Hello everyone, one of the spring projects I have on my plate is to get a downspout to drain away from my foundation. However, it is between the house and a sidewalk walkway to my front door. I plan to trench under the sidewalk for a drainage line, but I'm concerned about undercutting the sidewalk. I've got all of my drainage parts sorted out and the digging and drainage pipe is straightforward.
How do I backfill to get the necessary support beneath the sidewalk? Looking online has mostly given information around jacking, rather than just supporting, but I'm concerned about using those materials as the sidewalk is perfectly even and level right now. I've seen some responses about hand packing as best you can, but that seems not great.
When I find videos on youtube, they all cover methods for digging the trench, but not how to backfill it, that's typically right when the videos end.
allangee t1_jeazn3l wrote
It sounds like you have a poured sidewalk (otherwise you would have just lifted a block). Very likely it's reinforced with rebar and/or steel mesh. That means it'll bridge gaps well.
I'm guessing you're going to put in a 4", maybe 6" pipe to accommodate the downspout outflow. If you keep your excavation close to the width of the pipe, the concrete will bridge that without back filling so that should ease your mind a bit.
But I know where you're coming from... I feel the same way about these kind of projects.
Depending on your access, and how wide the sidewalk is, you could mix a "soupy" batch of Quikcrete and let it free flow in, in layers. If one end is higher than the other, you'd obviously start there and block the other end as the concrete rises.
If that's not possible, poke in as much coarse gravel as you can (jagged stuff, not pebbly). Then run water through with sand to fill up the gaps.