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Thread: Basement walls

  1. #1
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    Basement walls

    So far it looks like South Carolina is not happening for us. So I am looking for a less costly place to live.



    Found this one house that seems ideal except for this basement wall. It bulges pretty far out. but...
    A. The thing has been concreted up. Looks like it is holding. You can see where the flashlight is that the regular wal was and where it was concreted up to cover the impending collapse. There are no cracks in the concrete.
    B. There was a wall built to the left of this shot to relieve the stress in this wall.

    So is this house worth the risk? Will this wall remain stable with any certainty?

  2. #2
    La Rata Del Desierto K7SGJ's Avatar
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    If it were me, and I was seriously considering buying the house, I would have a structural engineer look at it. Perhaps you could make it a condition of the sale and have the seller pick up the costs. Without it, I would be scared shitless that it might all cave in, and never get a good night of sleep.
    A clear conscience is usually a sign of a bad memory

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  3. #3
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    Finding an inspector is a task. The inspector we had from this hose was worthless. It was a mess of money we spent for nothing. Still cost us thousands in repairs within a year of moving in repairs required that was not caught. But your advice is sound if I can find a real structural engineer. I will look.

  4. #4
    Master Navigator AE1PT's Avatar
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    This is an expensive episode waiting to happen. Looks like there are already water issues.

    Very little that can be done here except break the wall out, excavate behind it, rebuild the wall after discovering what drainage or other issue caused the strain on the wall in the first place, rectifying that and then and put a waterproofing coat on all the block walls once rebuilt. Attempting to put horizontal anchors to retain the wall is a fool's errand. Believe me, as I have a master's degree in this stuff.

    Ask the seller to reduce the price of the house by at least five grand if you are really interested.
    Last edited by AE1PT; 03-03-2013 at 09:12 PM.
    Give a man a fish, and he will eat it. Teach a man to fish and he will spend lots of money on tackle...

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by AE1PT View Post
    This is an expensive episode waiting to happen. Looks like there are already water issues.

    Very little that can be done here except break the wall out, excavate behind it, rebuild the wall after discovering what drainage or other issue caused the strain on the wall in the first place, rectifying that and then and put a waterproofing coat on all the block walls once rebuilt. Attempting to put horizontal anchors to retain the wall is a fool's errand. Believe me, as I have a master's degree in this stuff.

    Ask the seller to reduce the price of the house by at least five grand if you are really interested.
    Your opinion on this means a lot Pat. Thanks.

    So are you saying that the job will cost $5000?

  6. #6
    Administrator N8YX's Avatar
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    I'm going to go with Pat on this. Said basement looks like an impending mess, and one wonders what else is going to have to be done in the way of exterior drainage improvements to prevent a recurrence.
    "Everyone wants to be an AM Gangsta until it's time to start doing AM Gangsta shit."

  7. #7
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    The cement looked several years old and there are no cracks so there is no settling. I thought it might be okay. If it will somehow restart crumbling, I would need to get it fixed.

  8. #8
    Island Godfather NA4BH's Avatar
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    How old is the house? Does the backyard slope towards the house?
    "Friendships come in strange packages
    The best ones are opened with a smile"

    NA4BH '15

  9. #9
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    I think the house was built in 1943. The land immediately surrounding the house is relatively flat. The wall bulge is in the front of the house.

  10. #10
    Island Godfather NA4BH's Avatar
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    For whatever reason the basement wall has pressure on it and it's not likely to stop. If this is in the Chicago area and the bulge is due to water, a couple of good freezes is going to push that wall down. Personally I'd steer clear of the future money pit and look elsewhere. Let the current owners find a new fish to take on their problems.
    "Friendships come in strange packages
    The best ones are opened with a smile"

    NA4BH '15

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