After a long time of talking about I (with a lot of help from family) have finally broken ground on a wood-fired oven project. We'll be using the excellent Pompeii 42" plans.
As I mentioned in my introduction post we are facing some interesting challenges with this build. First, we're on an island northeast of Toronto, Ontario so materials have to be brought in by boat and all concrete will have to be mixed by hand. Secondly, our site sits on very little topsoil (2 - 4") and then levels of fairly solid limestone sandwiched between smaller layers of clay (see the first picture).
To give some extra weight distribution and provide support for finishing the outside of the block stand we dug a footprint bigger than recommended (ours is 79" X 92") and 15" deep. The next layer is six inches of solid dolomite limestone on top of clay and the frost line is somewhere in that six inches.
Our plan is to dig four piers (8" dia sonotube filled and reinforced with rebar) twelve inches deep (i.e. through the six of limestone and six of clay below it) and roughly under the eventual corners of the block stand (so in from the corners of the foundation pad. We'll then fill with gravel and pour a 4" slab tied into the piers. In other words we'll have 4 inches of slab supported by about 24 inches of pier in some places and 4 inches of slab on about 12-13" of gravel on dolomite in others.
Is there anything wrong with this plan? Should we tie the piers together laterally with poured grade beams? Should we used extruded foam board between the slab and gravel, at the bottom of the piers, or at the bottom of the grade beams?
Sorry to make my second post such a long one with so many questions but as you can probably tell I'm eager to get building. Thanks in advance for any help.
-David.
As I mentioned in my introduction post we are facing some interesting challenges with this build. First, we're on an island northeast of Toronto, Ontario so materials have to be brought in by boat and all concrete will have to be mixed by hand. Secondly, our site sits on very little topsoil (2 - 4") and then levels of fairly solid limestone sandwiched between smaller layers of clay (see the first picture).
To give some extra weight distribution and provide support for finishing the outside of the block stand we dug a footprint bigger than recommended (ours is 79" X 92") and 15" deep. The next layer is six inches of solid dolomite limestone on top of clay and the frost line is somewhere in that six inches.
Our plan is to dig four piers (8" dia sonotube filled and reinforced with rebar) twelve inches deep (i.e. through the six of limestone and six of clay below it) and roughly under the eventual corners of the block stand (so in from the corners of the foundation pad. We'll then fill with gravel and pour a 4" slab tied into the piers. In other words we'll have 4 inches of slab supported by about 24 inches of pier in some places and 4 inches of slab on about 12-13" of gravel on dolomite in others.
Is there anything wrong with this plan? Should we tie the piers together laterally with poured grade beams? Should we used extruded foam board between the slab and gravel, at the bottom of the piers, or at the bottom of the grade beams?
Sorry to make my second post such a long one with so many questions but as you can probably tell I'm eager to get building. Thanks in advance for any help.
-David.
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