I did not realize it is a crack in the wall, but now I do not understand how I missed that.
It must be shifting something awful if it makes that big a crack and tears the glass-fibre reinforcements in the plaster. Did an expert on structural stability to look at the building?
The house itself is on solid rock. The crack is in the garage
When they built it they simply didn’t compress the ground enough before they poured the concrete.
We had an architect and an engineer look at it. It’s not salvageable, but also not a danger. Car doesn’t fit inside anyway.
Ice Swimmersays
Giliell @ 6
I see, a more mundane reason. The coal mine thing just sprang into my mind (I’ve read The Road to Wigan Pier by Orwell, in which he writes about houses tilting and twisting because of the mining tunnels underneath), as the modern history of that corner of Germany has been due to coalfields to a great extent (right?).
Oh yes, we used to be a mining region and what you mention is a huge problem in some parts, but not right here.
It’s kind of a shibboleth here to have a miner or metal worker in your lineage.
Charly says
Looking for a new appartment, perhaps?
Ice Swimmer says
A blue tit peeking into a crack.
Giliell, professional cynic -Ilk- says
Probably, though the crack is not that wide.
Yet.
Fucken garage wasn’t built on solid ground…
Charly says
I did not realize it is a crack in the wall, but now I do not understand how I missed that.
It must be shifting something awful if it makes that big a crack and tears the glass-fibre reinforcements in the plaster. Did an expert on structural stability to look at the building?
Ice Swimmer says
Giliell @ 3
Are there coal mines under the lot?
Giliell, professional cynic -Ilk- says
The house itself is on solid rock. The crack is in the garage
When they built it they simply didn’t compress the ground enough before they poured the concrete.
We had an architect and an engineer look at it. It’s not salvageable, but also not a danger. Car doesn’t fit inside anyway.
Ice Swimmer says
Giliell @ 6
I see, a more mundane reason. The coal mine thing just sprang into my mind (I’ve read The Road to Wigan Pier by Orwell, in which he writes about houses tilting and twisting because of the mining tunnels underneath), as the modern history of that corner of Germany has been due to coalfields to a great extent (right?).
Giliell, professional cynic -Ilk- says
Oh yes, we used to be a mining region and what you mention is a huge problem in some parts, but not right here.
It’s kind of a shibboleth here to have a miner or metal worker in your lineage.