VietGnome
Well-known member
Hey, previous thread got some traction when I was looking for help deciding on a grade plan for my shop. Decided on the rear "shop area" to be level, and have the front sloped towards the two front 10' wide doors to deal mostly with snow melt in winter, etc.
Some helpful people pitched the idea of a trench drain/catch basin to help with melt.
The main thing, is tying whatever I go with into a drain system is just not an option. Whatever I go with will need to be a simple catch basin style drain and I'll have to manually deal with it.
The three options I'm between are:
1. 17x17x24 catch basin centered under each bay, with concrete sloping in towards it. Most labor as grading will be more of a PITA for the concrete guy. Possibly the cheapest material wise (2x Catch basins with galvanized grate are around $375.)
2. Linear trench drain oriented perpendicular under each vehicle bay, same grading concept as above.
3. Linear trench drain parallel with door. Slope would be simple slope towards door, and drain would catch. runoff.
Second biggest concern with option 2 and 3 is the price of grade covers. I might have a bead on two 6" wide x 6' long stainless grates on marketplace for only $100. Outside of that, any new galvanized/stainless grate cover is insanely expensive. Looking at 600-700 minimum for 20ft of grate to cover off 2x 10' wide trenches.
I've looked at some catch basin style channel drains. The issue with those is they seem to be designed to tie into a drain system, so the often have a "U" shaped bottom are narrow, and somewhat shallow. So they'll fill quickly and be a PITA to clean. Such as https://www.homedepot.ca/product/re...t-with-portland-grey-grate-3-pack-/1001580791
I could possible tie a few kits above to a shared catch basin between doors for probably a $600-700 range all in, not including whatever that would cost in labor.
Looking for thoughts/input. Not sure if it not tying into a drain system will also cause issues with stink, or if a bare concrete trench will require some sort of liner/sealant?
The last option is just just keep the rear level, slope the front towards the doors. Doors are 10' wide so water shouldn't really pool against walls at all, and I also have an 8" stem wall all around, so there wouldn't be an issues with rot. Not necessarily opposed to this either.
Some helpful people pitched the idea of a trench drain/catch basin to help with melt.
The main thing, is tying whatever I go with into a drain system is just not an option. Whatever I go with will need to be a simple catch basin style drain and I'll have to manually deal with it.
The three options I'm between are:
1. 17x17x24 catch basin centered under each bay, with concrete sloping in towards it. Most labor as grading will be more of a PITA for the concrete guy. Possibly the cheapest material wise (2x Catch basins with galvanized grate are around $375.)
2. Linear trench drain oriented perpendicular under each vehicle bay, same grading concept as above.
3. Linear trench drain parallel with door. Slope would be simple slope towards door, and drain would catch. runoff.
Second biggest concern with option 2 and 3 is the price of grade covers. I might have a bead on two 6" wide x 6' long stainless grates on marketplace for only $100. Outside of that, any new galvanized/stainless grate cover is insanely expensive. Looking at 600-700 minimum for 20ft of grate to cover off 2x 10' wide trenches.
I've looked at some catch basin style channel drains. The issue with those is they seem to be designed to tie into a drain system, so the often have a "U" shaped bottom are narrow, and somewhat shallow. So they'll fill quickly and be a PITA to clean. Such as https://www.homedepot.ca/product/re...t-with-portland-grey-grate-3-pack-/1001580791
I could possible tie a few kits above to a shared catch basin between doors for probably a $600-700 range all in, not including whatever that would cost in labor.
Looking for thoughts/input. Not sure if it not tying into a drain system will also cause issues with stink, or if a bare concrete trench will require some sort of liner/sealant?
The last option is just just keep the rear level, slope the front towards the doors. Doors are 10' wide so water shouldn't really pool against walls at all, and I also have an 8" stem wall all around, so there wouldn't be an issues with rot. Not necessarily opposed to this either.


