There is iron inside. 2 layers of construction steel mats, and on the sides there are U-shaped bent mats (which basically connect the upper and lower mats, and at the corners there are angles made of construction steel. Probably not compacted. Just slid down a chute with a wheelbarrow and spread with a shovel.
I’m talking about the base slab, not the blocks. The blocks are still to come, but I also planned to reinforce them vertically and horizontally, and there’s also a connecting reinforcement sticking out of the base slab. So it shouldn’t fail because of the iron.
I am talking about the base plate, not the bricks. The bricks are still coming, but I also planned to reinforce them vertically and horizontally, and there is also a connection reinforcement protruding from the base plate. So it shouldn't fail because of the steel.
then it's fine. then you have concrete blocks and pour in more concrete
otherwise, only the structural engineer can tell you something.
Then I, as a complete layman in the subject of concrete, would be satisfied. Presumably, you can build a house on the slab. The few tons will be held by the thing, provided the ground was well prepared and nothing sinks.
Then I would be satisfied as a complete layman in the subject of concrete. You can probably build a house on the slab. The few tons it has to bear will be supported, provided the subsoil is well prepared and nothing sinks away
Does that now mean that YOU are also a layman, or that you know your stuff?