JohnDeere4300
Veteran Member
3. Basements are common in Colorado; but I'm less enamored with them as I get older, and wondering if we should go slab on grade. The downside of that is loss of storage space, resale value and tornado shelter. The upside is simpler construction and no stairs as this would be a single level building. The building site is essentially flat.
Thanks for the opinions!
Like some others have said... My vote is a Basement also.
When my Father-in-law built his new brick house he planned for a "basement/garage" before he even got started on the house.
The land where he built his house with a basement/garage is level ground, and this is how he done it.
He started with a slab and then laid blocks on 3 & sides and went up with the blocks 10ft. high, and then started building the house.
After he had the walls & floor built on the house, then he had dirt hauled in to fill in the (3 sides) and he covered up the blocks & had the dozer to slope the dirt....From the road you really can't tell that his house has a basement/garage, and it's not much of a slope (it still looks level)...You have to be standing in his driveway to notice that the land was filled in.
On the end where he didn't lay blocks all the way across, he put a garage door & a door to walk into the basement....He keeps his truck inside, ATVs, has a place for all his tools, a pool-table, laundry room and firewood.... and still has plenty of room...He use to keep his boat in there and then built another garage for that.
He also has a large wood stove in the basement, he ran the exhaust pipe into the chimney that is for the fireplace upstairs, and ran another pipe that gets heat from the stove(no sparks) into the duct-work of his house, and during the winter he can heat his basement & upstairs with that wood stove, and the heat from downstairs will make the hardwood floors fill warm....And during the summer it stays cool in there.
After the house was done then he built a elevator and when they go to the store, they can pull inside the basement/garage and put everything in the elevator & send it upstairs.... Its really nice for rainy days.
His oldest son is a superintendent & a electrician in the coalmines in Wheeling, WV and he can't figure out how my FIL built the elevator.... It runs on electric & lifts up & down using a cable & a big air-compressor.
When i built my home in 2001,i wished i had done mine the same way his is.... I have a two car garage built on the end of my home, and a couple years ago i had a company give me a rough estimate on lifting my home & garage and doing the block work, and it was thirty to forty thousand dollars.... and i plan to have it done maybe next year, the thing i didn't like was that we had to move everything out, and move into another house while the work was being done.
I vote for a basement because you have as much room downstairs as you do in the living area.