Help with telescope pier on a patio......
Thanks so much for the responses..
I'm going to pour the pier first, surround it with a sand buffer, and then
let a concrete contractor do the rest. As many of you stated, the
contractor said that a solid slab was NOT the way to go. Instead he'll pour
a retaining wall, backfill with dirt (and drains), and pour a slab over the
dirt.
Thanks again, I sure do love the newsgroups...
Scott
"Barry Gloger" wrote in message
om...
"Scott M. Petty" wrote in message
...
I'm planning to mount a telescope pier (Astro Pier) on a to be poured
concrete slab. The slab would be on a slope (although the slab
obviously
would be level) and would vary between 1 and 5 feet in depth, being at
least
4 feet deep under the telescope pier. The overall size of slab would be
approximately 8 x 13 feet.
I think you're implying that the slope of the hill is 1/2; that is a
verticle drop of 4' over 8' of ground; quite steep. Such a slope is
plastic and will tend to flow, especially when wet and supporting the
weight of a concrete slab.
Since you want to level the ground, hire a landscaping/patio
contractor and build a proper retaining wall and fill the hole with
rock and dirt as he suggests. Then pour a proper slab ( depending on
your temperature zone and subsoil - you'll probably only need 6" -
streets are built with 9" concrete and highways with 12") over
aggregate & sand, isolated from the pier as others have described.
Expect to pay $100 per cubic yard for the concrete,
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