derosa
Well-known member
I've started the planning stages of my garage and quickly realized that the poured cement floor is by far the biggest expense causing me to wonder if there isn't an alternative. I looked at some barns since I was hanging out in farmland this weekend and realized that all of them were wood floors over a shallow stone foundation. It made me wonder why a garage couldn't be the same.
The thought was a cinder block foundation with a center support wall or several piers. Have 3 or 4 beams made up of 2x8s or 10s that run the length of the floor and then put the floor joists over that. The following diagram might help with the description
black= foundation and piers
red= cross beams
blue= floor joists
Seems like several hundred foundation blocks and some lumber would be cheaper then a poured slab, just not as fast. A little slower still would be to make the foundation out of stone if it isn't illegal to pull the stone from the beach (the locals claim both, probably have to check with the DEC) that lies 500' away using the 4 wheeler and trailer for hauling.
Pros and cons of this, is this kind of construction still allowable? I've seen where some of these old barns are 80+ years old and still hold tractors.
The thought was a cinder block foundation with a center support wall or several piers. Have 3 or 4 beams made up of 2x8s or 10s that run the length of the floor and then put the floor joists over that. The following diagram might help with the description
black= foundation and piers
red= cross beams
blue= floor joists
Seems like several hundred foundation blocks and some lumber would be cheaper then a poured slab, just not as fast. A little slower still would be to make the foundation out of stone if it isn't illegal to pull the stone from the beach (the locals claim both, probably have to check with the DEC) that lies 500' away using the 4 wheeler and trailer for hauling.
Pros and cons of this, is this kind of construction still allowable? I've seen where some of these old barns are 80+ years old and still hold tractors.





