FOUNDATION DIAGNOSIS
EARTHQUAKE DAMAGED FOUNDATIONS
FOUNDATION CONSTRUCTION TYPES
FOUNDATION INSPECTION METHODS
FAILURES by FOUNDATION TYPE & MATERIAL
Block Foundation & Wall Defects
Brick Foundation & Wall Defects
Brick Thermal Expansion Cracking
Concrete Poured Foundation Wall & Slab Defects
Concrete Pre-cast Foundation Defects
Stone Foundation Defects
Wood Foundation Defects
FAILURES by FOUNDATION MOVEMENT TYPE
BULGED vs. LEANING FOUNDATIONS
COMBINATIONS OF FOUNDATION MOVEMENT
Bulge & step cracks
Earthquake Damage to Foundations
Flood Damage to Foundations
Foundation Movement During Collapse
Other Foundation Step cracks
HORIZONTAL MOVEMENT IN FOUNDATIONS
Bulging, Leaning & Sliding Wall
Horizontal Foundation Creep
Horizontal Movement & step cracks in brick
Impact Damage to Foundations
Thermal Expansion Cracking in Brick
VERTICAL MOVEMENT IN FOUNDATIONS
Diagonal Cracks in Concrete Foundations
Diagonal Step Cracking in Masonry
Differential vs. Uniform Settlement Cracks
Leaning or Tipping Buildings
Uniform Width vs. Tapered Foundation Cracks
Vertical Cracks
FLOOD DAMAGE TO FOUNDATIONS
FOUNDATION DEFECTS OF OMISSION
FOUNDATION CRACK EVALUATION
DIAGONAL FOUNDATION CRACKS
HORIZONTAL FOUNDATION CRACKS
SHRINKAGE vs EXPANSION vs SETTLEMENT
Sinkholes & Building Damage
VERTICAL FOUNDATION CRACKS
FOUNDATION BULGE or LEAN MEASUREMENTS
FOUNDATION DAMAGE SEVERITY
FOUNDATION DAMAGE REPORTS
FOUNDATION INSPECTION STANDARDS
FOUNDATION MOVEMENT ACTIVE vs. STATIC
FOUNDATION REPAIR METHODS
Bulged foundation Repairs
Crack Repair Methods
Horizontal Movement Repairs
Shrinkage Crack Repairs
Vertical Movement Repairs
SITE FACTORS AFFECTING FOUNDATIONS
SLAB CRACK EVALUATION
Control Joint Cracks in Concrete
Freezing & Water Damage
Frost Heave/Expansive Soil Cracks in Slabs
Seal Cracks by Polyurethane Foam Injection
Seal Cracks in Concrete, How To
Settlement Cracks in Slabs
Settlement Cracks vs. Frost Heaves
Settlement Cracks vs. Shrinkage Cracks
Shrinkage Cracks in Slabs
Shrinkage Cracks Along Foundation Walls
Standards for Repair of Cracks in Floors
WATER ENTRY in BUILDINGS
SUMP PUMPS GUIDE
ADDITIONAL READING More Information
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- How to Distiguish Foundation Bulging vs. Leaning Movement by Type & Location of Cracks & Bends in Foundation Components
- Different causes of foundation leaning, bulging, cracking
- How to Evaluate and Diagnose Foundation Movement by Type & Location of Cracks, Bends, Leans, or Shift in Foundation Components
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We will block advertisements which we discover or readers inform us are associated with bad business practices,
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inspect-ny.com/appointment.htm.
This chapter of the "Foundation Crack Bible" discusses in detail How to Distiguish Foundation Bulging vs. Leaning Movement by Type & Location of Cracks & Bends in Foundation Components. We distinguish among vertical movement, horizontal movement, leaning, tipping, bending, differential and
uniform settlement, earthquake and storm damage, and other foundation damage patterns.
Our "Foundation Crack Bible" document, of which this web page is a chapter, describes how to recognize and diagnose various types of foundation failure or damage, such as
foundation cracks, masonry foundation crack patterns, and moving, leaning, bulging, or bowing building foundation walls.
Also see FOUNDATION CRACK EVALUATION for a discussion of the diagnosis of specific crack patterns in masonry foundations, and see FOUNDATION BULGE or LEAN MEASUREMENTS which explains a simple method for
determining how much bulge or lean is present in a foundation or wall, then see FOUNDATION MOVEMENT ACTIVE vs. STATIC which helps determine if the foundation
movement is ongoing, and see FOUNDATION DAMAGE SEVERITY for a discussion
of just how much foundation movement is likely to be a concern.
To be used properly, this information must be combined with specific
on-site observations at the particular building in order to form a reliable opinion about the condition of that building's foundation. Anyone having
concern regarding the structural stability, safety, or damage of a building, foundation or other components, should consult a qualified expert.
Photographs of types of foundation cracks and other foundation damage: we have a large library of photographs which
we're in process of adding to this document. Pending completion of that work, contact the author if assistance is required.
© Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.
How to distinguish between a "bulged" foundation wall and a "leaning" foundation wall, and why we care
Why distinguish between leaning and bulging foundation walls?
We care about the distinction between leaning and bulging because understanding the location and pattern of
foundation wall cracking or movement may help us diagnose its cause and thus may help us understand what actions
are needed to stop further foundation movement or perhaps to decide on a course of repair or reinforcement of the wall.
For example, recognizing that a foundation wall has bulged inwards at about the depth of the frost line at a building
may tell us that the root cause of that particular foundation movement was frost pressure from spillage of roof
runoff too close to and along the building wall.
The same forces produce different effects on poured concrete walls compared with masonry block, brick, or stone walls
Even a concrete wall which is bulged is likely to be cracked horizontally, though perhaps not in
such a straight line. But a bulged reinforced concrete wall would be very rare unless perhaps the concrete wall bulged, or its
forms bulged, during the time that the concrete was being poured and was still wet. It's more likely that a reinforced concrete
wall will be caused to lean or to shift horizontally while a masonry unit wall or stone wall is likely to be bulged and
cracked by the same external forces.
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Characteristics of a bulging foundation wall
If our measurements anywhere between the floor and the top of the wall is greater than the distance measured (wall to string)
at the floor bottom and at the wall top then the wall is "bulged" inwards at that point. If the wall is masonry block in construction we'd
expect to see horizontal cracks in one or mortar joints in the bulged area, with the widest horizontal crack at or close to the
point of greatest inward bulge.
For details of a simple foundation bulge or lean measurement procedure using just string and a ruler, see FOUNDATION BULGE or LEAN MEASUREMENTS |
Characteristics of a leaning foundation wall
If all of our measurements of inwards movements in the foundation wall increase in distance (wall to string),
from floor up towards the top of the wall,
the wall is leaning inwards. In this case we'd expect to not see horizontal cracks (if the wall is masonry block, for example).
Watch out, in some cases a foundation wall may not lean in the direction you expect. For example a reinforced masonry block
wall or poured concrete wall which has been pushed inwards by earth loading might move inwards at the bottom of the wall
rather than at the top.
The bottom of the wall will have been pushed in to the building basement or crawl space and the top may
actually begin to lean out and may even become visible outside, protruding out past the building framed wall. (Earthquake
damage which shifts a building off of its foundation can also produce something that looks like and can be mistaken for
this condition.) |
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FOUNDATION DIAGNOSIS
EARTHQUAKE DAMAGED FOUNDATIONS
FOUNDATION CONSTRUCTION TYPES
FOUNDATION INSPECTION METHODS
FAILURES by FOUNDATION TYPE & MATERIAL
Block Foundation & Wall Defects
Brick Foundation & Wall Defects
Brick Thermal Expansion Cracking
Concrete Poured Foundation Wall & Slab Defects
Concrete Pre-cast Foundation Defects
Stone Foundation Defects
Wood Foundation Defects
FAILURES by FOUNDATION MOVEMENT TYPE
BULGED vs. LEANING FOUNDATIONS
COMBINATIONS OF FOUNDATION MOVEMENT
Bulge & step cracks
Earthquake Damage to Foundations
Flood Damage to Foundations
Foundation Movement During Collapse
Other Foundation Step cracks
HORIZONTAL MOVEMENT IN FOUNDATIONS
Bulging, Leaning & Sliding Wall
Horizontal Foundation Creep
Horizontal Movement & step cracks in brick
Impact Damage to Foundations
Thermal Expansion Cracking in Brick
VERTICAL MOVEMENT IN FOUNDATIONS
Diagonal Cracks in Concrete Foundations
Diagonal Step Cracking in Masonry
Differential vs. Uniform Settlement Cracks
Leaning or Tipping Buildings
Uniform Width vs. Tapered Foundation Cracks
Vertical Cracks
FLOOD DAMAGE TO FOUNDATIONS
FOUNDATION DEFECTS OF OMISSION
FOUNDATION CRACK EVALUATION
DIAGONAL FOUNDATION CRACKS
HORIZONTAL FOUNDATION CRACKS
SHRINKAGE vs EXPANSION vs SETTLEMENT
Sinkholes & Building Damage
VERTICAL FOUNDATION CRACKS
FOUNDATION BULGE or LEAN MEASUREMENTS
FOUNDATION DAMAGE SEVERITY
FOUNDATION DAMAGE REPORTS
FOUNDATION INSPECTION STANDARDS
FOUNDATION MOVEMENT ACTIVE vs. STATIC
FOUNDATION REPAIR METHODS
Bulged foundation Repairs
Crack Repair Methods
Horizontal Movement Repairs
Shrinkage Crack Repairs
Vertical Movement Repairs
SITE FACTORS AFFECTING FOUNDATIONS
SLAB CRACK EVALUATION
Control Joint Cracks in Concrete
Freezing & Water Damage
Frost Heave/Expansive Soil Cracks in Slabs
Seal Cracks by Polyurethane Foam Injection
Seal Cracks in Concrete, How To
Settlement Cracks in Slabs
Settlement Cracks vs. Frost Heaves
Settlement Cracks vs. Shrinkage Cracks
Shrinkage Cracks in Slabs
Shrinkage Cracks Along Foundation Walls
Standards for Repair of Cracks in Floors
WATER ENTRY in BUILDINGS
SUMP PUMPS GUIDE
ADDITIONAL READING
More Information
InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Structure
Contact Us
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Use links just below or at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.
FOUNDATION DIAGNOSIS - how to inspect and diagnose foundation problems, in-depth diagnosis, and evaluation of all types of structural and non-structural cracks in residential foundations [Brick, Concrete, Masonry Block, Stone]
EARTHQUAKE DAMAGED FOUNDATIONS - examples of earthquake-damaged building foundations
FOUNDATION CONSTRUCTION TYPES - identify different foundation types, construction materials, effects of sequence of construction
FOUNDATION INSPECTION METHODS - what to look for when inspecting any building foundation
FAILURES by FOUNDATION TYPE & MATERIAL- unique failure characteristics of each foundation material
Block Foundation & Wall Defects
Brick Foundation & Wall Defects
Brick Thermal Expansion Cracking
Concrete Poured Foundation Wall & Slab Defects
Concrete Pre-cast Foundation Defects
Stone Foundation Defects
Wood Foundation Defects
FAILURES by FOUNDATION MOVEMENT TYPE -recognize & diagnose types of foundation damage by the nature of foundation movement
BULGED vs. LEANING FOUNDATIONS - distinction of foundation bulging from foundation leaning has important implications for stability
COMBINATIONS OF FOUNDATION MOVEMENT - the real world of foundation cracks and movement: often more than one force is at work
Bulge & step cracks
Earthquake Damage to Foundations
Flood Damage to Foundations
Foundation Movement During Collapse
Other Foundation Step cracks
HORIZONTAL MOVEMENT IN FOUNDATIONS - detection, causes, effects, evaluation of horizontal or lateral foundation movement; hillsides
Bulging, Leaning & Sliding Wall
Horizontal Foundation Creep
Horizontal Movement & step cracks in brick
Impact Damage to Foundations
Thermal Expansion Cracking in Brick
VERTICAL MOVEMENT IN FOUNDATIONS - detection, causes, effects, evaluation of vertical foundation movement, differential settlement
Diagonal Cracks in Concrete Foundations
Diagonal Step Cracking in Masonry
Differential vs. Uniform Settlement Cracks
Leaning or Tipping Buildings
Uniform Width vs. Tapered Foundation Cracks
Vertical Cracks
FLOOD DAMAGE TO FOUNDATIONS - examples of flood damaged foundations, flood damage case analysis: were these cracks due to flooding?
FOUNDATION DEFECTS OF OMISSION - recognize things that were left out, like footings, reinforcement, soil compaction, during foundation construction
FOUNDATION CRACK EVALUATION- recognize & diagnose types of foundation cracks, movement, damage, by the size, shape, location, pattern of cracks
DIAGONAL FOUNDATION CRACKS - causes and significance of diagonal foundation cracks, varies by foundation type & material
HORIZONTAL FOUNDATION CRACKS - causes and significance of horizontal foundation cracks, varies by foundation type & material
SHRINKAGE vs EXPANSION vs SETTLEMENT - which foundation materials shrink, which expand, & their characteristic crack patterns
Sinkholes & Building Damage - sinkhole recognition, significance, cause, underlying geology, areas where sinkholes are worst
VERTICAL FOUNDATION CRACKS - - causes and significance of vertical foundation cracks, varies by foundation type & material
FOUNDATION BULGE or LEAN MEASUREMENTS - procedure for documenting the amount of lean or bulge in a foundation or other building wall
FOUNDATION DAMAGE SEVERITY - rules of thumb for deciding how much foundation movement requires further action
FOUNDATION DAMAGE REPORTS - how to report foundation inspection results and damage
FOUNDATION INSPECTION STANDARDS - definition of scope of what a foundation inspector
FOUNDATION MOVEMENT ACTIVE vs. STATIC - determine if foundation movement was a one-time event or an ongoing problem
FOUNDATION REPAIR METHODS - catalog of methods used to repair damaged foundations and masonry building walls
Bulged foundation Repairs
Crack Repair Methods
Horizontal Movement Repairs
Shrinkage Crack Repairs
Vertical Movement Repairs
SITE FACTORS AFFECTING FOUNDATIONS - drainage, rock, soil compaction, slope or grading, bedrock, sloping bedrock, proximity to roads
SLAB CRACK EVALUATION - recognize and diagnose different types of slab or concrete floor cracks and movement
Control Joint Cracks in Concrete - what are control joints, why they are needed, what happens when they're omitted; are they structural?
Freezing & Water Damage - recognize frost and water damage to concrete slabs, distinguish from other crack types
Frost Heave/Expansive Soil Cracks in Slabs - distinguish between frost damage and expansive clay soil damage to slabs
Seal Cracks by Polyurethane Foam Injection - stop basement or crawl space leakage
Seal Cracks in Concrete, How To - products and methods used to seal or repair cracks in poured concrete walls, foundations, floors, & slabs.
Settlement Cracks in Slabs - recognize slab settlement, assess risk, assess potential impact on structure
Settlement Cracks vs. Frost Heaves - how to tell the difference between frost heaves and foundation settlement; does it matter?
Settlement Cracks vs. Shrinkage Cracks - critical identification of shrinkage cracks (non-structural) compared with foundation movement
Shrinkage Cracks in Slabs - causes, prevention, assessment of concrete slab shrinkage cracks
Shrinkage Cracks Along Foundation Walls - why do we see a gap between a poured concrete slab and its abutting foundation wall?
Standards for Repair of Cracks in Floors - when does a floor or slab crack need to be repaired? why?
WATER ENTRY in BUILDINGS
SUMP PUMPS GUIDE - how a sump pump can avoid foundation damage and reduce building water entry
ADDITIONAL READING
More Information
Technical Content Reviewers for Foundation Crack and Movement Damage Evaluation, Diagnosis, & Reporting
- Daniel Friedman - ASHI (1986-2006) - author of this website and article, building failures researcher.
- Sal Alfano - Editor, Journal of Light Construction*
- Thanks to Alan Carson, Carson Dunlop, Associates, Toronto, for technical critique and some of the foundation inspection photographs cited in these articles
- Terry Carson - ASHI
- Mark Cramer - ASHI
- JD Grewell, ASHI
- Duncan Hannay - ASHI, P.E. *
- Bob Klewitz, M.S.C.E., P.E. - ASHI
- Ken Kruger, P.E., AIA - ASHI
- Bob Peterson, Magnum Piering - 800-771-7437 - FL*
- Arlene Puentes, ASHI, October Home Inspections - (845) 216-7833 - Kingston NY
- Greg Robi, Magnum Piering - 800-822-7437 - National*
- Dave Rathbun, P.E. - Geotech Engineering - 904-622-2424 FL*
- Ed Seaquist, P.E., SIE Assoc. - 301-269-1450 - National
- Dave Wickersheimer, P.E. R.A. - IL*
- *These reviewers have not returned comment 6/95
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