No inspections out here that i could ever find a trace of, and it won't be sold, family land and all, I guess that's alittle unusual in this day and age, but it means more to us than some land, its home, y'know? As far as not enough space, I'll be starting an addition as soon as i tack in the last piece of finish molding... adding a bedroom and extending the living room to make room for about a 16'x10'x4' tank


The 4" is the thickness of the concrete pads that the building will sit on, it's actually pretty common down here because we dont have a deep frost line, which is the primary reasoning behind deep foundations, to control frost heave. Plus im in Carroll County clay... you'd have to experience it. I can stay in one spot with a garden tiller with all the weight on the tines for fifteen minutes and not get 3" deep, and its all but impermeable to water on the hilltops. The 4'' will be the depth of the first block, then a 6x6 post atop that up to the floor beams, a doubled 2x10. I'ts perfectly sufficient for my area and soil type. My parents have a living room nearly as big as my house with large exposed beams in a very steep roof, loft, all kinds of heavy things, and it's built the same way, except they didn't dig their concrete pads in, they just leveled up a spot on the ground and sat them down, been fine for years, a tiny amount of settling when constructing, nothing since, still rock solid and level.
As for the tank, I think I will in fact go with an 8'x4'x3', approximately 700 gallons, 2x4 frame, 3/4 ply with fiberglass, then sweetwater epoxy. Will 1/2" glass work for 36" depth? I've heard it would, but I may go to 9/16 for added insurance.
(Whew, I think im done now)