ᐅ Steel fence including foundation broken / tilted

Created on: 12 Sep 2024 20:45
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Alibert87
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Alibert87
12 Sep 2024 20:45
Hello everyone, I urgently need ideas or advice on what I can do in my situation.

I bought an older building, and the adjacent steel fence including the wall (foundation) is broken and leaning towards the neighbor’s property.
A brief overview of the structure:
The neighbor’s land is about 40 cm (16 inches) lower, and the wall is approximately 80 cm (31 inches) high, with the steel fence on top. (About 25 m (82 feet) long)
A carport is planned to be built on an area of about 6 meters (20 feet).
Is it possible to repair or stabilize the broken wall? For example, drilling every 50 cm (20 inches) and inserting a steel rod?
Or should everything including the foundation be removed and replaced with something like L-shaped concrete blocks?
I am looking for a cost-effective solution.

Maybe someone has an idea!

Thank you very much.
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Alibert87
12 Sep 2024 20:51
Here is a simple sketch:
Blue shows my wall including tooth joint
Orange is the neighbor’s property
Green marks where the carport will be built
Arrows indicate the fence bending to the right at about 40cm (16 inches)
Black background, blue and gold bars, green rectangle on the left, white wind lines on the right.
11ant13 Sep 2024 12:45
Alibert87 schrieb:

Here is a simple sketch:
You could have also taken photos with the same phone and made a screenshot from Google Maps.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
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Alibert87
13 Sep 2024 12:59
I assumed a sketch would be more informative.. attached are the photos
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Alibert87
13 Sep 2024 13:00
The fence and wall have been leaning like this for about 10 to 15 years.
Green metal fence railing along the sidewalk, heavily overgrown; a VW van is parked in the background.

Green metal fence on the right; unkempt flower bed with a rusty strip, car in the background.

Leaning green metal fence covered with ivy next to a red paved walkway.
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Alex124
13 Sep 2024 13:49
Those who prefer peace and quiet remove the existing stuff and do it properly. Especially if a garage is going to be built on top, a stable foundation is definitely an advantage.
Those who enjoy a bit of a thrill might try fiddling with it somehow. If you really add a garage there, you can already guess where the gutter will end up – most likely along the boundary – and that's the direction the water will flow. ;-)