Fox Blocks Radius Form and what a radius wall looks like
Fox Blocks in Laguna radius corner and tower poured out clean
Fox Blocks Ellis Lighting and Power first ICF job electrical install
Fox Blocks 12 Inch Corner Form at manufacturing plant showing off
Fox Blocks Ellis Power Runs chased out in ICF Foam Panel
Fox Blocks Wins Big at the 2020 ICF Builder Awards
10 Steps for Building a Home with Insulated Concrete Form Blocks
An ICF home, like one built with Fox Blocks, provides many of the essential features that today’s homeowner is looking for: excellent indoor environmental quality (IEQ), energy-efficiency, and disaster-resistance.
Do I need an engineer to design and stamp Fox Blocks building plans?
Fox Blocks are listed in the building codes (IRC- Sections R404, R611 or NBCC Part 9) with specific applicability limits for residential construction. If the project meets the applicability limits within the building code, a Professional Engineer may not be required (dependent on local building department requirements). A building official has the right to request engineering and in some regions all projects require a professional’s stamp. For any projects that exceed the applicability limits, a Professional Engineer is required for the structural design. Check with your local building department.
How to Build a Wind-Resistant Home with Fox Blocks ICFs
Tragically, between 2000 and 2017 there were 894 wind and 1417 tornado-related deaths. In 2017, 36 percent of the wind and 63 percent of the tornado-related fatalities happened either in a mobile or permanent home. A wind-resistant design is critical to a home’s integrity and a family’s safety.
Contractors Can Use Traditional Building Measurements with ICF Studs when They Choose Fox Blocks