DIY Builds
Photo: Karolina Grabowska
To answer your question, yes adding some portland cement will add a bit of strength, up to a point, then other additives are needed to get super concrete.
One Door Was Formal, the Other Was Not While one door may have led to a formal area, the other could have been used for day-to-day business. This...
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Most Lay‑Z‑Spa hot tubs tend to be stored in garages or sheds and we advise that you keep it off the ground, such as on a wooden pallet, as a...
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Start by insulating your shed. Keep heat trapped by adequately insulating your wooden garden building. ... Use electric radiators. Ideal for close...
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Although wood is a cheaper alternative to concrete, it ages faster and has higher maintenance and repair costs. Hence, while wood deteriorates...
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Tom M King If you feel the need for extra strong, just buy the 5,000 lb. mix. John K Jordan I do a lot of projects myself, start to finish. Like decks. Now I'm doing a porch 8 feet off the ground. One thing I've always done is use Quickcrete 80 lb bags to fill the Sonotubes as the footers. Years ago, I started buying a bag of Portland cement and adding a shovel to each bag as I mixed it thinking that would make it stronger. Am I right that this improves the strength of the concrete or not? Thought I would post this here in case someone might know. Dave, I do the exactly the same thing, even for footers. The extra cost and effort is almost nothing. I started adding a shovel of cement when I noticed the quality of the bagged concrete going down. Some was worse than others. Extra cement also makes a better finish on exposed concrete. With a porch as high as yours it doesn't pay to skimp. I built a 1000 sq foot 7 level deck with some of the levels about 12' off the ground and used 4x6 posts. I didn't fill sonotubes for footers but did fill 12" holes augered 4' into the ground with rebar and bagged concrete mix, enhanced as mentioned. (Frost depth is 18" here) I formed an above-ground square of 2x4s for the exposed surface and it was still perfect 30 years later. I've seen other installations start to crumble. As you know, the water and mixing and rodding has to be right too... I admit I may be a little more sensitive to the concrete consistency and quality since I worked as a concrete inspector in the 70s. I have plenty of stories of concrete failures. BTW, one way to guarantee a good concrete mix on the truck is to tell them you are a concrete inspector and will do a slump test on site. :) My concrete finishers laughed when they saw the rebar I put into my shop slabs, 12" centers and every intersection welded, but 3 years so far and not one crack, inside or out. Then they asked if I could do their forming and rebar when they built their own shop.
Building a standard porch roof costs $16 to $30 per square foot, though things like gable roofs with steep slopes or an unusual porch layout can...
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In answer to the question – can my neighbour stop me building my extension? The answer is no, they cannot. They can request additional details...
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BTW2, I do everything myself too (except finish concrete) This shop is 24x62 and every detail from the soil compaction to the light switch wiring is exactly the way I want it!
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