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Moo[_2_] Moo[_2_] is offline
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Default Wet garage floor

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On Feb 29, 10:03�pm, "Moo" moooooo wrote:
I moved into a 30 year old house this summer, and am getting seriously
****ed off with puddles of water from melting snow from the truck. �In
previous houses, floors have been angled to drain through the door
naturally, although I've never seen it work particularly well.

In this house the water pools up in a couple of areas, towards the middle
of
the floor. �To make matters worse, there is a load bearing 2x4 wall in
between 2 stalls that is in the middle of one of the areas where it pools
badly. �It's starting to rot and I'm probably destined to replace it (this
time with a layer or two of block at ground level to avoid water touching
wood in future).

I really want to find a way of draining the floor. �I'm not sure what the
best approach is. �If money and time was no option, I would dig up the
floor, put in drains, and have then feed some large soaking beds under the
frost line (3-4 feet here in MN) to the side of the garage, dug deep
enough
that they would absorb a lot of water. �I don't really have the time or
money for that. �Does anyone have any ideas? �Maybe I should dig holes say
a
foot diameter, 4 feet down, and fill with gravel, cover up with drain etc?
I would need 2 or 3 to catch the key low points, but that would not be too
difficult.

I don't want to do the stupid mats as I know people that have had them
break
after one season, and I don't want to have to get the shop vac out every
day. �Looking for a low maintenance option.

I've putzed around on google for a few hours looking for ideas, but most
of
it is the stupid mats.

TIA for any ideas.

Mat


how about a under the slab drain with openings at the collecting spots
going to a sump pump.

with a low voume of water, this should do it.

do you have a place to send the water?

-----

That's what I was thinking. Trouble with taking the water out is there is
no place to vent it outside (since it is below zero for most of winter here,
the normal sump arrangement venting above ground outside will not work).
Also concerned that the water will silty/sandy and will block a pump.