Stem Wall Slab Foundations | The HOW and WHY

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  • Опубликовано: 19 май 2024
  • Learn about how (and why) Addison Homes builds a high performance stem wall slab foundation!
    #HealthyHighPerformanceHomes #DwellWell
    0:00 Intro
    0:58 Stem Wall Construction
    2:58 Why Stem Wall Slab?
    3:34 Dealing with Grade Change
    5:15 Coming into Shape
    7:29 Insulation
    9:48 Next Steps
    10:20 Recap
    10:43 Outro
    ---
    Website: www.addison-homes.com/
    Facebook: / addisonhomes
    Instagram: / addisonhomes
    Twitter: / addisonhomes

Комментарии • 97

  • @TheJake452
    @TheJake452 8 месяцев назад +4

    I'm new to construction. I inspect finished homes and apartments. My education was poor. So your video has been a tremendous help to me in understanding what a stem wall actually is. Thank you!

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  8 месяцев назад

      That's awesome to hear! Before I went fully into construction, I became a home inspector and witnessed many of the issues we now try to prevent in our new construction practices! Let us know if there are other topics you'd like to see covered!

  • @richardbeagan5039
    @richardbeagan5039 Год назад

    Awesome video! Answereed the questions that wake me up in the middle of the night as i plan on building our home.

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад

      So glad to hear! We work hard to share what we've learned over our 20 years of construction experience!

  • @Trapperjohn1000
    @Trapperjohn1000 Год назад +2

    I need this video. I just had plans drawn for a stem wall, slab and pier and beam. I definitely need to learn more about stems. Thanks for this video.

  • @organogold8
    @organogold8 8 месяцев назад +1

    This was very interesting. Thank you 😊

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  8 месяцев назад

      Glad you found it helpful!

  • @ericburdette4884
    @ericburdette4884 Год назад

    Awesome video Todd. Great information.

  • @briandonovan6546
    @briandonovan6546 Год назад +10

    man im jealous of you guys in the south. our footings here have to be 42" deep and that increases the cost A LOT

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад

      No doubt!!!! We have it easy in that respect for certain!

    • @kirankishore9934
      @kirankishore9934 7 месяцев назад

      I agree. Maybe, that is why most homes in the north have basement.

    • @backwardsrun
      @backwardsrun 7 месяцев назад

      Really it comes down to being jelous of our wearher

  • @billparsons7732
    @billparsons7732 9 месяцев назад +3

    Excellent presentation.

  • @realcomedyperrycoalmon9407
    @realcomedyperrycoalmon9407 3 месяца назад +1

    Good presentation of the process!!

  • @ahmedconstruction624
    @ahmedconstruction624 Год назад +1

    Very informative video and years of experience, thankyou for such informative video

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад

      You're welcome! Glad it was helpful!

  • @D.N.R.911
    @D.N.R.911 Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing

  • @squeekhobby4571
    @squeekhobby4571 Год назад

    Great information

  • @reginabrown7532
    @reginabrown7532 3 месяца назад +1

    I got a better understanding with your videos

  • @tonybrischler5172
    @tonybrischler5172 Год назад +6

    I'm enjoying this series. You give a nice summary of the steps and materials required in a no-nonsense manner. Very professional! We are building outside of Atlanta next spring and our footprint will be about 131' x 72', which includes garages and patios. Given the size it seems like a stem wall slab foundation rather than monolithic is the way to go (crawl space is too expensive.)
    A few questions, please: how thick a slab would you recommend? Looks like you'll be pouring a 6" slab on this particular house; will that suffice for something as large as my slab? What if I wanted 8" thickness, or would that be overkill?
    And maybe I missed it; I saw the piping to be "slabbed," but I didn't see the water lines. How did you handle those?
    Would you be able to share a rough cost of the foundation build up to this point, just as a reference?
    It's been a few months since this video so hope you post updates on this build! Thanks!

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад +4

      Thanks so much for the kind comments Tony! So glad you are finding the information useful. That is our goal. The stemwall slab, in our opinion, reduces any chance of slab heave that could occur with a monolithic slab. Be sure that you have sawcuts or explansion joints in your slab being that size to prevent excessive cracking. The slab in this video will be poured at 4" thick with grade beams poured to 10" thick under any load bearing walls. The 4" slab is perfectly adequate for a residential building but does need grade beams installed under load bearing walls sized based upon the load they carry and your soil conditions. If you wanted additional strength in your slab, I would suggest welded wire mesh and/or higher strength concrete before I would go thicker.
      We typically keep our drain lines beneath the slab for obvious reasons but run our water lines overhead for access and ease of layout for efficient hot water distribution. They are insulated and buried in the attic insulation.
      The direct costs were around $36k including the footings, walls, backfill, insulation and concrete slab.

    • @tonybrischler5172
      @tonybrischler5172 Год назад +1

      @@AddisonHomes Very helpful, thanks. Todd. Appreciate you taking the time to respond.

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад

      @@tonybrischler5172 You are so very welcome! Glad to assist.

  • @SantiagoRodriguez-mi9zt
    @SantiagoRodriguez-mi9zt Год назад +1

    Awesome video, Thank you for sharing it!!
    Quick question... Here in florida, the plumbing underground pvc pipes cannot be seating under rock foundation, we need sand underneath. Since you are using rock... do you need a soil compaction test before pouring??
    thank you!

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад +1

      Great question. It depends on the jurisdiction as to whether they require that we bed the plumbing drain lines in dirt or will allow stone. Our plumbers typically lay in some red dirt (in our market) on top of the stone under the pipes to prevent any issues.
      If we have portions of the foundation that we backfill with compacted soil, we always test compaction.

  • @bjhoneycutt2450
    @bjhoneycutt2450 Год назад

    Great video thank you!
    I have a garage almost starting to build. 54 by 80. 3 ft foundation, one ft steam wall. In Utah would you recommend same style of installation?

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  11 месяцев назад

      This can work but your climate zone and local code will determine the required depth of your footings and foundation. There are also options for frost protected foundations that allow for more shallow footings / foundations in colder climate zones.

  • @PatrickPrice-ny2ie
    @PatrickPrice-ny2ie 8 месяцев назад

    New Sub!

  • @vincentperry3156
    @vincentperry3156 2 месяца назад

    I like the 6" perimeter block on top, Did the inspector let you install verticle rebar after footing was poured . The 1st. video , there was no verticle rebar coming out of the footing.

  • @wilsonatore
    @wilsonatore Год назад

    Cool video, I'm taking NC contractor classes now and am wondering why no dowels/rebar sticking up from the footing into the blocks @6:00 mark?

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  11 месяцев назад

      The rebar extending up from the footings aren't necessary when the interior fill isn't over 2-3'. Code requires it over 4' but we typically add it if we are filling more than 2-3' with stone. It would be critical to incorporate when backfilling with compacted dirt fill.

  • @erictorbet8104
    @erictorbet8104 Год назад +1

    For constructing the stem wall, please explain the pros/cons of footings+CMU vs. all one pour for the footing/stem-wall. (The slab is still a separate pour in both cases.). Maybe it's not easy to create that ledge if it's a concrete pour?

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад

      We’ve never seen a footing and stem wall poured at one time. A poured in place stem wall would typically be formed on a footing previously poured. In our market, this would be more expensive than a CMY stem wall and many poured wall contractors wouldn’t be interested in such a small job. The other alternative would be the monolithic slab where the footings and slab are poured together.

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад

      CMU- sorry

    • @erictorbet8104
      @erictorbet8104 Год назад

      @@AddisonHomes Okay, thank you, good to know!

    • @barkleymencer2434
      @barkleymencer2434 11 месяцев назад

      Yes, thank you for explaining things so well!!! I am grateful to have found your videos!! Keep them coming pls

  • @stephengstokes
    @stephengstokes 6 месяцев назад +1

    Terrific video and explanation. What adhesive product are you using?

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  4 месяца назад

      Glad it is helpful! 3M Holdfast 70 is what we use.

  • @HistoricHomePlans
    @HistoricHomePlans Год назад +1

    I'm a residential designer. This was a great video and answered a lot of my questions.
    One last question - is there any cost advantage to doing a monolithic concrete pour, instead of his approach, which requires several steps?

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад

      On this particular foundation, we had some slope across 1/3rd of the foundation. The stem wall slab approach allowed us to adjust for this variation in elevation with a taller stem wall and internal fill material. This would have been difficult trying to approach the conditions with a monolithic slab.
      For a dead level site, a monolithic slab can definitely be done, but the foundation insulation is then exposed on the exterior of the foundation.

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад

      Sorry, just re-read your question. To answer your question regarding cost, it can definitely be more cost effective to do a monolithic slab depending on the market, labor availability, etc. Hope that helps!

    • @mikeholman4284
      @mikeholman4284 11 месяцев назад

      @@AddisonHomes Why couldn't you make it level with a building pad? Planning to build a home myself in Florida, hoping to educate myself. Looking to build an uber reinforced concrete home (1900 square feet). Since I'm doing the work myself, I'll spend money on Owens Corning pink rod rather than steel, fiber reinforcement throughout all concrete. It will be a 2 year project.

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  11 месяцев назад

      @@mikeholman4284 We have rolling topography here in the foothills of SC and there are many sites where moving that much dirt around isn't possible due to the proximity of other homes or the topography itself. In this case, the house was adjacent to a nice pond

  • @Wildernesbear
    @Wildernesbear Год назад

    I'm building my spouse here in NC this exact same way, I've got a question. I'm curious about how yall do your foundation drains, and also what you do about all the water that will be trapped on the interior of the home if it rains before you pour the slab?

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад

      On stem wall slab foundations, a perimeter foundation drain and waterproofing isn’t required.
      We’ve never had any issues with water being trapped within the stem wall prior to pouring concrete. Any rainwater that falls prior to pouring the slab just soaks into the soil beneath.
      If water table was a concern, drains can be added through the stem wall to relieve any water that might come up from beneath.

  • @GiftHorse123
    @GiftHorse123 10 месяцев назад +1

    Was it wise to have the PVC rough plumbing to be in direct contact with the course stone? Maybe should have had a pile of clean sand to lay in the trench then install the PVC on top of the sand. I used this technique in S. Florida, where our monolithic slabs needed to be elevated to meet a minimum floor elevation relative to the crown of the road. The plumbers would create their trenches in crushed rock backfill, install the clean sand, then install the underground PVC.

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  8 месяцев назад

      This is typical practice in our market. We don't see much sand used in construction in our market. I know other markets where sand is the predominant fill material. I supposed it depends on what is readily available in a given area.

  • @garrettp.5018
    @garrettp.5018 Год назад

    Another important detail when doing a stem wall is how the soil was back filled in layers. Ideally it should be 12" layers then a jumping jack compaction (because the skid steer will blow out the walls). This is repeated every 12" until it gets to grade.
    Is this what your team does?

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад +2

      Great point. We actually go one step further and backfill with stone that requires minimal compaction and avoids the issue with too much pressure against the foundation.

    • @garrettp.5018
      @garrettp.5018 10 месяцев назад

      @@AddisonHomes I noticed that! I should of done that on the side of my foundation that is 6'+ feet on the stem wall. If you do stone do you have to do 100% stone or can you fill some portion with fill and some with stone? You fill with 57 stone?

    • @GiftHorse123
      @GiftHorse123 10 месяцев назад

      If these stemwalls start to get pretty high, it is required by Code to have interim compaction of the backfill, otherwise, settling can occur. The other thing to consider is installing a floating structural slab if the compaction cannot be fully achieved.

  • @oldowl4290
    @oldowl4290 3 месяца назад

    Technically speaking, a CMU should be called a Cement Masonry Unit as there is no rock or aggregate in the mix to make them Concrete.

  • @raylebonville7499
    @raylebonville7499 Год назад +1

    I found this interesting and also a little concerning because you seemed to suggest that backfilling with dirt would increase the risk of a blow out. I wish to do this build debit free so I'm trying to save money at each step when possible. Dirt is a lot cheaper lol. my wall is only 4 courses high with L blocks on top so a total of 5 this is the tallest portion of the wall . what do you think about a dirt fill of about 3 ft with stone the rest of the way? TIA

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад +2

      Thanks for the comment! Backfilling with dirt can increase the risk of damage to the wall when compacting the dirt close to the wall. A couple of thoughts for your project:
      - to reduce the risk of damage to the wall with relatively small amount of backfill (4 courses = 32 inches), you can stub up some rebar out of the footing every 4 feet or so and fill the cells of the block at the rebar with mortar. This will add strength and keep the wall from pushing if you compact the fill close to the wall.
      - with only 32 inches of fill, depending on how you plan to compact the dirt fill, stay back a few feet from the wall so you don’t put too much pressure on the wall from the dirt. Your slab will be supported by your block at the perimeter and can easily span 2-3 feet of less compacted fill. You could add some rebar from the L-block back to the well compacted fill for additional support.
      Hope that makes sense!

  • @johnmed1972
    @johnmed1972 Год назад

    Nice video...how do you anchor you sill plates? Thanks

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад

      Fantastic question! We actually embed them in the concrete slab when we pour. Its a more solid connection to the slab.

    • @johnmed1972
      @johnmed1972 Год назад

      @@AddisonHomes Thanks for you response..just curious how this is done if you have 4" frame wall over 4" block.Are you using a 90 degree strap anchor? Thanks

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад

      @@johnmed1972 Absolutely - The inside of our exterior walls are actually 5" in from the outside of foundation (1" Foam Board, 7/16" sheathing, 3.5" stud) and we use a standard foundation strap which we lay into the concrete at an angle so the two straps sit under the framed wall.

  • @MrLoudog7
    @MrLoudog7 10 месяцев назад

    Is there any need for drain pipe and stone under or behind the footing? I see tons of homes in the south with none.

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  10 месяцев назад

      No perimeter drain is needed for a stem wall slab or monolithic slab unless there are bulk water issues. No stone is required either, but we often use stone for the backfill inside a stem wall slab.

  • @garrettp.5018
    @garrettp.5018 Год назад

    I am also in SC (Anderson) I did a stem wall on my build mainly because I like the features of a slab over a crawl. I didn't weight the two from a cost perspective. Is stem wall slab better value than an encapsulated crawl? I know slab on grade mono is the cheapest foundation (which is why all the production builders do it).

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  11 месяцев назад +1

      The cost depends mostly on the topography of the site and how tall the stem wall and crawlspace walls must be. On a relatively flat site, the stemwall will be less expensive than the encapsulated crawlspace by a significant difference.

    • @garrettp.5018
      @garrettp.5018 10 месяцев назад

      @@AddisonHomes Thanks for the reply! My property was very similiar to this where about 1/4 of the perimeter was about 6-8 blocks high. I really like my stem wall slab and like the firm ground underneath vs a crawlspace. Also, like knowing no critters are living underneath my feet lol
      My stem was foundation was also with 4" block and exposed brick sandwiched together.. Why would some foundation experts build it this way vs coming in after and doing the brick on the exterior of a CMU?

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  10 месяцев назад

      @@garrettp.5018 if the desired exterior finish is brick, then masons will often lay brick and 4” cmu together as you describe. The brick technically needs to be structural since most of the exterior wall bearing sits on the brick.
      If the brick was installed outside of the 8” and 4”, it will site beyond the framed wall and require a brick water table cap to terminate. This is, however, exactly how it would be done if the entire building would have brick veneer siding - the brick would sit outside the block foundation and extend up the outside the framed wall and up to the soffit.

    • @garrettp.5018
      @garrettp.5018 10 месяцев назад

      @@AddisonHomes Okay, So the foundation with the brick and 4" CMU would yield a brick wrap slab only foundation. The siding would protude past the brick. If I wanted a brick roll off I would do the brick as an exterior off of an 8" CMU? This would give the depth to stick out past the siding?
      What prep has to be done if the brick will be the siding? It would start off of the footers and build up? Then there need to be an air gap between the sheeting and the brick wall?
      BTW, I emailed your on your business email. Thought this might be the best way to get in contact with you since I am local to Anderson, SC.

  • @chrisw6734
    @chrisw6734 Год назад +1

    Hey. Can you do this in cold climates? Thanks!!

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад +1

      Yes, absolutely

    • @canonicaltom
      @canonicaltom Год назад +2

      No, any foundation system in a cold climate must guarantee that the concrete doesn't freeze. In this case you would have to add horizontal insulation on the exterior to make a frost-protected shallow foundation (FPSF)

  • @niveknospmoht8743
    @niveknospmoht8743 10 месяцев назад +1

    A header block will accomplish the same thing, be stronger, and still give you room for anchor bolt centering.

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  10 месяцев назад +1

      Unfortunately the header block approch prevents the ability for the perimeter insulation which is why we do not use the header block.

  • @Beloved20223
    @Beloved20223 Год назад +1

    Is stem cell wall foundation or monolithic slab more appropriate for south texas?

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  Год назад +2

      David- It really depends on the soil bearing capacity in your area. If you have expansive clay soils, these may require an engineered slab foundation. Be sure to check with a local structural or soil engineer to be certain. If the soil type is conducive to standard prescriptive foundation types, you should be good with either type of slab foundation.

    • @Beloved20223
      @Beloved20223 Год назад

      @@AddisonHomes Thank you very much!

  • @tracymankey9314
    @tracymankey9314 7 месяцев назад

    I wish you would show the rest of the video of laying the fine gravel down and the styrofoam and the plastic

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  6 месяцев назад

      We are working on some videos for this now! Stay tuned.

  • @juliojames5986
    @juliojames5986 11 месяцев назад

    This method looks labor intensive, needing serious payback in insulation gain, both heating and cooling . The density strength of foam board also a concern. Great presentation at any rate…thanks .

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  11 месяцев назад

      Thanks for sharing your thoughts. We have found that a typical foundation can be insulated on the perimeter in less than 2 hours. The “score board” foam is best since it doesn’t require cutting. Incremental improvement and extreme comfort is what we are after. The compressive strength of most commercial XPS foam is 25 psi. That is 3600 pounds per square foot - well beyond the required soil bearing capacity for a foundation, so we don’t have any issues with the compressive strength of the foam. Thanks again!

    • @juliojames5986
      @juliojames5986 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@AddisonHomes Thanks for the comeback. I was off the wall guessing, an old retired guy, with construction background. 👍🏻😁

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  11 месяцев назад +1

      @@juliojames5986 thanks much! All great conversation and you bring up some great points of clarification!

  • @craigedelmann6476
    @craigedelmann6476 7 месяцев назад

    I would never do block and only do a poured concrete wall!

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  7 месяцев назад

      Everyone certainly has their preferences. In my view, it comes down to performance, cost, sustainability, and availability of trades to reliably perform the work. In our market, CMU block performs excellent, is more cost competitive, has a lower environmental impact, and we have readily available materials and labor to install. Some of these factors will vary by market.

    • @craigedelmann6476
      @craigedelmann6476 7 месяцев назад

      @@AddisonHomes Well being in the concrete field for 30 years second gen poured walls are cheaper as well as stronger and more durable.

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  7 месяцев назад

      @@craigedelmann6476 not sure what market you’re in, but we’ve not found poured walls to be less expensive than CMU. Not sure how poured concrete is any more durable than filled concrete cmu. As someone in the concrete field, how do you the cost numbers in your market compare- poured concrete vs cmu?

  • @bradkvanbek7148
    @bradkvanbek7148 Месяц назад

    There are better ways to build a wall. ICFs (Insulating Concrete Forms) are easier to work with, already insulated and poured concrete is far stronger than CMUs. ICFs are better than stick framing too.

  • @dammitbobby283
    @dammitbobby283 7 месяцев назад +1

    Typical Southern US failed logic for not insulating, "Well it doesn't get cold here". My inlaws didn't insulate their new house slab floor in SC and have a $700 a month, every month, electric bill on a 2,200 sqft home. They can NEVER fix the non-insulated floor. Don't listen to these types of lazy contractors, buy the insulation for the floor and forget about it. Insulation is WAY lower cost than heating/cooling bills. Keep in mind, the heating/cooling bill will increase for the rest of your life because of inflation but the floor insulation is a one-time cost.

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  7 месяцев назад +1

      Everyone is entitled to their opinion, but we like to work with data. Data, not "failed Southern logic". Your inlaws home in SC has far more going on than an uninsulated slab with an electric bill of $700/month for 2,200 sqft!!!!! Sounds to me like a new home that was simply "built to code" with likely some massive envelope air leakage and some poorly designed mechanical equipment. Sure would like to know more about his house - its definitely not the result of an uninsulated slab. Follow the building science and the data! A simple energy monitoring setup would allow them to pinpoint the source of the energy waste!

    • @dammitbobby283
      @dammitbobby283 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@AddisonHomes There's no data. Contractors in the south skip on insulation because they're lazy. They ALWAYS use the same logic fail that you've used in this video "It doesn't get cold (ground temp 60F)". The homeowner who falls for the sales pitch has no clue what they're buying.

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  7 месяцев назад +2

      @@dammitbobby283 It's unfortunate that you insist on making broad generalizations that are not backed with any discernable data. This is the epitome of flawed logic.

    • @dammitbobby283
      @dammitbobby283 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@AddisonHomes Data? Ok, you want data, you literally said it in this video (60 ground temp, no insulation needed).

    • @AddisonHomes
      @AddisonHomes  7 месяцев назад +2

      Data - The house that was built on the foundation in the video has an average total electric bill of $100 per month for 2,800 square feet. The lowest bills (~$70 per month) are in the cooling season due to the reduced cooling loads from the ground temp beneath the slab. The highest bills are in the heating season (~$135/month for 3 months) due to the slight penalty from the ground temp.