Chuck52
Veteran Member
The main part of my 50+ year old house is on a full basement, and the garage and laundry room are on an attached slab. The slab has settled a bit over the years relative to the rest of the house, and I decided to get estimates on stabilizing and perhaps lifting the slab back up to square with the rest of the house. I'm going to get at least three or four estimates, but after getting the first I figured I'd ask the collective intelligence we call TBN for comments.
Perma Jack and Ram Jack seem to be two national brands...perhaps franchises. The local Perma Jack fella came by yesterday. He said it would take eight driven piers spaced at eight feet to do the job. He suggested a minimal lift, as our settling hasn't caused major mis-alignment and, as he put it, what took many years to get to shouldn't be pushed back in twenty minutes. He said they could easily lift the slab all the way back, at no extra cost, but he would recommend just stabilizing and then doing the necessary cosmetic fixes to door and wondow frames, since too much lift could easily do much more damage than we have. Sounded reasonable to me. Then we got to the fee. About $1200 per pier, with some extra charge if they had to do the needed removal of a concrete walkway.
I have two other estimates coming, but does anyone have experience with such work? I've seen it done on a much larger scale on an elevator add-on to a local building. In that case, the elevator shaft was enclosed in an add-on structure to a building, and after a few years it began to lean. Piers were sunk and it was jacked back into alignment, but in just two years it began to lean again. This was a really heavy load, composed of a three story, limestone veneer structure. I suspect that my slab can be brought back to near alignment and then be stable, I hope.
So, anyone had this kind of work done? How did it come out, and how much did it cost?
Chuck
Perma Jack and Ram Jack seem to be two national brands...perhaps franchises. The local Perma Jack fella came by yesterday. He said it would take eight driven piers spaced at eight feet to do the job. He suggested a minimal lift, as our settling hasn't caused major mis-alignment and, as he put it, what took many years to get to shouldn't be pushed back in twenty minutes. He said they could easily lift the slab all the way back, at no extra cost, but he would recommend just stabilizing and then doing the necessary cosmetic fixes to door and wondow frames, since too much lift could easily do much more damage than we have. Sounded reasonable to me. Then we got to the fee. About $1200 per pier, with some extra charge if they had to do the needed removal of a concrete walkway.
I have two other estimates coming, but does anyone have experience with such work? I've seen it done on a much larger scale on an elevator add-on to a local building. In that case, the elevator shaft was enclosed in an add-on structure to a building, and after a few years it began to lean. Piers were sunk and it was jacked back into alignment, but in just two years it began to lean again. This was a really heavy load, composed of a three story, limestone veneer structure. I suspect that my slab can be brought back to near alignment and then be stable, I hope.
So, anyone had this kind of work done? How did it come out, and how much did it cost?
Chuck