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Concrete advice needed

Hoodoo

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I want to remove or at least break these down to below the slab level. Weapon of choice??

IMG_5987.jpeg
 

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Hit it with a 10lb sledge hammer. Looks like it's a cold joint so it shouldn't be attached to the slab.
 

arch stanton

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If you’re going to try a sledgehammer don’t waste your time with an 8 pounder use a 20 pounder or as close to that weight as you can find it only sounds like more work with a bigger hammer
 

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Core the middle of it with a 3in or bigger core and the break it in toward the middle and pull the pieces out and then patch it in
Thats a lot of work to core it. He should buy a case of beer and a case of ammo and shoot it until it's where he wants it.
 

Xring01

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Just rent a jack hammer.. be done with it…
 

4Waters

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Thats a lot of work to core it. He should buy a case of beer and a case of ammo and shoot it until it's where he wants it.
He just has to core it a couple inches below top of slab
 

DLC

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Option #1
1.5 inch style sds max roto hammer and a 1 inch drill bit drill a bunch of holes to below slab grade then chip away

Opt #2
Cut off saw make a bunch of slices then chip away

Opt #3
Cut the corner at a 45 w/ skill saw then jack hammer / chip it out.
 

Hoodoo

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You can also cut it at a 45° angle

View attachment 1400095

Problem is I have two in the centers. This was a log pavilion for years where we parked the rv. It had a full bath and an outdoor kitchen. We recently built a house on the lot and I’m trying to decide whether to cap the slab with flagstone and stone bench’s



IMG_5988.jpeg
or remove all of it. It’s not in the exact spot I’d do if starting from scratch but it’s not a bad location.
 

4Waters

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Problem is I have two in the centers. This was a log pavilion for years where we parked the rv. It had a full bath and an outdoor kitchen. We recently built a house on the lot and I’m trying to decide whether to cap the slab with flagstone and stone bench’s



View attachment 1400099 or remove all of it. It’s not in the exact spot I’d do if starting from scratch but it’s not a bad location.
The finish is horrible, you will never match it. If it isn't your perfect location then I would just remove it.
 

Gelcoater

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Problem is I have two in the centers. This was a log pavilion for years where we parked the rv. It had a full bath and an outdoor kitchen. We recently built a house on the lot and I’m trying to decide whether to cap the slab with flagstone and stone bench’s



View attachment 1400099 or remove all of it. It’s not in the exact spot I’d do if starting from scratch but it’s not a bad location.
It may be the pic but it doesn’t look level at all?
If it isn’t and it’s not in the place you want it, rip the thing out of there.

Seems like moving the utilities would be more hassle than the slab removal?
 

Bigbore500r

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Quickie saw with a concrete blade, make "ice cubes", beat with sledge hammer.
X2. Cut to depth of surrounding slab, make a few pizza slices out of it and then break it up.
If he makes enough cuts, he can probably save the slab below (wont be pretty but it should stay intact)
 

Hoodoo

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The finish is horrible, you will never match it. If it isn't your perfect location then I would just remove it.

The finish didn’t really matter for its previous purpose and matters even less now that’s it’s going to be covered. Another thing is it has drains/fresh water/100 amp panel built into it, which is good but requires some creative stonework to blend in. I plan to carry on unless my mason tells me otherwise. Thanks for all the replies.
Phil
 

Hoodoo

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It may be the pic but it doesn’t look level at all?
If it isn’t and it’s not in the place you want it, rip the thing out of there.

Seems like moving the utilities would be more hassle than the slab removal?


My stone guy is looking at the grade and will advise. It’s not level but way less noticeable than the pic indicates and it does shed water.
As soon as some guests leave I’m going to grade the three ungraded sides. Thinking that, along with some landscaping will render the slab grade unnoticeable? The utilities are why I didn’t rip the slab out last year. I don’t have a good eye for what works vs what won’t but my stone guy does. My hope was to cap the slab with flagstone and have the mason build low profile right angle bench’s at each corner and a fire pit in the center. I have a lot of stone left over from the chimney.
IMG_5990.jpeg
As far as location, the lot is fairly narrow so there really isn’t a perfect spot.
 

Nordie

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Looks like the pilasters were there first then the slab came later. Put a redhead in there and see if you can pull em out.
 

Hoodoo

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Looks like the pilasters were there first then the slab came later. Put a redhead in there and see if you can pull em out.

I think you’re right. One of them popped out last summer when the structure was dissembled.
 

Nordie

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I think you’re right. One of them popped out last summer when the structure was dissembled.

It'll save you the headache, they're probably only 2 or 3 feet deep. Dig a side away from the slab and pull em with an F150. 🤪
 

rivermobster

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Problem is I have two in the centers. This was a log pavilion for years where we parked the rv. It had a full bath and an outdoor kitchen. We recently built a house on the lot and I’m trying to decide whether to cap the slab with flagstone and stone bench’s



View attachment 1400099 or remove all of it. It’s not in the exact spot I’d do if starting from scratch but it’s not a bad location.

Looks like the perfect spot for my toy hauler. Where are you at again?

🤔😁
 
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