Tag: excavation

Garage Excavation Prep

After a number of quotes, we bit the bullet and signed on to get the garage built. We made an initial deposit on Friday and they said they’d be in touch Monday to discuss scheduling. Instead, Monday they showed up with an excavator. Unfortunately, even though the concrete demo was done, we weren’t quite ready for them to start.

Monday morning surprise excavator!

Primarily, we needed to get the fences along the sides of the yard removed. We also needed temporary fencing, a porta-john, and while they had asked if we had a survey and we said yes, we actually needed the physical survey markers at the corners of the property. So they wound up leaving and left us to get prepared. Sadly, we also had to take down the swing set I built for the kids during Covid.

Fence panels removed on North side

We started with conversations with the neighbors to either side, getting permission to encroach temporarily on their yards during construction. On the one side, the fence was built during their renovation, but on our side of the property line. That made it our fence, so we just needed to make sure they were ok with closing off their access to the sidewalk along the garage while we removed it. They have a toddler and we want to make sure their yard is secure.

Fence posts removed, temporary fence delivered

On the other side, there’s actually two fences, a chain link on our side and a wooden picket fence on the other. We got permission to relocate the wooden fence about a foot back from the property line as long as it was secure for their dog. We got the porta-john, the temporary fencing was delivered, we got an expedited survey done, and took out the fence.

Chain link fence and stump removed, South fence moved

The fence posts and the tree that had grown in between the two fences were the bigger challenge. We picked up a “farm jack” which was a tool I was previously unfamiliar with but will use anytime we have a post to remove in the future. It lets you ratchet the post straight out of the ground, with or without the concrete footer attached. Sarah and I took out about eight or ten wood and metal fence posts in fairly short order. I wasn’t as lucky with the tree stump. That required some extensive work with a reciprocating saw and long blade, but I managed to get that ripped out of the ground. Sarah and I moved a few sections of the wooden fence on the South side back a foot and made it secure for the dog next door.

With everything removed and prepped and all of the fence debris and landscaping stones cleared away, we let the contractors know they were good to proceed. They showed up the following week on Tuesday and had the footings completely excavated in just a couple of days. They actually cut back the sidewalk on the neighbors side where it was over the property line, so we’ll need to fix their side gate once the walls are up.

Drainage Project Excavation

Original sidewalk

Original sidewalk

Sorry that it’s taken so long to post, but we’ve been really busy with the house. I really thought I was done filling dumpsters with wheelbarrows of concrete, dirt, clay, and stone, but here we are again. The purpose of the drainage project is to prevent rain water from coming through the brick walls of our basement, but we’re accomplishing a lot of other things at the same time. I was planning to do this project after the house was done as part of landscaping, but after having moving into the basement and getting water every time it rained, we knew we needed to do something about it.

More dumpsters with concrete

More dumpsters with concrete

We got a dumpster delivered into the back yard (I believe this was dumpster #10) and broke up the sidewalk between our house and our neighbors, which runs from the front of the yard all the way to our basement steps. Technically, it keeps going to the back of the property, but that can wait. Under the sidewalk, on the side closer to our house, was a layer of asphalt, and under that was even older sidewalk. Under that was a really loose, oily black soil that I think might be fly ash or something. We couldn’t dig a trench in it, so I dug it all out and we filled the dumpster.

The result was a very uneven excavation down to the clay, but since we discovered that the yard slopes to the front of the house, while the drainage tench needed to slope to the back, we dug deeper in the middle and built up the side against our house. I used the laser level to keep things correct, with the typical drainage grade of 1″ every 8′. Factoring in the added slope of the yard, the end result was a trench close to two feet deep. Sarah’s brother, Will, took a crack at the trench digging, helping us knock out the last ten feet or so of trench, including the old concrete porch footings.

Will breaking up concrete

Will breaking up concrete

We also took off the concrete “apron” that ran along the front of the house around the bay window. Under that we discovered the original window sills. We’d had new sills put in by the brick tuck pointers last year, and they were in pretty bad shape having been buried in the yard. The front window sill in particular came apart with the concrete, leaving a gaping hole in the first wythe of brick. Sarah and I filled that in with bricks from our chimney and a judicious amount of mortar. Once that was set we back-filled with dirt and dug a small trench abut five feet out across the front of the house. We’ll have a front porch eventually, and this trench drains into the main trench under the sidewalk.

The next step was the rest of the front yard. We’d let it get overgrown with weeds and the two evergreen shrubs had gotten out of control over the years. I chopped both of them down and pulled out the root balls (pro tip: sledgehammer). The rest of the weeds came out as we I re-graded the whole yard to slope to the front. The next step was to cut the path the walk will take as it bends across the yard to meet the front walk. I used landscaping edging to mark it and then excavated everything. By this point we’d made a pretty big mess, and it was time to start putting it back together, but that can wait for the next post.

Laying out the path

Laying out the path