Digging out under our house
Hi folks. The photo attached is underneath our house. Actually its 5 photos stitched together. Naturally the beams are straight, its the photography that makes them look bent. Anyway, I need more shed space and am thinking about digging this area out. I'd like to remove the nearest three piles on the right, which I think will give me enough space. The problem is I know very little about this. Can anyone give me some pointers to how this is done. Ultimately, I'll get a builder to do the structural stuff, but I like to know what is involved before I start talking to contractors.
I assume a beam or RSJ is slung across somehow, the piles are removed, the clay is dug out, a slab is laid and the walls are lined somehow. Any further detail, advice or clarification would be welcome.
thanks
Arron
Retaining walls vs underpinning
Aaron,
I went through the process of speaking to designers and builders about a very similar thing, to a larger scale.
As I wanted to get the most space I could under our house at the time (Ringwood Victoria) I was going to underpin, take the walls straight down, instead of retaining walls 1 m in from the exsisting ones.
It looked as though I would just miss out on the height requirements, unless I became the lowest point in the street, which would have made the frogs happy.
Then started looking at the option of jacking the whole house up. Recall seeing an article in one of the local papers about a guy who was doing it.
Being brick veneer, then decided to lose the bricks, as they were pretty ugly, which would make the whole job a lot easier.
In the end, I moved to Japan. Much cheaper!
No help what so ever really, but it was a great time, looking at the possibilities of a large, sound proof workshop, billard room, cellar, bar, home cinema, kids retreat, garage.
Though the quotes were getting high, I still felt it was better value doing this to an old house on a big block and end up with a huge house as I wanted it and still keep the back yard. For the same price as the house and renovations / re-build, could get a brand new box, with no yard but some fancy foam cornice in the entry hall.
Some of the regulations to watch were the ratio of windows to floor space, I think was about 10:1
After living in Japan for a while, I now value the back yard more than ever before. If you can make use of the space under the house, go for it!
Steve