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I have a 8 x 8 deck, attached to the house since initial build. All in good condition, ledger and bolts, inspected and main boards repaired in 2014.

It sits in a corner on a 4 x 4 post, again in excellent condition.

The pad underneath has sunk a few inches and the deck has started to move away, splting the caulking from the house on both sides. [see pictures also].

The root cause was previous owners had not modernized the natural swale on one side of the property. Once this was remedied, and now we had lots of dry and wet cycles, and this is a symptom.

I am showing a 1/4" per ft tilt down, stressing wood around, door slider issues.

My plan was either

a) use a bottle jack with 4 x 4 [with 2 x 4 cross braces] on both horizontal beams, and then jack up incremently. Then then use insert wedge pieces above the support column and/or use an adjustable jack column as a secondary support, close up on the primary support beam.

Or,

b) jack the concrete 17ft x 6ft x 6” slab = 7650.49lbs + 1000lbs for deck, and use HD foam 250psi as shoring before backfilling around. proven method used here https://youtu.be/31uSPxKmBFA

Any feedback

deck moving away from 1 corner deck moving away from 2 corner all deck, see right bottom corner for where slab has sunk post connector

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  • Is the footing for the 4x4 post or pier below the frost line?
    – Tyson
    Commented Jul 12, 2018 at 2:39
  • When you say moved down , you mean sunk a few inches ? You could mud jack it, because it will continue to sink unless the real problem is resolved. Of course you might not find a company willing to do a small mud jack job.
    – Ken
    Commented Jul 12, 2018 at 9:30
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    One of the first things you want to do is get that downspout extended away from the slab. Make sure that any rain water is discharged out into the yard somehow, then work on raising the slab.
    – gnicko
    Commented Jul 12, 2018 at 16:26
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    Can you rephrase this statement: "The root cause was previous owners had not modernized the natural swail on 1 side of the property, once this was remedied, and now we had lots of dry and wet cycles, and this is a symptom."? I'm not sure what "swail" is....
    – gnicko
    Commented Jul 12, 2018 at 16:28
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    I didn't know exactly what a "swail" was either. The common spelling I believe is "swale". From wiki "A swale is a low tract of land, especially one that is moist or marshy. The term can refer to a natural landscape feature or a human-created one. Artificial swales are often infiltration basins designed to manage water runoff, filter pollutants, and increase rainwater infiltration."
    – Dan
    Commented Jul 12, 2018 at 19:45

2 Answers 2

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The deck isn't pulling away from the house so much as leaning away from the house. It's tight at the bottom and separating at the top.

It looks like the reason for that is the outside posts rest on a patio that is settling. If you look at the third picture, you can see a wedge-shaped gap between the concrete patio and the step at the patio door. It also looks like an additional gap under the slab at the lawn in that area.

Any fix you do to just the deck support will need to be redone when the slab settles more. You need to fix that problem first.

There are two downspouts visible. One dumps water right at the slab's edge, which is a problem. The other goes into a pipe and where that pipe discharges isn't clear. However, the picture makes it look like the worst settlement is in that area. If that pipe actually discharges far away, then the issue may be that the pipe or downspout is full of debris and water is leaking out of the downspout higher up.

The downspout issues need to be fixed before you tackle anything else. Water dumped next to the slab soaks into the ground and softens the soil under the slab. You need to get that water far away from the house. Even after you stop the water problem, there may continue to be some settling for awhile.

If there is also a grading problem, you need to fix that so rain water runs away from the house, and rain falling elsewhere doesn't run toward the house.

Once you stop the erosion, soil softening, and settlement, you can decide whether to jack the patio. A single slab that size will be tough to jack, especially in a way that supports it evenly it's entire depth toward the house. You could end up breaking it if you can even lift it.

You would likely need to excavate much of the edge, support broad areas of the slab with timbers, and use a series of bottle jacks to apply pressure across a large area at once. But even if you lift it, I wouldn't want to support a slab that size by just slipping foam boards under the edge; that creates a lot of stress on the slab and it may crack. There isn't really a good way to support it from the edge.

I've seen mud jacking and foam jacking used for big slabs. That would provide support under the entire slab. However, it can also settle after a few years, especially if there is still active settling of the soil underneath.

If it were me, I'd be inclined to leave the slab alone unless there is future evidence that it is still settling after you solve the water problems. The slope isn't so much that it affects it's use. The gaps, like below the patio doors, can be filled to keep the step supported and improve the appearance.

I would try to fill the gap under the slab edge at the lawn. You can pack material under it by pounding it in. It won't do much for support, but it will at least help keep stuff out of the gap, and maybe slow further erosion.

That leaves the deck. You may want to do a potentially temporary fix until you can assess what's going on with slab settlement. It looks like the support posts aren't actually secured to the slab, just resting on it. If that's the case, I'm not sure it meets code and isn't very safe. Someone more fluent in the code can get into that issue more, but without knowing code requirements, I can suggest what would at least be an improvement.

Use timbers and jacks to raise the side of the deck away from the house until it's level again. Measure the gap you need to fill between the bottoms of the support posts and the slab. Use squares of cement board (green board), the dimensions of the post, to fill big gaps. Use plastic shims (back to back in opposite directions to create adjustable parallel surfaces), for small gaps, with enough shims side by side so the entire end of the post is supported.

Once the post is supported at the correct height, trim away any of the support material extending beyond the face of the post. Then install brackets on the slab to constrain the post so it can't move laterally.

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I disagree with the answer above. The support is sitting on the slab and the slab is sinking, causing the deck to pull away from the house at the top. You can see this clearly in the picture.

I would suggest bottle jacking up the deck and installing two temporary supports to either side of the existing one, allowing you to remove the existing support. Then notch the slab to allow a new support to be installed on an actual footer beneath the slab, which itself is installed to the correct depth for the frostline in your location. Because the support is on the edge of the slab, it would be trivial to dig a hole for a footer.

You can rent a concrete saw and notch the slab so that the new support can pass through it. For aesthetic purposes you could re-level the slab, but I would just leave it as is. Once the weight of the deck is off it, it will stop sinking. You could also overpour it make it look level if the aesthetic bothers you.

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