Underpinning: Mass Concrete Method, When It's Needed & Building Control

Quick Answer: Underpinning strengthens or deepens existing foundations that have failed or been undermined. The most common method for domestic properties is mass concrete underpinning (also called traditional or sequential underpinning): dig below the existing foundation in 1m bays, pour concrete to the new depth, and allow to cure before opening the next bay. Building Control notification is mandatory. A structural engineer must design the scheme and specify the concrete mix, bay sequence, and new foundation depth.

Summary

Foundation failure or inadequacy is one of the most serious and expensive building defects. Underpinning is the remedy when existing foundations are too shallow, have been damaged by ground movement, or can no longer support the loads placed on them — for example, when a loft conversion significantly increases the load on an old shallow strip foundation.

For builders and groundworkers, underpinning is specialist work. It is dangerous (excavation near an occupied structure) and the consequences of errors are catastrophic. Always work to a structural engineer's design and specification. Never open more than the permitted number of bays simultaneously — the spec will tell you this, and it is non-negotiable.

Subsidence, differential settlement, and tree root damage are the most common causes requiring underpinning. In London particularly, proximity of clay soils and mature trees creates frequent foundation problems. Insurance companies usually require an approved structural engineer's scheme before approving underpinning claims.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Underpinning Method Best For Relative Cost Structural Engineer Required?
Mass concrete (traditional) Shallow strip foundations; domestic Lower Yes
Beam and base Where mass concrete impractical Higher Yes
Mini-piled Deep bearing stratum; restricted access Higher Yes
Resin injection Non-structural settlement; minor sinking Lower Assessment required
Screw piles Speed-critical; limited access Medium Yes

Detailed Guidance

When Is Underpinning Needed?

Not all foundation movement requires underpinning. Many old buildings have settled and stabilised — historic cracking in plaster or brickwork does not necessarily indicate ongoing movement.

Indicators that underpinning may be required:

Monitoring first: Before underpinning, install crack monitors (crack gauges or tell-tales) and monitor for 3–6 months. If cracks are stable, underpinning may not be necessary — the movement may have self-arrested.

Cause identification (essential):

Traditional Mass Concrete Underpinning — Step by Step

This is the standard domestic method for continuous strip foundations:

Phase 1: Design

  1. Structural engineer carries out ground investigation (trial pits to expose existing foundation, borehole if deeper information needed)
  2. Engineer designs scheme: new foundation depth, concrete mix, bay width, bay sequence, temporary propping requirements, monitoring points
  3. Submit design to Building Control; get approval before starting work

Phase 2: Preparation

  1. Notify Building Control of start date (typically 2 working days notice)
  2. Install monitoring on crack-sensitive areas (crack gauges, tell-tales, precise level points)
  3. Set up exclusion zone; advise occupants of vibration and noise

Phase 3: Excavation and pour (per bay)

  1. Excavate the first bay: dig between the bay markers, going under the existing foundation to the design depth
  2. Do not disturb adjacent ground or the foundation outside the bay
  3. Clean the base of the excavation; check it's at the specified bearing stratum (engineer to verify in some cases)
  4. Pour concrete to engineer's specified mix and slump; fill to within 50mm of the underside of the existing foundation
  5. Leave 50mm gap (the dry packing joint) and allow concrete to cure (minimum 24–48 hours, often 48–72 hours)
  6. Dry pack the gap with a stiff mortar mix (1:3 cement:sand); this transfers load from the old foundation to the new concrete once set
  7. Backfill around the new concrete; compact carefully
  8. Move to the next bay in the sequence (never adjacent to the last bay)

Phase 4: Complete and sign off

  1. All bays completed in sequence
  2. Engineer and BCO inspect
  3. Make good ground surface; reinstate drains, paths, garden
  4. Obtain completion certificate from Building Control

Mini-Pile Underpinning

Where access is restricted, the foundation is very deep, or load transfer is complex, mini-piles are used:

Health and Safety

Underpinning excavations are among the most dangerous on construction sites:

Resin Injection (Non-Traditional)

Structural resin injection (Uretek, Mainmark) is a newer technique where expanding resin is injected through narrow tubes into the ground below the foundation. As it expands, it compacts the soil and lifts the foundation.

Suitable for:

NOT suitable for:

A structural engineer or specialist contractor must assess suitability. This is not a DIY solution.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does underpinning take?

A typical domestic semi-detached property requiring underpinning to one side (say 10m of foundation) might take 4–6 weeks from start to Building Control sign-off: approximately 1 week per 3–4 bays (due to curing time between bays), plus mobilisation and sign-off.

Does underpinning devalue my house?

Underpinning carries a stigma, but a well-documented underpinning scheme — structural engineer signed off, Building Control completion certificate, insurance-backed guarantee — should not significantly affect value. Many solicitors and mortgage companies treat underpinning as resolved if fully documented. Undisclosed previous underpinning without documentation is the real risk.

Can I undo tree removal causing heave?

No — once a mature tree is removed from clay soil, the heave process (clay rehydrating) takes years (sometimes decades) to stabilise. If heave is expected, the engineering solution is typically to design new foundations that are isolated from the heave zone (piles that go deeper than the heave zone; or a suspended ground floor with a void that allows the ground to move without pushing the structure).

Regulations & Standards