Conventional reinforced slab
Conventional reinforced slab for Australian residential builds. Full guide covers AS 2870 site classes, beam sizing, mesh grades and hold points.
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The full guide on conventional reinforced slab construction for Australian residential builders is at:
Conventional reinforced slab: Australian residential guide
That article covers:
- When a conventional reinforced slab is appropriate (Class A and Class S sites under AS 2870:2011)
- How it differs from a stiffened raft and a waffle pod slab
- Site preparation, services rough-in, termite management, and pre-pour hold points
- Reinforcement, vapour barrier, concrete placement, curing, and tolerances
- Common defects and holds specific to this slab type
Go there for the full reference.
References
Quick orientation
A conventional reinforced slab is a flat concrete panel cast directly on prepared ground, reinforced with steel mesh. It suits Class A and Class S sites under AS 2870:2011, where reactive soil movement is negligible. It is the simplest and typically least costly residential slab type.
The most common mistake is specifying a conventional slab on a Class M or higher site. That is a non-compliant footing system and a defect-liability trap. Confirm the soil report and site classification before committing to slab type.
For the step-by-step construction sequence, cost comparisons, and full compliance notes, see the canonical guide.