DIY Concrete Foundation for a Garage or Shed (With Curb Wall!)
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- Опубліковано 27 чер 2021
- #EverythingAboutConcrete #MikeDayConcrete
This is a diy concrete foundation we did for a garage. The garage slab was 16' x 24'. You could use this slab foundation for a shed also.
We added a two foot high curb wall to the foundation slab so the exterior could be back filled higher than the slab height.
To learn how to install concrete slabs like we do, you can either join The Concrete Underground or get my Concrete Slab Course below.
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/ everythingaboutconcrete - Навчання та стиль
Wire mesh is the most ineffective slab reinforcements one could use. I removed a slab I placed 30 years ago and almost all of the mesh was rusted and corroded. The only good thing was that it made it easier to demo. Pulling up on the mesh is pointless when the finishers step right into the concrete afterwards, pushing it back down to the ground.
The best reinforcement is #4 rebar set at an 18" on-center grid with dobies at 36" on-center; 2" dobies for a 4" slab and 3" dobies for a 6" slab. Also, forget the fiber-mesh, the best crack control is saw cutting the control joint grooves a day or two later at 1/3 of the depth of the slab; 1-3/8" for a 4" slab, and 2" for a 6" slab and dividing up the surface area into a maximum of 7 foot by 7 foot squares.
One of the best methods of crack control I can tell you is to take your 2" x 5" margin trowel and push in down into the slab at all joint locations where the control joint meets a structure, drain, form, or at the beginning and the end of the joint. This insures the cracks to follow the joints and gets the saw cut closer to the end of the joint where the saw can't reach.
Authored by Steve Milovich GC of 42 years
You’re a treat to watch. Plain, simple, concise, informative. It’s really nice to watch a crew who truly cares about the outcome- not just running to the bank to cash the check. Thank you.
It's amazing how the pros can make hard work look so easy. I'm glad you mention using a water reducer in the videos where you use it as I was concerned when I started watching your videos that pouring the mud that loose would affect the strength. Great tip. Keep the videos coming. Nice job.
I had lay very little concrete in my younger years but I had enjoy doing that. You guys make look so easy but is not, you have to be always on time and moving. Great job !! thanks for the video.
Watching Mike's videos makes me wish my guidance counselors talked about jobs like this instead of pushing college or military. Proud of my military service and 23 years in public safety, but I would love to earn a living doing this stuff.
Don't be sad little buddy , just because you lived off the taxpayer your whole life doesn't make you less of a man
Exactly the dimensions, door placements and orientation of my garage! Nice job Mike.
This brings us back to our good old days when all our jobs were 3 people max. Thank you for this !
Thank you for taking the time to film & explain it.
Very informative!
mike i like watch'n your stuff . . . no rocket science, no pandering just common sense, knowing your material and specs then getting it done. . . proper.
Really nice work Mike ! 💪🏼💯💪🏼
Perfect for my side shed plans in the Burbs on a slope.
You guys are pros and it shows.
Hey Mike have poured a lot of concrete in my day usually we inset a 2x4 tapered on each side for a keyway found that this helps prevent cold joints
WHERE?
@ZAPATTUBE either middle of your footings or middle of where the wall will go.
What is a keyway in concrete?
2x4 tapered on each end?
I'm a shade tree, can that be explained.....
Thanks
@@ChipsPlace1952 the 2x4 laid in the floor where the wall will go so as to create a channel and help lock in the wall. Tapered on either side so it's easy to remove the 2x4.
That looks awesome! I’m doing my next garage like that
Nice work. I like the smooth knee walls.
It looks great👍
Comments are hilarious. This is not a Condo in FL..... It's a frickin' garage.... Nice work.... I have done a few slabs and my work is a joke compared to the efforts here. And some are 20 years old with no issues. Nice content, very educational, and a chick on the team to boot. Awesome....
Great Video. Thanks!!
Thank you
fantastic craftsmanship!!!
Excellent video!! Thank you.
Very nice. Nice you showed a different way. Some try to pour all one.
Good video. Made it look easy.
Tia had a really good go,hats off to her
To everyone commenting on chairs...plastic chairs usually break when people walk on them. Dobies can create voids. Not to mention trying to wheel on chairs or dobies. Pulling up the wire is fine. I have done many tear outs where the wire is on the ground. It was not pulled up. When I pour...I pull it up and double check as I’m pouring by looking at the bar that has not been covered in concrete. Give it an extra yank before I walk back in it to screed. It NEVER sinks all the way to the ground. The aggregate settles underneath it. Usually when you find wire on the ground it’s because people get in a hurry and FORGET TO PULL IT UP. People ask how is this monolithic? The slab has thickened edges that will be below finished grade. Theirs no need for 48” . As others have stated it’s a floating floor...that’s why the walls are on TOP of the slab. He did put in L bars and I’m sure he put them in more than just the corners. You twist the L bar so it becomes a part of the slab. Also, commenters, what kind of strength would tying flimsy wire to the upright or horizontal floor add?? Nothing. I live in Nebraska..48” frost line is not required for a floating slab under 500 square feet. It’s detached and we’re not parking tanks or semis on it. It’s a one story SHED. Sorry to mention a competitor Mike, but watch Dave Odell. The guys a serious professional and NEVER uses chairs or dobies. I’m not sure if people are trying to “show off” with all of the knowledge they have...but a lot of the comments are ridiculous.
Wow, beautiful!
You’re a bad man! Great work Mike
Great video! Now I'm motivated to get out there and do my project!
This was really fun watching you guys. I really enjoyed it. Thanks a lot
Glad you enjoyed it!
those hob forms look like the go. pain setting up with timbers and also to pour in 1 hit nice work
Nice, very tidy work.
Wow ur a great teacher. Great video
Great work!!
Lady was amazing better then many apprentice 🍷🍷🍷🌹🌹🌹🌹👌👌👌👌👍
Nice job Mike...
Good to hear that Maine accent once again. Thanks for posting. Great job.
Nice job mike .
Good work. Thank you.
Great job!!!
That's another level ...
Nice job well done.
I do Concret in Indiana, you guys did a nice job.
Great job
I have been spring forms for a slab that I’m pouring tomorrow. The home owner did the sub grade himself and it was river rock with maybe three inches of sand over it. It was almost impossible to drive stakes. It took forever. I ended up just driving them held back and using shims to get the forms in place. He also wanted me to use lumber that he cut himself. It was rough cut so no planing. And the edges were not flat. It took a while before I realized why I couldnt get my forms to match my string line. I ended up planing the top edge of all the forms myself.
Those aluminum forms are nice
Nice job guys
Awesome job guys. I didn’t know you did walks as well. Those aluminum forms are a beautiful thing. We use 1 1/8” plywood panels. 4 bar 8’ and every thing else under 8’ including 2’ stackers
Great job. Guess this can be used even for a house or pole barn construction
Thanks for the video
very nice work.
A job well done!
Good job . I like it.
Really nice job.
thats really nice
Nice work
great job
Very nice!
Great video
Love aluminum forms. Kinda crazy that ties are hard to come by now
Nice job.
Thank you
Ya made that slab pour look easy. My old man said pour on sand the slab will never crack as the clay wont expand or contract it and crack . He used to do Mega structures...
We use chairs and for the Rebar and more steel in Australia..
Mike, thought monolithic slab would be continuous pour, slab and walls. Like your videos.Thanks
What do you use for screws Mike. We have been using timber lock screws. Love those things. Bought two big boxes bout 18 months ago, and prolly only lost a small handful since then.
“DIY”…first 30 seconds….hired excavator….hired Mike Day.
You could still rent an excavator and do everything yourself.
Hired concrete truck 😆
If you think your gonna poor a full on garage fondation with a hand mixer and concrete pouches
@@reminoel483 These DIY concrete guys probably can't mix a yard by hand in a day. Let them dream.
@@flocksbyknight Dude, you’ve got ZERO clue… 🤣👉🏼🤡
agree not bad at all...
Hey Nice workmanship and video. I would like to have this type Monolithic slab poured for a garage same size as this video. I’m in Jersey.
Hey That’s the size garage I’m looking to get. If you feel like coming to Jersey I have some work. Excellent video
From one Day to another Day, howdy.
Love that Maine accent! Been too long since I've visited Bangor. Greetings from your friends in Nova Scotia! Great video.
Thanks! 😃
Hi Mike,
Have you ever done concrete for an in ground basketball pole/backboard?
Nice
Great job! I wish you were in my area. I would definitely hire you. I have a couple concrete jobs I want done and am planning a garage in a year and it’s hard to find someone that cares to do quality work in my area. Enjoyed watching the video. Thanks
Do you guys do full basements? I'm looking to build a house in Wales and if thats something you do, I'd love to call to get a quote. This video was all I needed to tell me you guys would be the people for the job. Nice work.
That was beautiful and clean - I feel like I should build a house every day, just so I can see concrete poured and coming out beautiful like this -
Belo trabalho !! 👏👏👏👏 Sou empreiteiro.. no momento estou fazendo uma piscina ... Sou Brasileiro admiro seu trabalho
Obrigado. Saludos
Yes, that is a great laser.
Mike - I always love watching your videos! Question - what is the purpose of the "knee wall" for this garage? Backfill?
Yes, the outside grade was high on a couple sides.
It's like meditation to watch your videos. Do the concrete forms pop right after when it's time to remove them? Or do you have to nudge them off? Have been curious about that.Thx.
Very useful info! 1st question: how much does something like this cost? (Ballpark) and 2: you mentioned Maine and the use of materials in your mix. With that climate zone, does the mix of materials replace having to "tie in" the monolith slab into the Earth below the Frostline? I imagine the Frostline is likely below 48" there. If it was DIY and you didn't have the fancy ingredients, could you also use vertical rebar into the frostline depths? Or would something more substantial be required?
Is the knee wall slump thicker than the floor pour? Thanks Mike.
Just curious to you prefer a key way for the kneewall
Is there a video of you setting up the forms for the wall?
Hello. Does the course you're selling take into consideration soil type, weather conditions, etc? I am in the Catskills and it gets quite cold in winter (frost depth estimated to be around 50"). The soil is very very rocky, too. Would a simple slab be sufficient or do I need some kind of special considerations?
Looks great...This is in Maine? Aren't there codes for depths of footings and freeze depths up there? Down here in Mass., anything with a roof and/or decks must have 4' depths.
Yeah, those lasers are really great. Minimum fiddling required. I tell you, that slab looks more like 8 to 9 inches thick if those are 2×12s. That thing definitely ain't going anywhere. I normally don't put rebar in any slabs with fiber. I just pour them about 4 to 4.5 inches thick and I've never had any problems with them. It's a special case or customer request normally when I do use rebar. I guess it is a good insurance policy though.
EDIT: I just heard you say you're in Maine so is that the reason for the rebar, all the freeze/thaw movement going on?
Great videos! I'm still learning what all is needed in foundations and I'm wondering, would the metal mesh on the slab always sit on the ground and not be "suspended" in the concrete, like the walls or footings?
They sell what's called a "rebar chair" which is a small plastic piece that you can use to suspend the rebar while pouring, but in the video he says he is pulling up on the mesh as they pour. The guy walking over it while pouring is pushing it right back down though, it would seem.
Do you nail the aluminium forms to the wood forms for the curbs walls? And is the inside aluminun form screw to the slab? Thank you
QUESTION can you just have the knee wall on footings to leave the ground free of concrete maybe pour stone? would this be foundationally sound? For Central Ontario Canada
Would you do the same thing for a 40 by 60 shop? I live in Canada so I’m not sure if I should do monolithic slab or do a frost wall. If I do a slab I’d want a small concrete curb
Just get a 16ft screed much easier to screed from the outside. Even with a 14ft if you just borrow it back and forth. Come out flatter too. I carry a 10-12-14-16 and a 12ft magic screed on my truck. As for the wall do a keyway and water-stop bentonite. Other than that you guys work well together.
how long after did you form and pour after pouring the floor?
where do you get the forms? thanks nice video
will this work for a house? (codes)
Or do you do it the other way around. Pour the footer (tall) and then fill in the slab.
Sorta a short basement or finished crawl space.
IF you are pulling up the rebar or steel as you go along aren't you pushing it back down when you are walking back on the areas you had pulled it up?
I've always been curious about these kind of foundations. Do they heave in cold climates?
Diy bought and stacked bags hosed down
Is it possible to do the slab and knee walls in one pour ?
Does the knee wall bond with the slab or is it just the rebar holding the walls?
I still like what you did.
When do you have to dig below the frost line versus why does a monolithic slab with thickened edges not need to be below the frost line