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Fine Homebuilding
May 2009
Footing Form On a Roll
by Ron Budgell
FASTFOOT®
■ Manufactured by Fab-Form Industries
■
888-303-3278;
www.fab-form.com
■ Cost: about 80¢ per linear ft. |
Houses would be much easier to build if all concrete footings
were perfect, but perfection is a monster that feeds on man-hours,
especially when working with rough-sawn 2x10 lumber that is wet,
warped, and covered in old concrete. Still, that didn't stop me from
laughing when an architect on my last project recommended that we
try Fastfoot®, a reinforced sheet-plastic footing form that is
unrolled and installed in a light framework. When I stopped to
consider that I routinely pour concrete into forms made of foam,
Fastfoot® no longer seemed so silly.
To get started, I built a light framework with 2x4 top rails
supported by stakes spaced 2 ft. to 3 ft. apart. Then I laid the
footing fabric into the framework and stapled it to the top edge,
folding the plastic neatly to go around corners. After tying the
sides of the framework together with 1x4 strapping, I was ready for
the pour. Setup took about 20% less time than I had estimated for
installing lumber forms, and this was my first time working with the
system.
When it came time to pour, I was tense, but that nervousness
evaporated about 10 minutes into the pour; nothing moved from where
I'd put it. Stripping the form lumber was easy. In fact, except for
the top braces and a few stakes, all of the lumber was clean enough
to be reused for the house's framing.
Having such success with Fastfoot, I really can't see myself
forming footings any other way in the future. This system is faster,
better, and less expensive. Who says you can have only two out of
three?
Ron Budgell is a builder in Prospect Bay, N.S., Canada.
Photos by Ron Budgell
Click here for the Fine Homebuilding® website.
Click here
for a PDF of the magazine article.
March 5th, 2009 in
Blogs
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