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That's one of the oddest ways I've ever seen a building positioned. Dump loads of rock and then place the lifted building over it. Why not pour concrete and place the building on it?
Post frame construction, posts have to be set in virgin soil, so they were set first. Then I have to raise the entire level 3+ feet to comply with flood regulations, so the rock was brought in to accomplish that. Now that it's built we'll bring in 4-5 more loads and grade it out, and pour a concrete slab as the final step. Posts first and concrete last is just how you build a post frame building.
Pete frolicking through the daisies.
Great, sounds like you're on the right path. If you extend the base rock another ~8' to 10' out around the perimeter of the building (to get beyond the angle of repose) at roughly the slab elevation, that should contain things if compacted, etc. You're just either spending money on crushed spec rock & installation, or stem walls, neither is cheap, but you pick your poison...sounds a lot like designing and building high end speakers, we can't fool mother nature, too much.http://www.concretenetwork.com/concrete-subgrades-subbases/All the bestKenreau
Pete, in his speedo, frolicking in the clover and daisies??? Promises he NEVER works in his Speedo. PROMISE!!!