Ground beam (pier-and-beam footing)
Ground beam is a reinforced concrete beam spanning between pier footings, tying them and supporting the structure above. Engineer-designed; not a DTS element.
Ask Chalkline about this →A ground beam is a reinforced concrete beam spanning between pier footings, tying the piers together and carrying the structure above. It is the horizontal counterpart to the vertical pier footing: the pier transfers point load to deeper bearing soil, the ground beam distributes load along the wall line above. Together they form a pier-and-beam footing system, an alternative to strip footings or stiffened raft slabs on certain sites.
When pier-and-beam (with ground beams) is used in residential:
- Reactive soil sites (Class M, H1, H2) where shallow strip footings would suffer differential movement. Deep piers reach below the reactive zone; ground beams span across, isolated from the shrink-swell zone.
- Sloping sites where stepped strip footings would be inefficient or expensive. Piers can extend to the required bearing depth at each step.
- Sites with weak surface fill over good underlying bearing. Piers bypass the fill.
- Heritage retrofits where existing footings need supplementing without disturbing the building above.
- Stumped subfloors historically; less common in new build today.
Construction sequence:
- Pier holes excavated to engineered depth (commonly 1.5 to 5 m, set by the soil report and load).
- Pier reinforcement cage placed in each hole.
- Piers poured (often using a steel sleeve or formed shaft above ground).
- Ground beam reinforcement placed in the trench between piers, lapped into the pier reinforcement.
- Ground beam concrete poured in one continuous run (or with planned cold joints).
- Sub-floor or slab built above the ground beam.
Why it’s engineer-designed (not deemed-to-comply):
- AS 2870 deemed-to-comply tables cover strip and raft footings on standard reactive sites. Pier-and-beam with ground beams sits outside those tables and requires site-specific engineering.
- The engineer designs the pier diameter, depth, reinforcement, and the ground beam dimensions (typically 300x400 mm or larger) based on the soil report, load calculations, and span between piers.
- Each project’s ground beam detail is unique; there is no standard “ground beam”.
Common defects:
- Ground beam poured before the pier reinforcement has set; the lap joint is compromised.
- Pier hole sides not stabilised in soft soil; the bearing area is undermined.
- Ground beam cast on disturbed fill rather than against the pier; the load path is broken.
- Cold joint in the ground beam without an engineer’s design detail; potential failure plane.
Also known as: GB (drawing abbreviation); pier-tie beam; subfloor beam; capping beam (when above piers).
Category: Structure.
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Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16. Quarterly review for currency.