Property owners and managers should learn how to deal with these liability issues NOW with the latest concrete repair techniques and preventative measures. If you’re a contractor, you need this information because it’s critical for YOUR customer – the property owner.
Since an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, it’s helpful to know where to look for potential sunken slabs, especially if you own or manage a large variety of properties. As a contractor you’ll want to focus on these types of sites when looking for potential customers. The three main property categories that tend to have slab settling issues are:
Residential sites can often have driveway, sidewalk, patio, or garage floor issues. Commercial and industrial sites often contain showroom or factory floors made of concrete slab. Warehouse and logistical centers can contain huge floors with massive square footage. Because warehouse floors are often raised off the ground to incorporate a loading dock, they are particularly vulnerable to the formation of dangerous voids underneath.
Let’s take a look at why slabs sink in the first place. There are at least six main reasons:
Familiarity with these common causes of slab settling can help a lot when attempting to diagnose the exact cause at a specific location. For more, see our blog post series The Causes of Unstable Soil.
After becoming aware of a slab issue, the property owner has a critical choice to make. To repair or not to repair – that is the question. Neglecting a repair can have huge implications. Here are a few possible results of neglect:
Read that list a few times and seriously consider the very real possibility that one or more of these events may occur when a property owner neglects a slab repair. As experts with many years in the industry, we’ve seen every one of these events unfold after a problem was ignored.
In the next installment of this two-part series, we’ll review the two most common methods for repairing a trip hazard aside from polyurethane, and then we’ll review the three most common types of slab repair with polyurethane: slab lifting, soil stabilization and void fill.