Tiziminchac said:As long as the slab has been poured over firm ground you should be ok.
I didn't know that homes (other than those premanufactured trailer type homes) came on anything BUT a slab.
Toby'sFriend said:nearly all newer construction built in most parts of Texas is on a slab foundation. The type of soil and in alot of places the groundwater there makes it very difficult to build a basement.
And in Minnesota and Wisconsin, most houses have basements because we usually don't have groundwater close to the surface. We also need a place to go in case of tornados.Toby'sFriend said:nearly all newer construction built in most parts of Texas is on a slab foundation. The type of soil and in alot of places the groundwater there makes it very difficult to build a basement.
Not only have the inspector check the condition of the slab itself but any plumbing and wiring that has been routed through the slab.Can anyone tell me if a slab is okay? Anything I should be worried about?
With a crawl space you can have easy access to your plumbing, have more storage, and you can place your furnace down there and if you have a well your bladder tank. Animals are no more going to get into a newly built crawlspace than they are into your house. And in our area as others have mentioned we have a place to go to during tornados.Why does your DH want a crawl space? Is there a need to get under the house? As I fail to see how a crawl space will make the house stronger built.
I would worry about animals like raccoons and squirrels and whatever else could somehow get into the crawl space and build a nest!
You are hard pressed in most of the South to NOT find a house that has anything but a slab foundation. Here in FL as someone else mentioned, the water table is too high for basements.
I've learned on the DIS boards that high-end houses in some places have popcorn, but that is definitely the a sign of a less expensive house here b/c they require so much labor.
My sister just sold her house and she had an inspector that made all sorts of notes of possible problems. My sister hired a structural engineer to look at these potential problems (at request of the buyer) who said that has to be the worst inspecter ever. None of those problems existed, where even close to existing. Her house was in fantastic shape.
lecach said:We found a house we want to buy but its on a slab foundation. We've never had slab so we're a little concerned. Can anyone tell me if a slab is okay? Anything I should be worried about?
rt2dz said:Around here (southern TX), it's slab or nothing for the most part. Here, you don't want a house with a basement--which some very old homes have. Not good. I don't think it's the type of foundation, but what shape it is in. Like a previous poster said--hire the inspector! Just make sure it is a good one. My sister just sold her house and she had an inspector that made all sorts of notes of possible problems. My sister hired a structural engineer to look at these potential problems (at request of the buyer) who said that has to be the worst inspecter ever. None of those problems existed, where even close to existing. Her house was in fantastic shape.