Methinks not! Garages usually have a sloped floor or a step down of 100mm, for the few that do or did leak, to create that rule.
"Has your architect dealt with the sloping floor of the garage, to cope with fuel spills, or another method such as a bund (reduced floor level) to meet compliance at the wall party to the residence?" Haha, I doubt that very much!! I wasn't aware that there did need to be a sloping floor away from the house.
I was planning on doing the footings myself. It's not rocket science and I have a good laser level and would simplify matters by hiring a pump truck when they are poured. But do i actually need to have a step in them? Can they not be all one level, and it just means that there are more blocks used to come out of the ground for the garage section?
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Well, you'd defo need that if there's a doorway, but maybe not if there's just a wall and no shared roof space for fire to breach through to the house within. BCO and your architect should be approached now to address / identify this requirement. Door way to garage or not, assuming not due to levels, but there's nowt as queer as folk!
Are you referring to strip foundations and then dwarf walls for back-filling, then the garage structure atop? Tanking would be 'complex' to say the least. Walls would be block on flat then, or otherwise suitably beefed up, to deal with the outward forces from the back-fill.
A lot more excavation, muck-away, and back-fill, so wouldn't be my first choice solution.
What are you building with? Standard masonry walls with a cavity?