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Foundation Footings

House Footing

 

Introduction: The most important thing when building a home is sighting and constructing the foundation. Whatever the type of foundation you use they all begin the same way with the foundation footings.

A footing is typically concrete and often reinforced with steel rebar. The footing is the bottom part of the foundation that the foundation wall sets on. It's the base that is sometimes called a "spread footing" because it spreads the vertical loads that are coming down from the building out to the earth surface below.

The site surveyor, usually the builder’s excavator sub-contractor, will lay out exactly where the footing will be placed and outline it with paint. The excavation contractor removes the material so footing forms can be set up for the footing. The size of the footing depends on the soil. If the soil isn'tFoundation footing.jpg really that strong a larger footing will be required to help spread the load out over a larger area.

Pouring concrete directly into a trench is a common way to create a footing for small houses that are built on slab that do not have basements. When there is no basement the foundation wall is very short, usually about two feet and build with concrete blocks. For houses that have a basement the foundation wall is built on top of the footing.

Rebar is often installed in the footing to give it strength and to lock the wall to the footing. The footing size is usually two feet thick and eighteen inches wide, depending on the size of the building and the weight that is to be distributed to the footing. After the form is constructed a code office usually inspects the footing to insure that it meets the building code requirements.

Concrete footings are usually made with 5,000 PSI concrete and are poured in a single pour for a continuous piece of concrete without any brakes. This insures that the footing is strong enough to support the structure.

Related articles: 

Buying a Cement Mixer

Concrete Step Repair

Concrete Driveway Benefits

Fiber Reinforced Concrete

Home Foundation Walls

How to Make Stronger Concrete

How to Seal a Concrete Driveway

Lightweight Concrete verses Regular Concrete

Mixing Cement

Mixing Concrete and Mortar

Muriatic Acid for Cleaning Masonry

Polishing Concrete Floors

Sealing Concrete

 
 For more DIY information Check out these Resources
Book 1 Deck Book Masonry Book

 

 

 


 

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