Hi,
I have recently had a garden/boundary wall constructed but am concerned at the method in which the foundation was built. I initially had an ageing half brick decorative concrete block wall. This was demolished and a one brick wall built in its place. The new wall was built on a foundation consisting of a single layer of high density concrete blocks layed on their side alongside the old walls foundations. The wall is approximately 1 metre high and 4 metres in length. Is this method of constructing the foundation suitable and safe???
your help is very much appreciated
Regards
Duncan
Boundary wall foundation - Groundworks
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A lot depends on the subsoil. If you're on a shrinkable clay soil then putting in a solid concrete foundation will just result in it cracking. If you put concrete blocks on their side, long axis at right angles to the wall, and use a lime mortar, then the structure has some flexibility and will move with the seasons, but any cracks will heal themselves as the Carbon-dioxide in the atmosphere combines with the exposed lime.
The big problem when portland cement came along was that it was quick, and therfore cheap, and people forgot why the old ways were often better.
The big problem when portland cement came along was that it was quick, and therfore cheap, and people forgot why the old ways were often better.
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danesis
you sound like the lecturer on my vernacular skills course,the wall is built mate and i would guess its in OPC
if heavy clay is a concern then i would use clay boards,but for a wall this size a decent foundation normally does the trick
i cant see a foundation 4m by .225m by .4m cracking,unless there are large trees nearby
i love using all that lime putty and flints and that,but no-one (well very very few) want to pay the extra for a wall that will last 400 years after they are dead IYKWIM
cheers LLL
you sound like the lecturer on my vernacular skills course,the wall is built mate and i would guess its in OPC
if heavy clay is a concern then i would use clay boards,but for a wall this size a decent foundation normally does the trick
i cant see a foundation 4m by .225m by .4m cracking,unless there are large trees nearby
i love using all that lime putty and flints and that,but no-one (well very very few) want to pay the extra for a wall that will last 400 years after they are dead IYKWIM
cheers LLL