frost footings and drainage

   / frost footings and drainage #1  

5030tinkerer

Gold Member
Joined
Dec 27, 2005
Messages
457
Location
Iowa
Tractor
Kubota GL3830/GL5030
I am building a home with a walkout basement. ICF supplier says that only the non-frost footings need a drainage solution (whether it be form-a-drain or plain ol' drainage tile). Any comments on this? It seems logical that you shouldn't be worried about water in your basement from any water collecting well below the basement floor (at the 42" frost footing depth), but it also seems that the frost footing and wall would last a bunch longer if it wasn't subjected to hydraulic pressure on either side of it. Any thoughts? /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif
 
   / frost footings and drainage
  • Thread Starter
#2  
I am building a home with a walkout basement. ICF supplier says that only the non-frost footings need a drainage solution (whether it be form-a-drain or plain ol' drainage tile). Any comments on this? It seems logical that you shouldn't be worried about water in your basement from any water collecting well below the basement floor (at the 42" frost footing depth), but it also seems that the frost footing and wall would last a bunch longer if it wasn't subjected to hydraulic pressure on either side of it. Any thoughts? /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif
 
   / frost footings and drainage #3  
What is ICF /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif

If I had your intuition, I'd put the drains in where you think they should be (and I agree on their placement, especially from my experience 50 years ago in IA where there was clay soil and plenty of water even on top of the hills /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif )
 
   / frost footings and drainage #4  
What is ICF /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif

If I had your intuition, I'd put the drains in where you think they should be (and I agree on their placement, especially from my experience 50 years ago in IA where there was clay soil and plenty of water even on top of the hills /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif )
 
   / frost footings and drainage
  • Thread Starter
#5  
ICF's are insulated concrete forms (I am using IntegraSpec's product). I am tempted to add the 4" drain tile on the inside and outside of the frost footing (connecting the two sides) if nothing else to be able to connect it to a drain to daylight (about a 200' trench to accomplish this...) later if someone thought I needed it. Once the basement slab is poured, there would be no easy way to get the tile on the inside of the frost footing. A piece of me agrees with the ICF supplier (who is also a builder), but another piece of me questions it.
 
   / frost footings and drainage
  • Thread Starter
#6  
ICF's are insulated concrete forms (I am using IntegraSpec's product). I am tempted to add the 4" drain tile on the inside and outside of the frost footing (connecting the two sides) if nothing else to be able to connect it to a drain to daylight (about a 200' trench to accomplish this...) later if someone thought I needed it. Once the basement slab is poured, there would be no easy way to get the tile on the inside of the frost footing. A piece of me agrees with the ICF supplier (who is also a builder), but another piece of me questions it.
 
   / frost footings and drainage #7  
Just (almost) completed a large partial basement on a home addition. Used ICF and love it. Since I could not run the drain to daylight, because there was not enough fall, I had to use a sump pump. With all the rain we have had the last couple of weeks, the sump has had to kick in several times. (Note:landscaping isn't finished so the drain around the house does not slope correctly yet.) None the less, I'm sure all that hydraulic pressure would not have been good on the foundation and walls.

It is not that expensive to add drains now. I would surely play it safe and add them during construction.
 
   / frost footings and drainage #8  
Just (almost) completed a large partial basement on a home addition. Used ICF and love it. Since I could not run the drain to daylight, because there was not enough fall, I had to use a sump pump. With all the rain we have had the last couple of weeks, the sump has had to kick in several times. (Note:landscaping isn't finished so the drain around the house does not slope correctly yet.) None the less, I'm sure all that hydraulic pressure would not have been good on the foundation and walls.

It is not that expensive to add drains now. I would surely play it safe and add them during construction.
 
   / frost footings and drainage
  • Thread Starter
#9  
Clarification: I have drainage around my foundation. The question is whether I need drainage around my frost footings that set 44" below my regular non-frost footings.
 
   / frost footings and drainage
  • Thread Starter
#10  
Clarification: I have drainage around my foundation. The question is whether I need drainage around my frost footings that set 44" below my regular non-frost footings.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2011 FORD F750 XL SUPER DUTY DUMP TRUCK (A51406)
2011 FORD F750 XL...
2021 Caterpillar 428 4x4 Extendahoe Loader Backhoe (A52377)
2021 Caterpillar...
2019 CATERPILLAR D6T LGP HI-TRACK CRAWLER DOZER (A52705)
2019 CATERPILLAR...
2019 RBR Venturi 380 (A55301)
2019 RBR Venturi...
CFG MH12RX Mini Excavator (A49461)
CFG MH12RX Mini...
Plasmarc PM150 Plasma Cutter (A54811)
Plasmarc PM150...
 
Top