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Alibert8712 Sep 2024 20:45Hello 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.
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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Alibert8712 Sep 2024 20:51Alibert87 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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Alibert8713 Sep 2024 12:59I assumed a sketch would be more informative.. attached are the photos
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Alibert8713 Sep 2024 13:00Those 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. ;-)
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. ;-)
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