RyanBuilder
REGISTERED
Hello all, I'm building a home in Massachusetts near the ocean. We have a walkout basement on one side and I needed to step the trench down for frost protection under the door. The soil is terrible, all hard clay and we dug to right above the water line for the rest of the footings. The step down trench is full of water and this project has a conservation order of conditions which says we cannot dewater. Since it would have been impossible to pour without dewatering, the engineer came up with a plan to construct a dewatering trench to pump the water to, which we dug and laid out last week.
Planning to pour yesterday, I showed up and the step down trench was full of water so I turned the pump on. Then I checked on the dewatering trench and it was filled to brim with water. There is no place to put it!
My thought is to fill in the step down trench where we need the frost projection with stone, but that will only leave us 2' below grade. How can I properly insulate this with rigid foam? It seems like this is my only option since we can't get rid of the water. I've never had to do this before. Thanks in advance!
Planning to pour yesterday, I showed up and the step down trench was full of water so I turned the pump on. Then I checked on the dewatering trench and it was filled to brim with water. There is no place to put it!
My thought is to fill in the step down trench where we need the frost projection with stone, but that will only leave us 2' below grade. How can I properly insulate this with rigid foam? It seems like this is my only option since we can't get rid of the water. I've never had to do this before. Thanks in advance!