As the old saying goes, there's no accounting for taste.
And it cuts both ways.
And it cuts both ways.
My trilevels lowest floor is all a slab and we have no issues.They don’t work where it freezes. Period.
To have a stable foundation, you have to go below the frost line - which is five feet in Vermont.
That means you might as well have a basement.
If you put a slab on the ground - the frost will heave it up and down every winter. A house built on that wouldn’t survive.
You can do it for a barn, if the barn is actually supported by poles that go down five feet to the piers. Then the floor heaves and moves, and cracks, but the barn walls float above and stay steady and square.
Your slab is below the frost line.My trilevels lowest floor is all a slab and we have no issues.
Part of it is, the north side is totally exposed but there is a hill that slopes up as you go south. It’s possible it goes super deep (relatively speaking) into the ground though.Your slab is below the frost line.
Good to know! I’ll stick to machining, not engineering@Skippy722 - it has to be, or your house would’ve heaved and cracked.
The footers go down below the slab as well, making it stable in winter.
You can’t do a simple slab on grade up North like they do in the South.
It doesn’t work.
That’s how lots of them started out around here - contractor builds the “barn” and then the tax base is established …Imagine the property tax savings if the assessor doesn't figure out it's a residence.
Hmm... if it wasn't mother-in-law bait, one could consider parking a tiny single wide out front as camouflage. I think I'd rather risk the taxes.That’s how lots of them started out around here - contractor builds the “barn” and then the tax base is established …
Folks would build minimum inside and move in - continue working it.
Tax man is pretty much on to them.
One couple built a huge one - later closed in more of the inside as a “party area” - from the HVAC work that unexpectedly became taxable living space …
They built a new house and are turning it back into a barn …
I’m sure they hooked up with a real estate lawyer - the new house is large/nice and both structures are on 15 acres inside the city limits. With a Ford Platinum pickup, Lincoln SUV, and C8 Vette parked there - plenty grownup toys - doubt they are in a bind - just got really PO’d that a seldom used area increased taxes by 40% etc …Hmm... if it wasn't mother-in-law bait, one could consider parking a tiny single wide out front as camouflage. I think I'd rather risk the taxes.
A potential issue is if the property is what's called mixed-use (residence w/business) so the homeowners can't get residential financing.That’s how lots of them started out around here - contractor builds the “barn” and then the tax base is established …
Folks would build minimum inside and move in - continue working it.
Tax man is pretty much on to them.
One couple built a huge one - later closed in more of the inside as a “party area” - from the HVAC work that unexpectedly became taxable living space …
They built a new house and are turning it back into a barn …
They don’t work where it freezes. Period.
To have a stable foundation, you have to go below the frost line - which is five feet in Vermont.
In case you're interested there are 2 versions of slab-on-grade.Good to know! I’ll stick to machining, not engineering![]()
It is a commercial building. And $950K will get you something better than that.Curb appeal ? There is none. It looks like a $950k commercial building in an industrial park.