San Antonio-Dry Weather Can Crack Home Foundation

Mary Heidbrink, Express-News Staff Writer –

It appears like a route on a roadmap, a squiggly line inching from the corner of the door toward the ceiling. It gets wider, like an expanding thoroughfare.

Then, the door that had been a little stubborn won’t open at all.

Is it a sure sign of doom for a homeowner, the signal of foundation failure? Or is it just another sign of a long dry spell?

It all depends, and so does the action you take.

CONCRETE SLAB

•What’s under the slab? If it’s limestone, rest easy (unless you’re trying to dig a hole in the garden). If you’re not sitting on rock, investigate further.

•Clay soil is often the culprit in shifting foundations because of its plasticity. Think of a sponge that plumps up when it’s full of water and shrinks and curls when it dries. When this happens to the ground under your house, it can cause the foundation to heave or sink.

•Proper site preparation mitigates the effects of shifting soil. The builder should remove all soil and tree roots and replace it with nonexpansive fill material.

Signs of trouble

•Cracks that are 1/8 inch wide or wider.

•Floors that are out of level at least 1 inch per 10 feet.

•A crack in a wall or a sticky door indicates settling, not a cracked foundation. Of more concern: a combination of cracks inside and outside or cracks and jammed doors.

•If there are wide cracks in the walls or a door that won’t open, consult an engineer. An expert’s opinion will cost about $500.

To water or not to water?

•Watering around the perimeter of the foundation can help, but before hauling out the hose, use a carpenter’s level to check the floors inside the house.

•If the floor is fairly level, watering around the foundation can help keep it that way.

•To water, line the perimeter of the foundation with soaker hoses. The hose should touch the foundation. Turn water on a quarter turn and water two to three times a week for two to three hours, keeping soil consistently moist, not muddy.

•Water the side of the house that is lower than the rest.

•Monitor progress using a level on the floor, and be patient. It likely will take months to see results.

Repairs

•A foundation company will dig under the edge of the slab and install concrete piers 10 to 15 feet deep, leveling the foundation and isolating it from the problem soil near the surface. If work is needed under the middle of the foundation, workers will tunnel under the slab or install piers from inside the house.

•Leveling can cause additional cracks in drywall. Sometimes it can be patched; sometimes it will need to be replaced. New doors might be in order if existing ones had been modified to fit crooked openings.

•Foundation repairs average about $12,000, and typically have a lifetime guarantee.

PIER AND BEAM

Different underpinnings, same symptoms. Cracks and sticky doors still might indicate a faltering foundation.

Different care

•Standing water is the enemy, causing soil to expand or rotting cedar piers.

•Monitor the perimeter to make sure water drains away from the foundation.

•Pier and beam foundations don’t need to be watered because the crawl space under the house keeps moisture uniform.

Repairs

•Repairs, which usually consist of replacing piers, average about $8,000.

•Drywall can buckle in the leveling process. Doors might not fit, and windows might not open when the work is done.

•Repairs typically have a lifetime guarantee.

[mappress]

Parking Deck Collapses in Atlanta

By GREG BLUESTEIN and DORIE TURNER

ATLANTA (AP) — Part of a six-floor parking deck near downtown Atlanta collapsed Monday, crushing at least 35 cars, with fire officials saying it was miraculous there were no reports of injuries hours after the mass of concrete fell during a busy lunchtime.

Crews were stabilizing the building with timber supports, and firefighters were preparing to search car by car in the evening. The deck “pancaked” from the fourth floor to the first level. More than 50 firefighters rushed to the parking deck around 12:30 p.m. and the bottom level was a “huge mess of vehicles and concrete,” said Fire Chief Kelvin Cochran

“We’re hoping with all our hearts that we don’t find any people inside,” Cochran said at a news conference.

What caused the 7-year-old structure to collapse was not immediately known. Hardin Construction, the general contractor on the deck, was one of three companies that was working at the Atlanta Botanical Garden when a pedestrian bridge collapsed in December, killing one worker and injuring 18.

The search of the parking deck was delayed when engineers spotted signs of bolts popping on the other side of the deck, said J.P. Spillane, an Atlanta police official. A handful of welders soon entered to shore up the area. Search dogs were to ready to sniff through the rubble once the building was secure.

“We want to be absolutely sure the building is safe and there is no secondary collapse,” Cochran said.

Shaun Dodson was eating lunch in his truck at the far side of the building when he felt the ground shake and heard a sound like a building “being demolished.”

“I ran around, saw a hole and thought the building was collapsing,” Dodson said. “I’m eating lunch from now on in my office.”

Firefighters will tunnel through the debris with listening devices to pick up any noise from possible victims, Cochran said.

If no one is found, he said crews will then do a “more aggressive” search using heavier equipment. The work could continue through the night.

Hardin Construction spokeswoman Barkley Russell confirmed the company was the general contractor on the deck and surrounding office complex. She said the majority of the deck work was done by subcontractor Metromont Corp., based in Greenville, S.C.

There are 1,415 spaces and about 35 were affected, Russell said in a statement.

“We are just thankful at this point there are no reports of injuries,” Russell said.

Russell directed questions about how the deck was designed to Metromont Corp., which did not immediately return a call for comment.

Earlier this month, Hardin was fined $6,300 by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration in the Botanical Garden bridge collapse. The agency’s report concluded Hardin and another company placed two support towers too far apart, which may have caused the collapse. The company is appealing.

The parking deck was last inspected at the time it was built and cleared for occupancy in 2002, said Catherine Woodling, spokeswoman for Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin. It has not had any code violations since, Woodling said.

The collapse sent workers in the busy commercial district scurrying to the area.

John Hurlbut, who parks at the deck every day, spotted his Hyundai Sonata just a few feet from the gaping hole.

“I’m very fortunate,” he said. “And I feel everyone is very fortunate. I’m amazed no one was hurt.”

 

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Firefighters look at damaged vehicles in a collapsed garage in Atlanta, Monday June 29, 2009. Part of a six-floor parking deck at a building near downtown Atlanta collapsed crushing dozens of cars, but there were no immediate reports of injuries. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)
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Mortar Repair – 4 Common Crack Problems on Your Home

By Michael Olding

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Cracks in mortar between bricks 

CRACKED BRICKIt’s a sunny morning and you’re up early. You decide to grab your coffee and take a quick stroll around your homes’ exterior to look for signs of wear. You find nothing and are pleased until you turn the last corner of your home and stop abruptly in disbelief!
There before you in the beautiful brick masonry of your home is a huge crack! How did it get there? What do you do? You wonder. Whom do you call?
Well take a deep breath and relax. You’re not alone. Millions of homeowners have experienced this gut wrenching feeling as well. So don’t grab the For Sale sign just yet! Read these handy tips to understand what may be happening to your home.
1.) Settlement Cracks – These common cracks usually manifest as a ‘stair step crack’ or a crack that steps up as it moves horizontally across the wall. Found at or close to the corners of the home, wing walls and quoin corners they are common and easily repaired. Just watch and expect more movement if the settlement has not stopped.
Solution: Contact your local masonry crack repair pro to have these cracks repaired to keep water, bugs and reptiles from entering the home.
2.) Thermal Expansion Cracks – A vertical or stair step crack usually in the upper portions of the masonry can be caused by thermal expansion. Bricks walls expand when heated by the sun and if expansion joints are not present, can cause cracks. These cracks appear anywhere within the surface of the sunny wall or in near to abutting walls
Solution: Contact your local masonry repair pro and/or a structural engineer for an evaluation. Some cracks are simple for a repair pro to check and others may need an engineer’s analysis and testing to find the cause and recommend the type of repair needed.
3.) Steel Expansion Cracks – Another common crack occurs at the upper corners of doorways, garage doors, windows or any opening. The usual culprit is the steel that supports the masonry above these openings. This is due to the daily and seasonal differential movement between the steel and the brick materials which expand at different rates.
Solution: Contact your local masonry repair pro to have these cracks repaired or caulked. Caulking will move with the materials and help reduce future cracking.
4.) Bulging or Bowed Wall Cracks – Cracks can appear throughout an entire wall or the wall is bulged, bowed in or out or has sunken. This is a serious issue and is usually the symptom of age related failure or structural failure due to improper reinforcement of the masonry.
Solution: Contact a structural engineer immediately for an evaluation and recommended repairs.
It is a good idea to check your home annually for signs of cracking or structural damage in the bricks on your home.
Michael Olding is tradesman and consultant in the field of restorations and repairs and now operates a restoration and repair business in Cincinnati, Ohio. He is also a Master in the field of masonry construction, restorations and repairs.
In addition he is a writer and speaker as well as a marketing, training and business consultant for the contracting industry. If you interested in his services he may be contacted by visiting http://www.cincihomepro.com

cracks in mortar between bricks

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