Have You Ever Jacked Up A House? SCARY!
I have an deeply-held belief system with regards to old houses:
1) One needs to expect structural issues.
2) As long as you discover SIX or less structural issues, you are lucky. All is well. The Gods have blessed you.
3) If however you find SEVEN, give the house back to the previous owner. And RUN FOR YOUR LIFE.
After buying the Cross House in 2014 I soon, not surprisingly, started to discover structural issues. One. Then two. Hey, I was calm as this is to be expected. Then three. I started getting nervous. Then four. OK, I am kinda freakin’ out, man. Then five. Panic is now setting in.
But no more. To date, I have not reached nor gone past the vital SIX mark.
Whew. Praise the Lord. Hallelujah.
STRUCTURAL ISSUE #1:
Standing in the Octagon Bedroom (so named because it has a octagon-shaped tower in the south-west corner) I wondered why there were so many cracks in the plaster walls.
This is an important consideration because if you repair cracks without understanding the underlying cause as to WHY the plaster cracked over time you will, without question, have the cracks reopen.
One thought led to another and with the help of a laser level (a way way way cool & necessary device regarding old houses) it was soon discovered that the bedroom…sagged. An inch-and-a-half in the middle.
An inch-and-a-half may not sound like much but it is. Such a sag is readily obvious, can be discerned walking across the floor, and causes windows to not close properly (or at all).
But why an inch-and-a-half sag?
After some deep thought, and many runs up and down the main stair, the answer was discovered. It made me gasp.
You see the foundation? Then the bay cantilever?
All is structurally good. Had the bay been capped only by a roof all would have been well.
But (scary theme music now) the architect or builder of the Cross House loaded the weight of the second-floor octagon bedroom (very very bad), AND loaded the weight of the massive roof (spectacularly bad) onto the bay cantilever.
As soon as my brain grasped the enormity of what had been wrought in 1894 I grew alarmed. Geez. Wow. And, please excuse my language, but WHAT THE FUCK WERE THEY THINKING?????????????
OK. Now back to the pink EEK. This points to where TWO FLOORS of load were sitting on top of 2×12 floor joists with NO SUPPORT UNDER. This is bad. SO very bad.
And the joists were sitting on top of a cantilever. Oh dear, my heart and mind and nerves just ached.
Hey! What a great idea!
Of course, having a solution is quite a different thing than manifesting the solution, you know, as reality.
We had to:
1) Cut through the floor joists. This of course would make the house collapse…
2) …so we had to temporarily support the upper levels.
3) Then we could cut the joists, insert the steel beam, jack up the sag, install vertical supports to keep the beam in place, remove temporary supports, and with the assistance of divine intervention the house would not collapse and crush us.
In the above image there are three sets of supports. In the foreground there is a temporary beam holding up the floor joists. Behind that is the new steel beam, being supported by really impressive jacks. Then behind that is another temporary beam holding up the rest of the floor joists. Why a triple set of beams? Because we brazenly cut right THROUGH the joists to install the steel beam.
Sensible people would have simply installed the steel under the joists (my initial, sensible plan) but this would have created a beam where none was intended, and would have impacted the nice visual of the ceiling plane continuing uninterrupted into the bay. And I do love a smooth plane.
All this effort corrected an issue which has been there from Day 1. Now, windows close, floors do not sag, and cracked plaster can be repaired and will stay repaired.
At least it is hoped.
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Hi Ross:
Did you use an I-beam or just a long piece of steel? In the drawing, it looks like you were going to use an I-beam, but in the photo, it looks like you just used a long piece of steel.
Thanks!
Traci
Hi Traci!
It is an I-beam. I will add a close-up image to make this obvious! Thanks!
Well well well…..haven’t you had some fun. Great job on getting this new steel I-beam in place. I, too, wouldn’t have wanted a disruption of the original ceiling plane. SO glad to hear that installing it the way you did, & jacking it up slowly and surely resulted in the hoped for result – wonderful!! Well done! Whew! And yes, WTF were the original builders thinking? Yikes.
And yes, I have jacked up the main floor of my last house in Winnipeg, after putting in a new beam in the basement – it was scary, but also worked like a charm – no more floor slope or dips. That house was/is a much beloved 3 story Victorian with a turret (this is the house that I hung out of the smallish third story dormer windows, in a rope climbing harness that a rock climbing friend rigged up for me, to scrape, prime and stain the third story – I am too small to move that large of a ladder to get up that high. I was told after I got it all completed that my bopping around the house by hanging out the windows was quite entertaining for my neighbours. Of course, that was 20 or so years ago – I don’t think I’m up for a repeat of that adventure.)
It’s a little shocking that this was actually built this way, considering the size, complexity and cost of the structure.
I agree!!!!!
I can’t believe that it did not sag more! You literally saved this house. How many more years would it have been standing if you didn’t correct that problem?
I’m a master carpenter, specializing in renovation and restoration of old houses. I probably ask myself “WHAT THE FUCK WERE THEY THINKING?” three times a day. I’m enjoying your journey through the Cross house immensely.
I am rereading your posts from the beginning and this time I am wondering if you needed to jack up or put support under the cantilever before putting in the temporary support wall in the bay, or was it close enough to the foundation? Was the bay floor sagging too, and did this solve that? I now want to run out and get a new laser level. I had one that disappeared in one of my moves and had forgotten about them. Thanks for the reminder.
Hi Stewart!
We did have to support the cantilever. We also had to jack it back up, and install new joists. We then removed the supports.
Quite a project, Ross. When my son inherited his grandfather’s 1920’s story and a half Craftsman here in Tacoma, the living room had a 6″ difference between opposite corners. Having had 2, 1893 Victorians that both needed leveling, I set about doing so with my son’s house, and his help. I bought 2, 25 ton hydraulic bottle jacks, and 2 dozen adjustable steel columns. We were lucky to have a full basement to work in, and we started at one corner of the house with the jacks and a stout 6′ beam, and jacked a few joists up 3/8″, then proceeded to the next in line and jacked those, placing the steel posts to hold temporary beams as we went around ( and around, and around ) the house, only jacking it up small amounts each time. Eventually we got it up the whole 6″ ( although we had to take down the chimney, which was integrated into the structure ( my son has since replaced it with a custom mantle, tiles, and built in bookcases ). We filled in the new 6″ space between the rim joists and foundation when we let the house back down. I have wondered why the house settled so badly – being on a slope I conjecture that ground water might have eroded the foundation after many years, or that the original builder used fill ( wood? ) that decomposed after that time. The weight of the house on the concrete basement walls actually broke the perimeter of the concrete floor next to them from the lack of foundational support – perhaps the walls never had any bearing footings as are required today? I had a similar situation with my 1893 Victorian with post & pier “foundation”. For the central chimney, the mason just dug down 8″ and started laying brick, which pulled down the center of the whole house. What were they thinking? ( Or not! ).
You are doing an exceptional job on a grand old lady. Keep on keeping on!