rburke65
Well-known member
You are doing a great job. You will look back on this and think " I must have been crazy". But hey....one hell of a learning experience!
Yes, but what I said was
So I would have gone one course deeper.Typically when using "garden wall" block for a short retaining wall, you bury the first course so that it is level with the lower grade as a minimum for a "footer".
I saw that, but mortar is not gone to hold up well in a damp environment long term.... and put mortar between all courses and outside before burying.
Yep ! Back fill with gravel.Using typical retaining block and doing the radius I did the gaps between blocks would be huge.
Yes, adding the vertical rebar would have been a lot of work. Like I said, the arch design is very strong.I was tempted to put rebar in but didn't figure I needed it.
Yes, but what I said was
So I would have gone one course deeper.
I saw that, but mortar is not gone to hold up well in a damp environment long term.
The arch between the 2 walls will be your saving grace.
Yep ! Back fill with gravel.
Yes, adding the vertical rebar would have been a lot of work. Like I said, the arch design is very strong.




Pouring stub wall on top of slab. It's only dug out around slab so that my forms can be fastened to outside of slab as well as room for coating the joint between slab and new concrete wall with foundation coating then cover with 2 inch foam and bury with dirt. I will be putting some concrete blocks on top of sidewalk in front of door as step up until ground settles and I redo deck in a few years. Then I will tear out deck, raise grade rest of area under it and pour new sidewalk from new deck to even with garage man door.Great progress. I like the videos. My son always sticks his nose into my videos too
The lift went extremely well. Very well done. I would say you have even more bracing than I did, and I felt mine was overkill. However you are pouring under yours and mine was only up for about 4 hours.
A couple questions:
1. So you are pouring the footings outside of the existing slab. I assume you then have rebar anchored into the old slab coming in to the new forms?
2. It looks like you pouring the footing outside the footprint of the garage. (i.e. beyond the 26x26). How do you then set the garage on these footings/stub walls? I'm not really following. It would seem that you will end up with a ledge on the outside somehow.
3. How do you plan to keep water from coming in the doors? It looks like that driveway drains right into the main door. (unless of course you are planning to raise the entire floor too)
Keep up the good work. I know the pain.
No. Garage was 2yrs old and would take 10x the amount of labor which I just don't have time for. It would cost same for fill and new slab so realistically the only thing making what I'm doing any different is the stub wall.Would it have been better to demo it and save the siding and the door(s) and salvage what you can to reuse?





Not pumped or mixed. Family friend that went to school with my uncle is pouring it with his guys. He's very expensive and very busy but I had no where else to turn with the original contractor backing out on me and everyone else I've called too busy. He couldn't give me a for sure day but said he'd fit me in. He'll have atleast 4-5 guys and should go pretty quick. He's coming over again tomorrow to see what I have going. Im assuming concrete truck is going to drive up to the garage and stick chute into middle and use wheelbarrows from there to walls and shovel into walls. If truck stays at road we'll have to wheel from the road and leave one of front forms off until the end. I'm not sure how it'll go but he's been pouring walls for 30+ years so I know whatever he decides it will he done right. I just hope truck doesn't break my driveway.Maybe I missed it, but if you're not having the concrete pumped in are you mixing it all yourself?
Not pumped or mixed. Family friend that went to school with my uncle is pouring it with his guys. He's very expensive and very busy but I had no where else to turn with the original contractor backing out on me and everyone else I've called too busy. He couldn't give me a for sure day but said he'd fit me in. He'll have atleast 4-5 guys and should go pretty quick. He's coming over again tomorrow to see what I have going. Im assuming concrete truck is going to drive up to the garage and stick chute into middle and use wheelbarrows from there to walls and shovel into walls. If truck stays at road we'll have to wheel from the road and leave one of front forms off until the end. I'm not sure how it'll go but he's been pouring walls for 30+ years so I know whatever he decides it will he done right. I just hope truck doesn't break my driveway.
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Id be careful about the truck going up your driveway. That's the last thing you need a cracked driveway and trying to hash that out with a relative of a friend.
No access pit. Tempted to do lift but no funds at moment. Wouldn't be difficult to saw out a section and add it later tho. Floor drain pipe is already cut through forms. Whole garage will be filled with 1.5 inch clear stone then 2 inch foam followed by 8 mil plastic and rebar 16" oc.
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There will be. I'm not done yet.Shouldn't there be ties connecting the exterior wall form to the interior wall form?




After all this having the concrete guy blow you off is just BS. There's got to be other companies in the area.