind, and other loads. (So the field of the slab can be relatively thin compared to the wall areas.)Isn't the load of a car driving in/out a concern, or will the slab support that adequately, by itself?
I don't know. I certainly didn't do anything!Something must have happened between photos and pour?
