Posted By FBBP on 08 Oct 2016 11:36 AM
smartwall - The floor has to be placed anyway. We normally do the floor in place when we have multi storey walls to do ie the basement and the main floor and sometimes a second storey. The main advantage is that the house is perfectly plumb and square prior to the placing of concrete so you don't have to spend time afterwards in truing up the walls. In a big pour, lower wall concrete is already kicking over so it is hardier to true up the walls at the end. The other big difference is that you have the whole floor to pour off not just the catwalk. Much nicer especially in the winter when catwalks are icy.
loghomebuilder - almost all floors will have a beam or two in the floor system. We just set up the steel columns on their pads and set the beam with the ends cut into the ICF wall. We put an extra temporary column under the beam at the wall. If it is a steel beam, there should be Nelson Studs on the end to embed into the concrete. Alternatively a pair of holes can be cut into the web and rebar inserted. If wood, some jurisdictions require a moisture barrier around the beam.
If you go to the link I posted to Integraspec you will see how to use flags on the bolts. With that method, you don't have to remove any foam other then the bolt hole. If you use standard bolts, 6" is more then enough, four inches better if the bolt is centered. This method does cause a bit of thermal bridging and in theory there is wood in contact with concrete is you don't place a moisture barrier.
fvicf - what is your concerned about open time on the ICF?
Sorry, did see this sooner. My concern is that if I am doing this myself I'd have the ICF (basement) walls standing without concrete while I'm putting the floor trusses in place. I guess I'd be concerned about wind, etc causing havoc with them.