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Lifting & Leveling Sidewalk
Posted on 2/27/24 at 1:34 pm
Posted on 2/27/24 at 1:34 pm
Anybody attempted such a thing? Sections of my sidewalk are rapidly sinking. I'm thinking of lifting each section and throwing some gravel or foam under it to lift and level it.
Considering using a farm jack, or drilling a hole through it and using a couple floor jacks on both sides, etc.
Anyone ever done this? How did it go?
Considering using a farm jack, or drilling a hole through it and using a couple floor jacks on both sides, etc.
Anyone ever done this? How did it go?
Posted on 2/27/24 at 1:46 pm to TSmith
Alot of work versus busting out and leveling then repouring.
Posted on 2/27/24 at 2:22 pm to TSmith
How much sidewalk we talking about?
Posted on 2/27/24 at 2:22 pm to TSmith
I did it once with just one section that was sinking and will never do it again. A lot more work and more strenuous than expected. Just replace.
Posted on 2/27/24 at 3:37 pm to mtcheral
quote:
I did it once with just one section that was sinking and will never do it again. A lot more work and more strenuous than expected. Just replace.
this ^^^^^^^^^^
and even after you lift it and do all that work, 80% of the times it shifts again and isnt level in just a year or two
if you insist on saving it, then dig it out, and a little dirt in the low spots and then place bricks under it to level it. after you get it leveled, lift the slab up and spread sugar sand to level the ground out to the level of the bricks and then set the slab back down. finally add sugar sand up around all the edges so it can help fill any remaining spots under the edge of the slab.
if you really want it to be level and stay level, then get rid of the slab, and pour a new one for it
This post was edited on 2/27/24 at 4:08 pm
Posted on 2/27/24 at 9:48 pm to TSmith
quote:
or drilling a hole through it a
Some outfits specialize in this.
They'll drill several small holes and then high pressure inject some type of expanding, hardening compound which lifts and secures sidewalks/driveways in place.
No idea the cost. Pretty much foundation leveling experts.
Edit: Probably cheaper than demo/re-pour for a driveway or patio, but maybe not for sidewalk sections.
This post was edited on 2/27/24 at 9:58 pm
Posted on 2/28/24 at 6:21 am to Geauxld Finger
Thanks for the feedback. I’d be doing 3 sections. Each are 48” X 42”. I’ll have to mull this over.
Posted on 2/28/24 at 6:55 am to TSmith
I paid $300ish to have a company come out and drill holes and lift it with some sludge/foam mix four years ago. They did three sections of sidewalk and porch step in less than three hours.
Hasn't moved since..
Hasn't moved since..
Posted on 2/28/24 at 12:26 pm to TSmith
Foam injections would be a start. Might be a few hundred, but would replacing them cost that much?
Posted on 2/28/24 at 12:46 pm to TSmith
For reference, a 4 foot square by 4" thick section of concrete is around 800 pounds.
It is doable. I've done it twice. My best success in lifting was digging out enough to get a 4x4 or 2 under the edge, using some blocks as a fulcrum and levering the slab up enough to jam some brick under it to secure. I dug out a footing and poured in a bag of concrete. Still holding after 20 plus years.
It is doable. I've done it twice. My best success in lifting was digging out enough to get a 4x4 or 2 under the edge, using some blocks as a fulcrum and levering the slab up enough to jam some brick under it to secure. I dug out a footing and poured in a bag of concrete. Still holding after 20 plus years.
Posted on 2/28/24 at 3:00 pm to philabuck
quote:
I paid $300ish to have a company come out and drill holes and lift it with some sludge/foam mix four years ago. They did three sections of sidewalk and porch step in less than three hours.
Are there any contractors around BR that do this?
Posted on 2/28/24 at 3:20 pm to TSmith
quote:
Thanks for the feedback. I’d be doing 3 sections. Each are 48” X 42”. I’ll have to mull this over.
make sure there's no water or sewer line underneath that could get crushed in the process.
Posted on 2/28/24 at 8:57 pm to sleepytime
Search concrete lift and you should find something. The one I used looked like it was some type of franchise operation.
Posted on 3/1/24 at 7:16 am to philabuck
quote:
The one I used looked like it was some type of franchise operation.
Do you mind sharing how much it costs per sq ft?
Posted on 3/1/24 at 7:47 am to sleepytime
We used national foundation, Darren 225-924-6156 for some commercial lots, he uses expanding foam, no complaints after a year of use. I have no idea what the cost for a small job like this would cost, but it is not “cheap” but should be less and cleaner than replacing
Posted on 3/1/24 at 7:57 pm to sleepytime
It's called foam jacking or mud jacking if they do it the old school way with mud/sand
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