Inverted-beam (grade-beam) foundation
A shallow foundation made of reinforced-concrete beams arranged in a grid beneath the columns, with the widened base turned downward: the beam is «inverted» because it works upside-down compared with a floor beam, loaded from below by the soil reaction. Tying all the columns into a stiff frame, it spreads the loads onto strips of ground, reduces and evens out settlements and stiffens the building at its base.
Technical section of the system, from inside (left) to outside (right).
A shallow foundation made of reinforced-concrete beams arranged in a grid beneath the columns, with the widened base turned downward: the beam is «inverted» because it works upside-down compared with a floor beam, loaded from below by the soil reaction. Tying all the columns into a stiff frame, it spreads the loads onto strips of ground, reduces and evens out settlements and stiffens the building at its base.
The inverted beam is a foundation halfway between the isolated footing and the raft: instead of a pad under each column (footing) or a single continuous plate (raft), a grid of beams runs beneath the lines of columns. The typical section is an inverted T: a vertical web and a wide base flange that rests on the soil.
In a floor beam the load comes from above and the tension flange is at the bottom; here it is the opposite: the ground pushes upward with its reaction, while the columns push down. The bending-moment diagram flips, and so does the reinforcement: the main tension bars are placed where this inverted scheme requires. Hence the name.
By widening the bearing onto continuous strips, the pressure on the soil is lower than under a footing, and the columns are tied into a stiff grid. This limits differential settlement — the enemy of structures — because the points can no longer sink independently: the grid forces them to move together. It is the typical solution on mediocre soils or with moderate loads, where isolated footings would settle unevenly.
If the beams become very wide and close together, it is better to switch to a raft, which is effectively the limiting case. The inverted beam stays competitive when the soil is fair, because it uses less concrete than a raft and leaves space between the beams (sub-floor void, buried services). The blinding layer, the cover toward the soil and waterproofing where there is groundwater must be detailed with care.
Why it works
Load spreading · widened baseThe column concentrates a large load at a point; the inverted beam gathers it and spreads it along a long, widened base. Spread over a much greater area, the same load produces a low, uniform pressure on the soil, which a mediocre ground can bear without sinking. And because the beams tie all the columns into a stiff grid, the points cannot settle each on its own: the grid forces them to move together, and the differential settlements — the ones that crack a building — stay small.
Control of differential settlement
Comparison · insulantsNodal details
Critical junctions · sectionsThe column bars are anchored down into the inverted beam, and over the support the top (negative-moment) reinforcement is continuous: the column load passes into the grid, which carries it as a frame.
- Column
- Inverted-beam web
- Top reinforcement (negative)
- Base-flange reinforcement
- Anchored column bars
- Blinding layer
In section the wide base flange spreads the load onto the soil and carries the bottom reinforcement, protected by a generous cover toward the ground; below, the blinding and the waterproofing isolate the cast from the soil and the water.
- Beam web
- Widened base flange
- Cover toward the ground
- Bottom longitudinal bars
- Waterproofing
- Blinding + soil
Installation controls
Specification · checklist01 · Excavation & base
02 · Blinding & waterproofing
03 · Reinforcement (inverted)
04 · Pour & cover
05 · Curing & backfill
Recurring defects
Diagnostics · siteComponent materials
The network · materialsReference regulations
2 norms- D.P.R. 380/2001Consolidated Building Act (Testo Unico Edilizia)In force
- D.M. 1444/1968Mandatory limits of density, height, distance between buildings and urban standardsIn force
Informational links to the regulatory framework. Always verify the current text on the official source.