Foundation Types Explained: Strip, Slab, and Pile Foundations
Learn how strip, slab, and pile foundations share loads, when each option fits, and why geotechnical input matters.
1. What foundations do
Foundations transfer loads from the building into soil. Their main job is to keep settlement controlled and prevent overturning or sliding. Standards such as ISO soil & foundation guidance explain how soil investigations feed into this choice, while Eurocode 2 describes the concrete and reinforcement rules used to build each foundation type.
2. Strip foundations
Strip (continuous) footings run beneath load-bearing walls. They work best on relatively uniform soils with moderate bearing capacity—typical for masonry houses or low-rise buildings.
- Advantages: simple formwork, minimal excavation depth, economical for repetitive wall lines.
- Limitations: not ideal for very soft soils or heavy point loads, may need thickened pads under columns.
Use the Strip Foundation Calculator to estimate width, depth, and concrete volume before a geotechnical report arrives.
3. Slab foundations
Slab-on-grade foundations are large reinforced slabs that spread loads across a wide area. They suit light commercial or residential projects where soil capacity is moderate and frost depth is shallow.
- Advantages: acts as both floor and foundation, good for distributed loads, simplifies services routing.
- Limitations: requires careful soil preparation, can crack if subgrade support varies.
Estimate thickness and concrete quantities with the Slab Foundation Calculator and refine totals using the Foundation Volume Calculator.
4. Pile foundations
Piles transfer loads to deeper, stronger layers when near-surface soils are weak or when uplift forces are high. They are common for high-rises, industrial plants, and sites with high groundwater.
- Advantages: bypass soft soil, resist uplift, control settlement in challenging ground.
- Limitations: require specialized equipment, higher cost, and detailed design.
The Pile Foundation Calculator offers first-pass quantities (number of piles, approximate length) so procurement teams can plan budgets while waiting for test results.
5. Estimation vs structural design
Estimators rely on typical soil values and simple load assumptions to size foundations quickly. These numbers help compare options and order materials, but they do not replace engineered design. Once soil investigations are complete, structural engineers re-calculate footing sizes using the actual parameters prescribed by ISO guidance, Eurocode 2, or local codes. Always treat calculator outputs as preliminary.
Educational notice
These concepts support planning only. Final foundation design requires qualified engineers and current regulations.
Related Standards
- Soil and Foundation Basics – ISO Geotechnical Principles Explained
Learn how soil properties affect foundations and how geotechnical principles relate to foundation, pile, and concrete calculations.