Long concrete garage/workshop base (10m) - Advice needed
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Hi
I'm hoping someone might be able to give me a few pointers on my workshop/garage base build.
I'm building a garage/workshop at home. Its going to be 3m x 10m and i'm going to have a 150mm concrete base poured over a DPM & reinforced with matabar.
To make things a little interesting i've got to built a retaining wall at one end for the concrete slab to be poured on top of.This will also be made from concrete and poured between some shuttering and again strengthend using some matabar.(pics should hopefully make it clear)
As the base is quite long (10m) and to make sure i'm getting it all level i've had to mark it out in sections which will also mean pouring it in sections, however i'm a bit confused as to how to set up the various divisions without puncturing the DPM?? at the moment i've not laid the DPM i've just staked the shuttering into the ground aand checked that are all level. Any ideas?
The existing base of the old shed, the new garage will be extended slightly as far as where the footings have been dug. The plan is to build a reinforced concrete wall up to the existing base level. Infill the gap between the existing base and the new wall, then pour the new concrete base/flooring on top of it.
The carport (which has come down)
First section started to be dug out
The section between the shutter and the gate is going to be dug out and block paved oce the concrete base has been finished
cheers
Matt
I'm hoping someone might be able to give me a few pointers on my workshop/garage base build.
I'm building a garage/workshop at home. Its going to be 3m x 10m and i'm going to have a 150mm concrete base poured over a DPM & reinforced with matabar.
To make things a little interesting i've got to built a retaining wall at one end for the concrete slab to be poured on top of.This will also be made from concrete and poured between some shuttering and again strengthend using some matabar.(pics should hopefully make it clear)
As the base is quite long (10m) and to make sure i'm getting it all level i've had to mark it out in sections which will also mean pouring it in sections, however i'm a bit confused as to how to set up the various divisions without puncturing the DPM?? at the moment i've not laid the DPM i've just staked the shuttering into the ground aand checked that are all level. Any ideas?
The existing base of the old shed, the new garage will be extended slightly as far as where the footings have been dug. The plan is to build a reinforced concrete wall up to the existing base level. Infill the gap between the existing base and the new wall, then pour the new concrete base/flooring on top of it.
The carport (which has come down)
First section started to be dug out
The section between the shutter and the gate is going to be dug out and block paved oce the concrete base has been finished
cheers
Matt
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ah thats really useful thanks!!!!
So going on that it would seem the best way to do it would possibly be to edge the bottoms of the walls in some timber shuttering as well and then put the dividers between these rather than flush up against the wall, the dividers can be fixed to these rather than needing staking into the ground and therefore puncturing the DPM.
The timbers against the wall would then act as a sort of expansion joint as well i guess so the concrete base doesn't force against the bottom of the wall.
So going on that it would seem the best way to do it would possibly be to edge the bottoms of the walls in some timber shuttering as well and then put the dividers between these rather than flush up against the wall, the dividers can be fixed to these rather than needing staking into the ground and therefore puncturing the DPM.
The timbers against the wall would then act as a sort of expansion joint as well i guess so the concrete base doesn't force against the bottom of the wall.
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irishpaving > i've got some large sheets of 18mm OSB and lots of 3"x2" so i plan on making some formwork which will sit in the footing trench i have dug. I'm thinking of making it about 350-400mm thick. The inner skin of the formwork will come up to the ground level of the base and the outer skin will come up a further 150mm (the depth of the base pour) so that when the final base is poured i can screed it to that level.
Obvioulsy the formwork will have plenty of lateral support to prevent it bursting/falling over from the weight of the concrete between it. I will have lengths of matabar between the 2 forms and i will leave some of this protruding from the wall pour so that it ties into the base pour.
hope that make sense
Obvioulsy the formwork will have plenty of lateral support to prevent it bursting/falling over from the weight of the concrete between it. I will have lengths of matabar between the 2 forms and i will leave some of this protruding from the wall pour so that it ties into the base pour.
hope that make sense
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why spoil such a nice dry stone wall by putting a concrete one beside it ??? At the very least i would place a foundation and use some nice bricks to compliment it, unless you can get some dry stone walling. Or set your concrete back and pit a skin of bricks etc; up the side of it. Don't use timber between your existing dry sone wall and slab, use fibre board, or simular.
sean
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ah sorry yes i should have said the i'm going to clad the concrete wall with some drystone bricks so that it all blends in and you don't see the concrete wall i've got tonnes of the bloody stuff spare!!
rab1 > so would it be better to use these expansion strips against the wall rather than placing some wooden boards and then remove them once the base had set?
rab1 > so would it be better to use these expansion strips against the wall rather than placing some wooden boards and then remove them once the base had set?
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