I discovered a vertical crack above grade and chiseled it out to see what was going on. Digging down revealed a couple of stepped hairline cracks, but nearly as bad as what you see above grade. The first photo shows the top of the foundation from inside the house. You can see rigid polystyrene on the inside wall between the blocks and the 2x4 framing. The second photo shows 9 rows of concrete blocks. From top to bottom:
Row 1: no mortar (vertical)
Row 2: cracked block (vertical)
Row 3: no mortar (vertical)
Row 4: cracked block (vertical)
Row 5: no mortar (vertical)
Row 6: cracked block (vertical)
Row 7: no mortar (vertical)
Row 8: no mortar (vertical and horizontal), but not cracked.
I thought I would fill the cracks with mortar from the outside, apply a membrane and 2" rigid polystyrene on the outside, then fill up the cell with cement from the inside all the way down to the footing. But the space is pretty tight and I don't think I could tap it down well enough so there wouldn't be a lot of air pockets. Any advice?
Row 1: no mortar (vertical)
Row 2: cracked block (vertical)
Row 3: no mortar (vertical)
Row 4: cracked block (vertical)
Row 5: no mortar (vertical)
Row 6: cracked block (vertical)
Row 7: no mortar (vertical)
Row 8: no mortar (vertical and horizontal), but not cracked.
I thought I would fill the cracks with mortar from the outside, apply a membrane and 2" rigid polystyrene on the outside, then fill up the cell with cement from the inside all the way down to the footing. But the space is pretty tight and I don't think I could tap it down well enough so there wouldn't be a lot of air pockets. Any advice?
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