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Causes of Foundation
Problems
Water is the main catalyst for foundation settlement. There is either too much water, causing
the soil to swell, or not enough, causing the soil to shrink.
If all soils beneath a
foundation swells uniformly or shrinks uniformly it is unlikely
to cause a problem. But when only part of the foundation heaves
or settles, differential movement causes cracks and other damage.

Most differential movement
is caused by differences in soils moisture. After construction,
soil beneath part of the foundation becomes wetter or drier than
the rest of the soil.
Here is why this happens:
1. When there is a gain in soil moisture:
This is the most serious threat since the swelling potential of
expansive soils is much greater than the shrinkage potential. Moisture
gain can come from plumbing leaks, subsurface water like wet weather
or a high water table, or surface water. Surface water is improper
drainage of landscape water or rainwater.
Poor drainage can be a major contributor to soil moisture gains.
Roof runoff should be directed away from the house through the use
of gutters. Gutter downspouts should not be permitted to discharge
the water next to the foundation. Surface drainage next to the foundation
should slope away from the house approximately ¼ " per
foot.
2. When there is a loss of soil moisture:
The soil may be at or near its optimum moisture content when the
foundation is built, but it may lose enough moisture during a drought
to cause the foundation to settle. Settlement is usually greatest
near the perimeter of the foundation where the soil dries most quickly.
3. Extremely low or high soil moisture during construction:
If the soil content is very low when a slab-on-grade foundation
is poured, soil to the slab edges regains moisture first because
it is directly exposed to rain water or irrigation water.
If the soil moisture is extremely high during construction, the
slab will hold in the moisture except at the perimeter, where it
is exposed to more wind and heat. In cases like this the slab edge
loses moisture at a different rate than the soils under the house
and the house will settle.
4. Poor Pre-Construction Compaction of the building
pad:

Slab-on-grade foundations
depend on the uppermost soil layers to provide bearing capacity
to support the structure and keep the foundation stable. If the
bearing soil was not compacted properly during grading, the foundation
is subject to settlement as the supporting soil consolidates.
Also of concern is when
a structure is supported by various soil conditions. In this case
the house may settle differentially . As an example, if
one half of the foundation sits upon expansive clay and the other
half bears on select fill and/or rock, the amount of seasonal movement
will vary from one half to the other half. If the foundation system
is not properly designed, the differential movement may cause damage
to the foundation and structure.
Have your foundation
professionally evaluated at no charge. Contact our office
to schedule an appointment with one of trained technicians
today
1-888-264-3121
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