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Tony Hwang Tony Hwang is offline
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Default wood or concrete basement floor

Jess wrote:
I'm in Portland Oregon where the weather is mild.

If I go with concrete, what type of gravel is best for a base? 3/4"
ballast, 3/4"-1/2", 3/4 minus, ... ?

Would the 2" foam insulation be of benefit in Portland?

So it would be gravel, then a vapor barrier like visqueen, then the
foam board, then say 4" of concrete?

Does a slab in a basement need reinforcement (wire mesh or rebar)?

I have concrete walls in the basement. Should the floor butt up
against the wall, or should there be some type of gap between the wall
and the floor?

What type of expansion joints are best for a basement floor? Should it
just be a cut say a 1/4" deep or should it be something like a board
or divider that totally separates the 4" depth of one section of the
floor from another?

Is 2500 psi concrete acceptable?

I will do all the work except the concrete. If I have the gravel,
visqueen, foam board, and reinforcement all in place over the entire
floor, will it be in the way when the concrete guys come in to pour?
Or in other words, should I let them do part of it (say like the
reinforcement) so they can do it as they go (to keep it out of the way
on other parts of the floor)?

There is really no way to get a wheel barrow full of concrete UP the
steep path and into my basement, so I assume that they can pump it in.
How far can an "average" pumper pump?

I've heard that concrete is going up. Does $90 a yard sound right for
Portland Oregon?

If I have a 400 square foot floor, what is a fair "ball park" range
for a Portland Oregon concrete dude(s) to pour my floor (labor and
materials)? I would guess that most contractors are experienced enough
to give a fairly accurate estimate for a basement floor just by using
the square footage (meaning that I could expect a rough estimate from
them over the phone). Is that true?




Hi,
Wouldn't it proper calling your local concrete contractor and discuss it
with him? concrete floor is always floating. It is not permanently fixed
to anything. And accurate estimate is done when the contractor surveys
the site and gives you a written estimate item by item. Don't forget
lien hold back when he does the job just to be sure.