I am at the starting point for this year's various small planning projects. This includes building two bedrooms totaling about 40sqm in an existing apartment.

The question is, how would you solve the foundation here most economically?

The rest of the apartment has an old potato cellar underneath it, which could be called a crawl space foundation. The floor level in the apartment is about 60cm above ground level where there is a framed joist floor.

There are considerations of pouring concrete in another part of the property at the same time, and I'm thinking that if the concrete truck is coming here anyway, I might as well pour a slab on grade?

Red barn with a corrugated roof and door marked "Innerdörr," surrounded by a grassy area and open field, suggesting a potential construction site.
 
Red building with corrugated metal siding and a small window, set on a grassy area with a visible foundation line and a short orange pipe.
 
Hmmm no wisdom this time..?
 
Is it possible to imagine an uninsulated slab on the ground, then three rows of leca blocks with a sill and the wooden walls on top?

Wooden floor beams at about 60 cm above the uninsulated slab to match the height of the rest of the apartment?
 
Well, the pictures show that it is a barn with a roof and metal walls.

Where is the existing apartment, and how is it built/constructed?
Surely you don't live in the barn?
 
One could say that the apartment is built inside the barn's shell. On this side, there are temporary planks with metal sheets outside as the exterior wall.

Is it insane to cast an uninsulated slab on grade, then build up three rows of leca and then frame a floor structure on the lecablocks? This would place the floor level at about 60cm, which is in line with the rest of the apartment floor....
 
What function is the cast slab supposed to serve?

And what type of insulation will be in the floor joists?
 
I will cast another garage slab at the same time and thought it doesn't cost much to let the concrete truck pour concrete for these extra 40sqm. Then I have to frame up 60cm to avoid level differences and thermal bridges in the apartment.

For insulation, I'm thinking 20cm mineral wool...
 
Sounds like a waste of money with a concrete slab under the raised floor.

Foundation wall 60 cm, with a raised floor, and filled with 60 cm of leca balls?
 
Fill the entire crawl space with leca balls?
 
Have searched online but can someone explain the simplest way to create a crawl space?

Material under foundation wall? Fill in the crawl space? Procedure for casting foundation wall?
I will have a concrete truck on site that will pour another slab on grade and I am thinking I can also get concrete for, e.g., the foundation wall in this project at the same time.

In my project, I assume that I only need foundation walls on 2 out of 4 sides, not the sides that border adjacent buildings?
 
As I understand it, a crawl space is a risk construction, and there are two ways to minimize the risk of moisture problems:

1) Warm foundation

2) Dehumidifier

I consider a warm foundation the only acceptable solution for new construction. A dehumidifier is an emergency solution for existing foundations.

An alternative to a warm foundation is to fill the foundation with Leca balls or Hasopor, (but I have the impression that Hasopor is more expensive). The method has been used in some old farmstead foundations. If you intend to lay tight floors, the floor should probably be ventilated underneath. Ventilated baseboards are likely sufficient.
 
Should I fill with leca balls etc.? Will it be cheaper with an uninsulated slab on the ground and then build a floor joist frame 60cm up...

Or?
 
What kind of ground is it under?
Do you know how deep the barn's foundation blocks are?
 
It is typically actually clay under, but both buildings seem to have sand and gravel around the walls.

The foundation blocks go about 40cm below ground level. It seems they built up with many large stones and then smaller stones mixed with cement.

Under half of the "plåtbyggnaden," there is a 3m deep torpargrund that has been a potato cellar.
There is only soil as the base...
 
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