jives
Well-known member
Need some insight here prior to putting down a new floor. House build 15 years ago, stem/frost wall with concrete slab. Slab is the finish floor (stained) and is tilting. Slab has radiant floor hydronic heating. Slab is not notched into the stem wall, but is butted up against the stem wall with an angle cut. The angle cut allows for insulation to separate the stem wall from the slab. The center of the house has a thickened slab (grade beam) that is monolithic with the slab. This grade beam supports the load bearing center wall. The slab has sunk/tilted compared to the stem wall, but not at the center grade beam. BTW, the slab sinking is also on the stem wall on the other side of the house. No discernable sinking is the past 5-10 years. The grade beam is exactly level with the stem wall. . . no sinking, raising, tilting. There is NO discernable cracking in the slab anywhere.
We plan on putting down a new floor, most likely quality vinyl that will go directly to the sill plate. But the drop is a problem. I could grind off the stain and use a floor leveling compound, then vinyl over the top. But is there a better way, such as some sort of sleepers and a partial wooden subfloor? I do not think that raising the slab is a good idea as there are too many unknowns, such as the radiant floor.

We plan on putting down a new floor, most likely quality vinyl that will go directly to the sill plate. But the drop is a problem. I could grind off the stain and use a floor leveling compound, then vinyl over the top. But is there a better way, such as some sort of sleepers and a partial wooden subfloor? I do not think that raising the slab is a good idea as there are too many unknowns, such as the radiant floor.






