tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1006402134736032965.post8229033735754782208..comments2023-04-04T15:48:53.578+08:00Comments on COLD HOLLER: a Postmodern (B)log Cabin in the Land of the Noonday Sun: 6: Setting the foundation beams!Jackson County up in the Mountainshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06103766289986712844noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1006402134736032965.post-22885047027696572102010-10-26T01:10:14.180+08:002010-10-26T01:10:14.180+08:00Follow-up thoughts -- as a do-it-myself person, I&...Follow-up thoughts -- as a do-it-myself person, I'd be tempted to avoid all of the labor and consulting fees and activity. But the heavy structure on compressible clay is troublesome. Can you rent a small backhoe and excavate it so that there's no need for a tall side? Then, you could fill a trench with rebar and ready-mix concrete and stack flat rock all the way around for a pretty solid result.Jackson County up in the Mountainshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06103766289986712844noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1006402134736032965.post-12692002503993252452010-10-25T23:15:41.834+08:002010-10-25T23:15:41.834+08:00Hi,
Thanks for the comment and for the encourageme...Hi,<br />Thanks for the comment and for the encouragement. As you now know, it's a lot of work, so it's nice to know it appeals.<br /><br />Before the drying-in party, I actually had a builder friend check my foundations. Because my cabin is small, I can always jack it up onto wide-based piers if necessary. I'd worry more about the clay than the slope. Concrete piers reinforced by steel can handle some height, but they'd need to sit on a wider base, below the frost line, and I'd put down permeable geo-tec cloth, a deep layer of number 57 self-compacted stone (all the same size with no fines, then a deep steel reinforced concrete footer, with vertical steel entering the pier). Of course, I'm no engineer and recommend you consult a geotech engineer and maybe a structural one too, if you don't have this knowledge. The scale of your cabin will make it *much* heavier than mine.<br /><br />Or, you could build a solid foundation wall -- a similar strategy would be to dig a four-foot wide trench, put in the cloth and at least a foot of rock, build forms and a steel-reinforced footer, and then have a block mason build a block foundation for you with vertical rebar, and a crawlspace doorway. You would still need piers in the middle, though. And I'd still consult a professional.<br /><br />I'd love to see pictures! If you don't mind, I might include them in a blog post. If you'd prefer to be private, I won't, or I could no include any identifying info.<br /><br />Good luck,<br />WillJackson County up in the Mountainshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06103766289986712844noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1006402134736032965.post-44861542989721184272010-10-25T23:12:17.151+08:002010-10-25T23:12:17.151+08:00This comment has been removed by the author.Jackson County up in the Mountainshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06103766289986712844noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1006402134736032965.post-86185600783237911832010-10-25T22:53:56.134+08:002010-10-25T22:53:56.134+08:00Great site: not only the blog, but for the cabin a...Great site: not only the blog, but for the cabin as well. I've decided to build a log cabin here in the piedmont about an hour or so east of Asheville, N.C. Just starting -- I've felled some trees and bucked and drawknifed about 40 logs so far (which may be sufficient for the walls), half Virginia pine and half poplar. Half the Logs are 20 feet long and half 16 feet. Base logs are about 15 inches diameter at the butt end. <br />Sorry about this meandering, but I do have a question, and it's about the foundation. I looked everywhere around the property and could find only small (and therefore unusable) black locust trees. And I think even if I had good posts, the terrain wouldn't allow for them. The cabin site is sloped -- maybe as much as 3 feet for the cabin width. So what is my alternative? I've seen some reconstructed cabin foundations (have you been to Hart's Square hereabouts?) that are mainly mortarted flat stone on concrete footings. I don't think posts (or sonotubes and such) will work, what with the slope and very clay-ey soil.<br />Again, thanks for a very interesting site. If and when I do make some progress (and if you're at all interested), I'll send some pix. (This is a solo project, by the way.<br />Fernand Chandonnet (chandonnetvale@wildblue.net)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com