Hi everyone,
We have had a huge amount of snow in late winter that melted pretty much all at once.
After the thaw, we realized our deck was buckling in the center and it looked like our center support beam (on a concrete footing) settled 3-4 inches during the thaw. (the house is 10 years old, we've been in it for a year and had not noticed any sagging prior to this event)
We have pretty sandy soil, and experienced unprecedented snowfall (like worst the season in 25 years) so I'm assuming thats the culprit.
Anyway - we've been calling contractors to see about getting it repaired. The first one that came out recommended just replacing the beam itself, and not doing any sort of backfill in the dirt / gravel area under our deck (which is about ~6 feet above the ground).
We had assumed that a portion of the process would have been to put in additional soil / gravel as well, or in place of, replacing the original post.
I've never dealt with settling issues in the past. Can anyone let me know what the 'best practice' is for this kind of repair?
Thanks!
We have had a huge amount of snow in late winter that melted pretty much all at once.
After the thaw, we realized our deck was buckling in the center and it looked like our center support beam (on a concrete footing) settled 3-4 inches during the thaw. (the house is 10 years old, we've been in it for a year and had not noticed any sagging prior to this event)
We have pretty sandy soil, and experienced unprecedented snowfall (like worst the season in 25 years) so I'm assuming thats the culprit.
Anyway - we've been calling contractors to see about getting it repaired. The first one that came out recommended just replacing the beam itself, and not doing any sort of backfill in the dirt / gravel area under our deck (which is about ~6 feet above the ground).
We had assumed that a portion of the process would have been to put in additional soil / gravel as well, or in place of, replacing the original post.
I've never dealt with settling issues in the past. Can anyone let me know what the 'best practice' is for this kind of repair?
Thanks!
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