Sinking/Settling Concrete Floor Slabs Near Wilmington, Fayetteville, Greenville

diagram of a repaired concrete slab floor

Concrete slab piers being used underneath a floor to help stabilize the floor permanently.

Notice how the piers can extend deep below the floor, extending until they reach competent supporting soils.

The Problem:

Your concrete slab floor is showing signs of sinking, sagging, or settling. Your floor may be cracking, or the walls may be separating from the floor below or ceiling above.

Telltale Signs:

  • Cracks in the concrete floor
  • Floors dropping and separating from the walls, forming a gap between the floor and wall.
  • Interior walls separating from the ceiling, forming a gap between the wall and ceiling.
  • Walls pulling away from adjacent walls
  • Interior wall cracks, commonly off the corners of interior doors.

How We Fix It:

Install a slab pier system underneath your concrete slab floor. These piers can extend down to strong supporting soils, ensuring long-term support.

We can fix your cracked slab floors once and for all! Call us for a free floor slab repair quote today!

We serve Wilmington, Fayetteville, Greenville, and many nearby areas in North Carolina.

Signs Of Slab Settlement

When a floor slab settles, the damage can manifest itself in many ways. Along with cracks in the concrete, the floors can separate from the walls as they sink downwards. Alternatively, the interior wall may be pulled down with the floor, instead separating from the ceiling. Walls can also pull away from other walls, and interior wall cracks can form -- commonly off the corners of interior doors.

(Click each photo to enlarge.)

 
Slab floor cracks showing in a Saint Pauls home Large slab floor cracks in a Spring Lake home A floor slab separating from the wall in a Southern Pines home. A partition wall separating from the floor in a Laurinburg home.
a sinking floor leaving a large gap between the wall and floor in a Pinehurst home The ceiling and wall separating as the wall sinks with the slab floor in a Hope Mills home partition walls being pulled away from the foundation walls in a Leland home. wall cracks along a doorway in a Havelock home.

What Can Cause A Concrete Floor Slab To Settle?

When a concrete floor settles, it can mean serious damage to your home. The causes of floor slab settlement are almost always due to the soils underneath being unable to support the weight of the concrete. They often accompany other foundation problems in your home.

The three most common causes of settling concrete floor slabs are as follows:

(Click for more information.)

Dry, cracking clay soils Drying/Shrinking Of Soils Under The Slab soil erosion Washout Of Soil Underneath The Slab A backhoe excavating a foundation Poor Compaction Of Foundation Fill Soils

Fortunately, there are fast, effective ways to address concrete slab floor settlement issues. if you would like a free foundation slab stabilization quote for your problem, call or e-mail us today!

Installing The Foundation Supportworks Slab Pier System

Foundation Supportworks Slab Pier System stabilizes the concrete floor slab in your home. It provides the best opportunity to relevel the floor and lift non-load bearing partition walls that may have settled along with the slab. To install our system, our contractor will take these six steps:

Coring the concrete of a concrete slab floor in Fort Bragg

Preparing for Installation

Before the installation day, our associated NC engineers will have already inspected your foundation issue. At that time, a foundation repair proposal was put in writing.

The engineer will use that inspection report to map out the locations where the slab piers will be installed. Once the engineer completes the installation plans, our foundation repair experts will be on site to make the repairs according to the engineer's specifications.

At the beginning of each slab pier installation, a small hole is cored through your concrete slab floor. This hole will create an access point for the slab piers that are about to be installed.


A three piece foundation slab bracket assembled underneath a concrete slab floor.

Position Slab Bracket

To give the slab pier something to "lift", a slab bracket is positioned beneath the concrete slab.

The Foundation Supportworks Slab Pier System uses a three-piece slab bracket that is assembled underneath your concrete floor, allowing for a much smaller hole to be cored in your concrete slab. Additionally, this larger bracket reaches across more area along your floor, creating a more even distribution of weight.


Driving foundation piers into the floor in Clinton.

Install Steel Tubes

Steel tubes are hydraulically driven down through the bracket to the competent soils beneath.

These steel tubes are the real strength of the foundation pier system -- and are responsible for transferring the home weight to strong supporting soils.

To prevent corrosion, Foundation Supportworks has slab piers available that are designed using galvanized steel. This ensures the quality and long-lasting strength of your slab pier system.


Using steel slab piers to transfer the weight of the concrete slab to the soil beneath in Kinston.

Transfer Slab Weight To Soil

The weight of the concrete slab is transferred through the piers to the load-bearing strata underneath your home.

As the system lifts your concrete slab floor upwards, the sinking movement of your floor will be permanently halted.

Often, it will also be possible to lift the concrete slab back to a level position.


A foundation slab pier after installation and grout injection has been completed in a Lumberton home.

Inject Grout Fill

Once the concrete slab has been lifted, a void will be present underneath the floor.

Additionally, if your floor had been sinking because of compacted soil or washout, a gap existed even before the installation.

To address this, we carefully pump grout under the slab to fill in all empty spaces.


Repairing the cored holes in the concrete slab floor with fresh concrete and cleaning up the Camp Lejeune home.

The Cleanup

At Southeast Foundation and Crawl Space Repair, we take pride in leaving your home looking clean and neat. Once the installation is completed, we repair all cored holes with concrete, making your final installation virtually invisible.

Any debris generated during the installation is cleaned up and removed by us. And once we're done, you can rest easy, knowing that you have a 25-year warranty on manufacturer's defects, as well as a performance warranty from us.

What Our Foundation Supportworks Engineers Recommend NOT To Do

As with most home repairs, some work all of the time, some work some of the time, and some don't work at all. Here are two "fixes" that we at Southeast Foundation and Crawl Space Repair do NOT recommend:

Jackhammering a slab floor in a Wrightsville Beach home.

A concrete slab being jackhammered and removed during a floor replacement in Supply. A typical replacement can take several weeks to complete.

Concrete Slab Replacement:

To perform a job like this, all home furnishings, floor coverings, and interior walls must be removed. Then a crew jackhammers the existing floor into small pieces and removes them by hand.

Once this is complete, a new floor is poured and the homeowner must allow two weeks for the grout to cure sufficiently.

The interior partition may be rebuilt, floor coverings may be reinstalled, and home furnishings may be returned.

While this situation is disruptive and expensive, the real problem here is that the issue that caused the problem in the first place has not been addressed. Without addressing the soil problems that lead to the floor cracks, your new floor may "break" over time too!

smoothing out the grout in a slab releveling project in Sanford

A contractor smoothing out a surface of releveling grout during a concrete slab repair. The previous concrete floor had shown cracks during settlement.

Releveling Grout On Top Of The Slab:

To begin this process, all floor coverings that were placed on the slab must be removed. The floor is then prepared so that grout will be able to bond with the slab surface.

A self-leveling grout is poured along the slab surface, where it begins to fill in the low portion of the floor and create a level surface. After the grout is allowed to cure for several days, the floor coverings can be replaced.

However, if the floor wasn't prepared properly, the grout may not bond well to the surface of the slab, leading to chunks of it breaking off. Additionally, the grout will add weight to the slab, potentially making the situation worse by causing further settlement. And, just like with the last two options, the real problem of soil settlement is not addressed!

Looking For Foundation Slab Repair Contractors In NC?

At Southeast Foundation and Crawl Space Repair, we provide proven solutions for concrete slab floor leveling -- as well as other foundation repair solutions -- to homeowners throughout North Carolina. Upon inspection by one of our partner engineers, we provide each of our customers with a free, no obligation slab repair quote, in writing, before any work is done. To schedule your appointment, call or e-mail us today!

Our service area includes Fayetteville, Wilmington, Greenville, and nearby areas such as Goldsboro, Jacksonville, Sanford, New Bern, Camp Lejeune, Lumberton, Wrightsville Beach.

Drying & Shrinking of the Soil Under the Slab

HVAC (Heating, Venting, and Air Conditioning) systems may be installed beneath the floor slab. Over time, the ductwork can leak air, which can dry out the soil.

As the soil dries and shrinks, gaps form under the floor slab, creating voids. Because the soil no longer supports the floor slab, the floor begins to crack and sink into the voids.

Supply

Washout of Soil Under the Slab

This is usually caused by plumbing leaks. If the plumbing leak is severe and there is a path for the water to flow through, it can wash soil out from under the slab.

With a void underneath the floor, there's nothing supporting the concrete slab anymore. In time, it begins to crack and sink downwards.

garage walls cracking

Poor Compaction of Fill Soil

During construction of a new home, layers of soil are commonly moved around or spread out to get to the desired grade level. When the home is built, footings may be deepened to extend below weak fill soils and avoid a foundation settlement issue.

The slab, however, remains on the fill soils. If the fill was poorly compacted, the fill soil compresses and settles, and a void is formed under the slab. In time, the slab cracks, breaks, and settles into the void.

foundation wall cracks in Supply

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