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The floor of the terrace in my apartment has cracked like a big root of a large tree. Similarly i found the wall raised there also getting displaced slightly. What might be the reason for this?
Any Experienced Civil Engineer or architects pl help me understand this. Is it because of faulty construction or bad design of the building?

2007-06-19 04:11:51 · 6 answers · asked by umesh_karthy 1 in Home & Garden Maintenance & Repairs

there is no tree near the building. i meant to say that the crack looks "like a root". i didnt meant the crack was caused by a root.

the building is around 1 or 1.5 yrs old. i'm located in bangalore in India.

2007-06-19 07:22:08 · update #1

The wall that is built from the floor of the terrace is vary clearly separated from the floor. thats wat i meant by cracked. its got a fissure big enough to be visible from 25mt distance.

2007-06-19 07:26:24 · update #2

6 answers

Roots can crack any masonary surface if it is not thick enough. It could also be ground movement if the temperatures vary considerably from summer to winter. This is why buildings have footers that go below frost level.

2007-06-19 04:55:11 · answer #1 · answered by sensible_man 7 · 0 0

Neither. Poor landscaping or the ill aimed poop of a passing critter. Roots destroy all concrete and the best rule of thumb is to plant nothing of substantial size within 20 feet of any slab or wall. The roots work like a small chisel and pry up and grow. Unfortunately this causes pressure and over substantial time the weight of the displaced concrete will cause a crack. Driveways Sidewalks Foundations andyes even terraces all take the toll. Sorry but it is how it is.

2007-06-19 11:17:27 · answer #2 · answered by arborsurgeon 4 · 0 0

Can you elaborate your question? Is the terrace slab near a large tree (within the dripline of the foliage?) similarly you found the "wall raised"? at that location also being displaced (up or laterally)? Where are you located? How old is the complex - approximately? What type of floor (slab or raised wood)?

2007-06-19 12:21:04 · answer #3 · answered by Paul C 3 · 0 0

poor compaction on the soil before it was poured,and not enough base material to support the weight of the slab of concrete. Setting is also a reason ,the concrete could have been poured where the the ground had been dozed and the builder didn't wait the year he was supposed to before he started building. The concrete may have been poured to thin to support the weight of the load on the floor. Concrete steel may have not been put in the floor before it was poured and caused the the floor to be too weak to support the weight on the floor.

2007-06-27 00:01:09 · answer #4 · answered by book writer 6 · 0 0

It sounds as if your floor caved in, which is why it's lower than the wall. Do you have earthquakes?

2007-06-26 23:26:51 · answer #5 · answered by Suzi 7 · 1 0

?

2007-06-26 17:03:57 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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