Footings Day 1
Posted on June 6, 2014 by
Today was the first day of installing the footings on our Earth Sheltered Umbrella home. You can find the video here.
After the initial excavation, we tried to stake out the basement but the hole wasn’t big enough and we had to call back the excavators to dig a little bit wider (see the last post). When I showed up on Friday (after a nearly a week off the site), I found that it was excavated well enough most of the way around, except on the north east side. On the west side, they had to excavate past the side of where the garage footing would have gone. The plan B had been to setup the footings for the basement and garage at the same time, but the over excavation cut into dirt under the garage, so we will need to save that for after the excavation. Plan C was to just form the basement footings and consider that practice for the rest later.
The crew from Dysert Concrete arrived on site around noon. There was a range of experience from one who had worked with Doug Dysert since they were both children, to the new guy who had started that week. No one on the team had ever done curved forms before, but they were all up to the challenge.
At one point, Doug sent the new guy to get the majibulator from the front of his truck. The new guy scrambled up out of the hole and got half way to the truck before Doug called him back and told him that there was no such thing as a majibulator.
Doug had brought 12 inch lap siding for the curved portions of the form and 2x12s for the straight parts. My computer model had made it pretty easy to estimate how much of each material we needed, but due to the change of plans (not doing the garage), I ended up with some extra materials on site. The lumber yard was out of stakes Doug bought 1x4s and sharpened them on site.
The team decided that Sherri and I had done a good job on the stakes (within a quarter inch and enough extra ones to capture the shape) so they used them directly and started forming within a few minutes.
Doug had brought his copy of my plans and we referenced it regularly. It was a bit of a hassle because the plans incorrectly showed the footings as 1.5 ft wide in the main view (the more detailed views correctly showed 2 ft). This caused at least one mistake where we made one of the piers 6 inches wider than it needed to be. The plans also did not include the extra footing bits that the building inspector wanted, so we had to remember to add those.
Doug had to leave part way through the afternoon for another appointment (so his crew will have work all summer), which left me responsible for the layout. Along the way, I made several mistakes that I realized right after the boards were cut and nailed into place. Some could be easily undone (such as the east pier where I just cut a board too long for where I intended it, but it still fit perfectly in the next spot. Other mistakes were not worth fixing and just added a little volume to the piers. The other guys (Baudillio and Jose) were pretty patient with me and only chucked a little when I would say, “No, wait, thats not right.” When I slowed down I made fewer mistakes. In total, I figure my errors only added about 4 cubic feet to the 18 cubic yards needed for the footing. That is less than 1 percent. (total concrete volume of the basement footings is 18 cubic yards (486 cubic feet) or about 73000 lbs).
I was very careful to place the inside boards so that each would only have 1 side and 1 end against concrete. This will make it much easier to remove them later.
The north east side of the site (top right corner of the scene, mostly off camera) was not excavated far enough and the guys had to dig it out manually… They ended up re-digging it numerous times because they didn’t throw the dirt in the right place (twice) and because the sand wall behind kept caving in and dumping more sand in the area. In the hot sun, it became a “laugh so you don’t cry” sort of thing, but we managed to get that last footing in and everyone left by 5:00 PM.
I noticed that when the guys wanted to keep their water jugs cool, they buried it in the cool earth. They didn’t build a little wooden box around it. Just sayin’
I also noticed that a couple of the guys put oats in the bottom of their water bottles… I wasn’t sure if they were eating those as a snack while they drank or had some other reason. The “new guy” asked about it and the others laughed and asked him if he ever had oat meal. “Same thing”, they said.
The laser level Doug brought was not working, so we just put the forms in for now and will need to come back next week to level them and add the ton (literally) of rebar.
When it was done and the guys were packing up, they said, “At first we thought the curves would be harder, but it all went pretty easy.” They all took pictures. I assume they don’t think most of their jobs are photo worthy.
If I did it again, I would use a saw table to make straighter cuts for the boards. The free hand cuts were pretty sloppy and made it harder to get the 90 degree angles for the piers. I guess it was good enough for footings work, but I don’t think it would have been any harder to make the more precise cuts and may even have made it easier to assemble and level. The hardest part would have been getting the table and power down into the hole.
Monday is rebar day, and hopefully I can get the building inspector out there on Wednesday so we can still pour this week… Now I need to think of what to do with the extra concrete. Any ideas? I am thinking a bucket rocket stove could use up a little.