Uh... pretty sure 80% of the posts in the thread have said the same thing you are recommending about getting an engineers report.
Then 80% were right. I didn't read every post, I just offered my best advice.
Uh... pretty sure 80% of the posts in the thread have said the same thing you are recommending about getting an engineers report.
Tons of experience with cracked foundations. My best advice is to ignore everything you've been told up till now. None of it matters, none of it has anything to do with the crack in your foundation. Get the engineers report, that will be all the information you need. It doesn't matter who hires the engineer, he's not going risk a lawsuit for a couple hundred bucks.
Run like hell. I dealt with this last year. Vertical crack in my foundation which caused the floors to sag and walls to start pulling away from the ceiling. It is all fixed now after the foundation repairs by Ramjack $14,000 and then the drywall and framing damage and kitchen repairs almost another $14,000. So after $28,000 in repairs I am again whole but a lot poorer than I was. I was lucky I had the cash. I wouldn't want to relive the experience.
So, so, so, so , SOOOOO wrong.
People are greedy and stupid. Combine the two and you'd be amazed at what some are capable of.
looks like they built a 2x10 stud wall in front of the concrete to provide support for the floor joists.
Would that even work correctly? You may not be on the footer anymore when you move in. It could just be 2-3" of concrete floor there. Or was the wall built to not support the load from the floor, but to only brace the concrete wall?? That would explain the joist hangers on the inside of the wall
Yep, the only other way to fix it is to build a second interior wall with braces to carry the load. It's cheaper but harder to get the inspectors to sign off on. Cinder block for foundations suck.
Yep, the engineer is suggesting what I had said before. However, the hard part is getting the inspector to sign off on it. I recommend meeting with the inspector and discussing the plan before building it.
well all of the work has already been performed according to the realtor. i requested the statements of work for what was done though, and am waiting to hear back in regards to that.
based on the report i posted, what do you estimate all of that work would have cost the current owners of the house?
UPDATE 7/15/12
so here are the scans of the structural engineering report that I received.
http://imageshack.us/f/827/scan0001g.png/
http://imageshack.us/f/859/scan0002fq.png/
i do not fully even understand what is going on in those, so if anyone wants to actually explain to me what it means that would be helpful too. i plan on calling the place tomorrow and asking them about the specific case as well, if they remember or have other records of it.
i was also told that all of the recommended work was performed when they finished the basement. i do plan to get the statements of work for that too.
I don't understand why people come to a place like this to get advice about something that could cost them tens of thousands of dollars instead of hiring qualified professionals.
The initial question I suppose I get. But a bunch of people have all told you the same thing: the issue is serious, and you need people who know what they are talking about. And yet you're posting engineering reports in a thread that lands next to other threads about hot babes and fart jokes.
Sorry to be blunt, but you need to take this seriously before you do something you're going to regret.
I don't understand why people come to a place like this to get advice about something that could cost them tens of thousands of dollars instead of hiring qualified professionals.
The initial question I suppose I get. But a bunch of people have all told you the same thing: the issue is serious, and you need people who know what they are talking about. And yet you're posting engineering reports in a thread that lands next to other threads about hot babes and fart jokes.
Sorry to be blunt, but you need to take this seriously before you do something you're going to regret.
additionally i am 100% sure they also waterproofed the basement as well. i'm not sure if that was when they did this same fix as well.
If there are any moisture issues at all, and likely there already are since the drawings call for an underslab drain, even p.t. wood is going to rot eventually. When it does that wood bracing become useless as a bracing against the wall bowing and as a joist support, not to mention the potential mold issues that could crop up in the interim. As already mentioned, the drawings don't show any moisture barrier between the foundation wall and wood. Even if there is little to no seepage through that crack it is still begging for moisture/mold problems due to the temperature variations the material will encounters.
if you read the thread, you would see that i didn't come in here asking for advice on what to do.
I'm the guy who was discussing the issue with you yesterday. I just hate to see people looking for advice on complex subjects in a place like this.
