wow, amir...good job! sounds like you really had it figured out..not pool related, but settling and cracking related. in our area, the ground can settle tremendously under houses. i first noticed that one side of my double garage was down about 4 inches overall..there was a long crack in the garage floor when we bought the house in fall 2007. i knew where it needed to start was a process called slabjacking here. not dissimilar i think to what you are talking about in terms of force a concrete type mix into underground cavities. the first guy i had come in who is a big contractor slabjacking large buildings said i could do it, but he said to be honest, the jobs he was doing were 50,000 dollars up and he didn't really do small jobs. he said he could do but it would cost me 6,000 dollars to which i gulped..but, he said i know a guy just out of town who's a one man operation who does all the small jobs and he would call him. the guy came in, the job was 400 dollars to drill 6 small holes and pump with concrete. it raised my floor and surrounding sidewalk to level and i did some work myself to finish raising the garage itself with a jack pole so the garage floor could come up. in the end, a pretty small job, but, one not to be ignored for the long term repercussions. i tip my hat to you.
ps- if it makes you feel better, the big slabjack contractor guy said he knew of one house in this area of the city that are all build on the side of what we call a coulee, basically a small hill going into the valley that runs along a river..and he said that you had to see it to believe the settling and how quickly.over the winter and after spring thaw, the floor in this person's living room dropped so much that the floor cracked all the way across and there was a difference of 6 inches from one side to the other. he said to fix it all and forever, it was going to cost the homeowner 150,000 dollars on a 400,000 dollar house. he has one crew permanently stationed in this area to do fixes and has more business than he can handle. part of his business now has become offering a package to "settle proof" homes in this area at a cost of 50,000 dollars going in. it's unfortunate, but apparently the house contractors just don't know how to do this themselves.
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