Ventilated sub-floor (ground-bearing floor)
A ground-floor slab that does not rest directly on the soil but on a ventilated air space, created with dome formwork (igloo units) cast to form a raised slab. The space keeps the floor away from ground moisture and, ventilated to the outside, sheds the vapour and above all the radon, the natural soil gas. It is the standard for healthy ground floors in new construction.
Technical section of the system, from inside (left) to outside (right).
A ground-floor slab that does not rest directly on the soil but on a ventilated air space, created with dome formwork (igloo units) cast to form a raised slab. The space keeps the floor away from ground moisture and, ventilated to the outside, sheds the vapour and above all the radon, the natural soil gas. It is the standard for healthy ground floors in new construction.
The ventilated sub-floor is the air space that separates the ground-floor slab from the soil. It is made with plastic dome units (igloo) resting on the blinding, over which a reinforced-concrete slab is cast: beneath remains a continuous void, some twenty centimetres high, connected to the outside by ventilation pipes. It is not just a gap: it is a system that defends the ground floor from moisture and radon.
The soil is always damp and water rises by capillarity: in direct contact, a floor takes up moisture, and with it mould and decay. The air space breaks the contact: the moisture evaporating from the soil stays in the void and does not rise into the slab. It is a physical break between soil and floor, more effective and lasting than a simple barrier laid on the ground.
Radon is a natural radioactive gas that seeps out of the soil and, building up in closed ground-floor rooms, is a health risk. The air space, ventilated by opposing vents (or mechanically extracted), intercepts it before it enters and expels it outside. The same airflow carries off the vapour: this is why the sub-floor is made «ventilated», with free air inlets in sufficient number.
Over the igloo units a reinforced slab is cast as the load-bearing plane that spreads the loads; above it go the thermal insulation, the screed (often with the services and heating) and the floor finish. The void can house pipe runs, which stay inspectable. The clear height of the void, the number and position of the air inlets and the continuity to the walls must be detailed for the ventilation to really work.
Why it works
Air space · break and ventilateThe void does two jobs. It breaks the contact with the soil: the moisture that rises by capillarity stops in the air space and does not climb into the slab, far better than a barrier laid on the ground. And it ventilates: a cross-flow of air, from opposing vents, flushes out the vapour and above all the radon — the natural soil gas — before it can build up in the rooms above. A healthy ground floor is made by lifting it off the earth and letting it breathe.
Defence against ground moisture and radon
Comparison · insulantsNodal details
Critical junctions · sectionsA ventilation pipe runs through the perimeter wall, connecting the air space to the outside through a grille; opposing inlets create the cross-flow that flushes out moisture and radon. The grille keeps out water, leaves and small animals.
- Perimeter wall
- Slab over the igloo
- Air space (sub-floor)
- Ventilation pipe (through)
- External grille
- Blinding
The plastic dome units rest on the blinding and act as permanent formwork: concrete fills the legs to form little columns, and the slab is cast over the domes. The continuous void beneath is the ventilated space; a barrier under it stops damp and radon.
- R.C. slab + mesh
- Dome (igloo)
- Air space
- Cast leg (between domes)
- Damp / radon barrier
- Blinding
Installation controls
Specification · checklist01 · Excavation & blinding
02 · Barrier & igloo
03 · Slab pour
04 · Ventilation
05 · Insulation & finishes
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.