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A foundation can be built for free out of stone on your land. This perimeter base of packed stone is referred to as 'the rubble trench'. It is a foundation that has been used successfully for thousands of years. Nothing is as durable as stone. And if you happen to have no stone on your property, simply order a truckload of gravel (about $200) - it works just as well.

  1. along the boundaries of your proposed building. The trench should be about 1.5' wide, and deep enough so that it's below the frostline. Use a pick/mattock to break up the soil, and a transfer shovel to shovel it out. The soil can be used as fill to build up the grade within the foundation, or outside it to slope the land down and away from the dwelling. When the trench depth is roughed out, use a square-ended shovel to scrape the bottom, so that the floor of the trench remains packed and undisturbed. [1]
  2. If you have boulders, or something like these hardened Quikrete bags to use, lay them in the bottom of the trench like this:
    • Continue to set in the largest stones you can lift and fit in the trench. The stone should get progressively smaller as you fill towards the top.
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  3. Everything should fit like a puzzle - pound rocks in with a hammer where you need to. Urbanite can also be used, and torn up asphalt sections from roads. If you're using old concrete block, break it up into flat pieces with a hammer.
  4. Make sure to swish the gravel around with your hands into all the crevices in your rubble. [2]

  5. and pack around it with stone. For good measure, lay an extra water line, and both 2" to 3" greywater and 4" blackwater pipe, just in case you want to tie into them at some point. [3]
  6. Put in the stem wall of your choice, to keep your building high off the ground. If you want to continue in the same low-cost, green, site-harvested, ultra-durable tradition, do an earthbag stem wall. This is rows of polypro seed bags filled with either dirt or rock, with strips of barbed wire run between each row for tensile strength. In the standard earthbag stem wall the bottommost rows are composed of bags of tamped aggregate (sand, gravel, rock, etc.), and the rows above are filled with a stabilized earth mix - your dirt mixed with either cement or lime, and allowed to cure until it hardens into rock. The stem wall when finished is covered in chicken wire and plastered for lateral strength and to protect the polypro bags. Earthbags are wide and make excellent stem walls for alternative building systems such as cordwood masonry and straw bale - as well as walls of earthbags themselves! [4]
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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    What is a stone foundation?
    Community Answer
    A foundation composed in part or entirely of stone. It may be bound by mortar to increase longevity and stability.
  • Question
    Is a stone foundation cheaper than other foundations?
    Community Answer
    Yes, if you don't buy the rocks. If you find them, the cost will be minuscule; the only thing you would have to buy is the concrete.
  • Question
    How do I lay my house foundation if I hit a large stone while digging?
    Community Answer
    Some houses actually have boulders as part of the basement/foundation because it was too large or too expensive to pull them out.
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      Tips

      • There are two ways to keep water out of your trench. One is to have a large roof overhang and make sure the ground slopes down and away from the building at all points. The other is to lay perforated drain pipe throughout the bottom of the trench, making sure it's sloped and it all ultimately drains to daylight.
      • The stem wall can be tied to the rubble trench by pounding rod down and through it, then filling the voids in your block with concrete. If you're doing earthbag stem walls, rod can be pounded down and through them the same, and once the stabilized earth mix cures the rod will become immovable.




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      Things You'll Need

      • Pick/Mattock
      • Transfer Shovels
      • Work Gloves
      • Hammer
      • Wheelbarrow
      • Hand Tamper

      About This Article

      Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 182,107 times.

      Reader Success Stories

      • Bry Hunter

        May 24, 2017

        "This is helping me to build the rock house I have wanted to build. Laying the pipe work first was not in mind, and ..." more
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