I can understand nobody's happy unless Momma is happy.
Just make sure she understands this repair is coming out of her shoe budget not your budget!
Put your foot down right from the start.
Based on the pics, I would guess the garage was actually the original house on the property, then remodeled into the garage when the new house was built out front. Your 'crawl space' under the slab was the root cellar..... It probably had post and beams in it prior to the slab floor getting poured.
And what did the engineer say when you told him the weights of your woodworking equipment?
I'm almost certain it was the barn, almost every house on this street had/has a barn so it appears unlikely it was a house. I'm guessing the cellar was for mucking out. It def has post and beam construction, I'll post some better pics of the attic where the original work is clear to see. And beautiful.
I wrote out the comments that the engineer emailed to me earlier in this thread. His reply was basically patch it up and contain the damage. I personally do not believe that is the correct fix, either short or long term. I explained my tool weights in numerous phone calls including yesterday and he continues to believe the slab is salvageable. I looked at the same rusted through rebar that everyone else has and there is no way that paint is going to fix that. So I'm going to map out where my tools are going and be sure that there is adequate structure under them and avoid the cancer area. When I've narrowed down to the best/most cost effective fix, I'll pull the tools out and do it.
Here is the engineer that wrote the report (and whom I have been speaking to), he's the first principle listed...
http://www.sde-us.com/docs/principals.htm
And his comments after seeing the photos I posted.
It looks like thru their use the deterioration has progressed. I am concerned about falling concrete and tripping hazards and not imminent collapse or structural failure, although this is a natural progression if it continues to be used as a garage and deterioration allowed to continue. The deterioration at the entrance was there, but has progressed.
The extent of concrete repair and coating of rebar has increased . so the cost of repair has increased.
The steel beam corrosion is natural for this type of system in a garage.
The “fix” would be as follows:
1. Have an inspection just to make sure
2. Chip loose concrete to remove spalled items top and bottom, confirm rebar integrity. Apply sika Armatec coting to rebar and act as bonding agent. Patch concrete with Sikatop 123 or like bag mix. Apply sealer healer to slab to fill cracks, may require caulking or taping cracks below, reasonable effort.
3. Apply epoxy garage floor paint to surface with grit and maintain paint. Epoxy coat steel beams below
The garage does not “scare” me, but does need to have the items addressed to preclude further deterioration. No structured garage is maintenance free, by structured I mean garage floor over occupied space. Particularly one built like this for residential use, and built when the industry did not realize the full impact of road salts.
I can think of many other options, all the way up to slab replacement, but that gets expensive. I think the above is pragmatic and would make me feel comfortable.
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