GARover
Member
Hi gang,
I have a typical 2-car garage which the garage floor pad is on concrete slab. It appears that when the garage concrete was originally poured, something wasn't done right or it somehow bowed towards the middle. The garage floor is also slanted slightly towards the garage door and away from the house (which is correct), but most of the water never makes it there and instead just piles up in the center of the floor and has no where to go so I have a small pong in the center of my garage for a few months of the year.
This isn't usually much of an issue in the warmer months as the small amount of water that would collect there evaporates off quickly.
Where this becomes a major problem is in the winter months when melting snow from the cars just falls off and collects in the center of the floor.
So, I'm looking for a creative (i.e. low cost) solution to my problem and want to hear from others who may have had the same issue, or contractors with real world experience who can provide some options.
My thoughts:
I've sort thought about using the natural slope of the garage floor to my advantage and just removing a small amount around the center of the floor (where the water naturally collects), digging down to adding a gravel base for drainage, and then adding a drain and re-pouring the removed concrete.
Some have told me that a small amount of water like this from melting snow will just go down into the gravel layer (like a small drain field under the garage slab) and be fine. Others have told me I'll need to drain it out to somewhere else, which would be way more complicated, albeit not impossible.
It does get below freezing around here and the ground can freeze, so I don't want to create additional problems, but I will say I fully insulated my garage with R13 and 5/8" drywall this year and it stays much warmer in there now. FWIW, I'm also looking into a gas heater of some sort this winter, so hopefully the inside of the garage will stay above freezing even in the most extreme cold days.
Any advice or BTDT GREATLY appreciated!!
Any links to build threads where others added floor drains retroactively (and less evasively) greatly appreciated.
Thanks so much. Looking forward to hopefully getting some useful feedback or ideas.
I have a typical 2-car garage which the garage floor pad is on concrete slab. It appears that when the garage concrete was originally poured, something wasn't done right or it somehow bowed towards the middle. The garage floor is also slanted slightly towards the garage door and away from the house (which is correct), but most of the water never makes it there and instead just piles up in the center of the floor and has no where to go so I have a small pong in the center of my garage for a few months of the year.
This isn't usually much of an issue in the warmer months as the small amount of water that would collect there evaporates off quickly.
Where this becomes a major problem is in the winter months when melting snow from the cars just falls off and collects in the center of the floor.
So, I'm looking for a creative (i.e. low cost) solution to my problem and want to hear from others who may have had the same issue, or contractors with real world experience who can provide some options.
My thoughts:
I've sort thought about using the natural slope of the garage floor to my advantage and just removing a small amount around the center of the floor (where the water naturally collects), digging down to adding a gravel base for drainage, and then adding a drain and re-pouring the removed concrete.
Some have told me that a small amount of water like this from melting snow will just go down into the gravel layer (like a small drain field under the garage slab) and be fine. Others have told me I'll need to drain it out to somewhere else, which would be way more complicated, albeit not impossible.
It does get below freezing around here and the ground can freeze, so I don't want to create additional problems, but I will say I fully insulated my garage with R13 and 5/8" drywall this year and it stays much warmer in there now. FWIW, I'm also looking into a gas heater of some sort this winter, so hopefully the inside of the garage will stay above freezing even in the most extreme cold days.
Any advice or BTDT GREATLY appreciated!!
Any links to build threads where others added floor drains retroactively (and less evasively) greatly appreciated.
Thanks so much. Looking forward to hopefully getting some useful feedback or ideas.

Great solution that is elegant in its simplicity! Love this!