forgeblast
Elite Member
Good luck!!
Good luck!!
Ok...I dug all day with a shovel, then shot the lines to make sure the sidewalk would slant down from the house and down from the cellar door. Then I got a pencil and drew out the door......and stepped back and looked at it. Holeey crap it would take a huge chunk out of the side of the culvert(30"x 68"). I knew the door would somewhat compromise the structural integrity of the culvert and I was prepared to reinforce it. However, after looking at it, the little voice says..."DO NOT CUT A BIG HOLE IN THERE". Add to this, I would need two trucks twice. A concrete truck and a belt truck(we don't have pumpers here for some reason). 3-4 yards of crete for the retaining walls and roof. Then on another day 3-4 yards for the sidewalk and entry door roof. Then I still need some kind of retainer walls(2) to get around to the house ...another 15'.
Soooo, I punted and spent 2 hours studying the problem. What I came up with is easier and cheaper.....a dog house on top of the concrete lid and a stairwell going down to a landing.....no retainer walls, no sidewalk, no ginormous hole. I will have to cut down from the top 2'ish and into the lid 2'ish to make the entry. The dog house will have a outside door and be insulated, then another door on the cellar that is also insulated.
On a good note, Laymon the BH guy had a good idea. Since you must have fresh air circulating he suggested using the drain tile as both drain and fresh air intake. Most cellars have two 3" or better vent pipes, one from the roof down almost to the floor, the other on the opposite side just at the roof. So I have is a good flow of cool air coming through them since the runs are both 30' underground. Stale air in a cellar causes rot and mold/mildew, so I will have 2 - 4" intake pipes and one 4" exhaust(maybe two) on the ceiling:
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...I plan on putting in an extra roof vent pipe...