A rubble trench is a simple, inexpensive, & effective foundation system.
This is one of the oldest types of foundation systems and was Frank Lloyd Wright's favorite. It's called "rubble" because gravel creates drainage & structural bearing. "Trench" because that's all you do: dig a ditch. And "foundation" because it will hold up your building without risk of movement from freeze/thaw cycles in the ground.
The purpose of a foundation - for any structure - is to take all of the weight from the building above, and distribute that load evenly to the ground below. I would argue that your foundation is the most important part of your whole structure! The type of foundation that makes sense for a particular structure depends on the size and shape of the building, the type of structural system for the building, the slope of the land, the capacity of the soil to support weight, and how deeply the ground freezes in your area in winter. The footer is the portion of the foundation that is underground. A rubble trench describes a low-impact option for the footer.

WHAT IS A RUBBLE TRENCH FOUNDATION?
A rubble trench is simply a continuous trench footer around the structural perimeter, dug as deeply as the ground freezing point in winter, and filled with stone. A structural (usually concrete) grade beam (a beam that rests on the ground) is poured on top of the stone-filled trench, and distributes the structural loads of the building across the surface area of the trench below. This type of foundation uniquely provides both structural bearing as well as water drainage in a single foundation system. The width of the trench determines the bearing capacity for loads above (as with a standard concrete footer). A filter fabric liner between the soil and the stone provides insurance against silt filling-in the cavities between the stones, which would impede the flow of water over time.
Drainage is important with most foundation systems, since water is the single largest culprit for foundation failure. Liquid water can erode the ground bearing around a foundation footer. Frozen water expands when it freezes, which causes the ground around your foundation to also expand, which subsequently causes the foundation to heave upward in Winter and drop it back down when the ground thaws in Spring. That heaving movement can crack the structure or cause uneven settling of the building. When installed correctly, a rubble trench results in a resource-efficient, high-performing, eco-friendly, and low-cost foundation footer.
Various forms of the rubble trench foundation have been used for thousands of years in construction. Earthen walls in the Middle East and Africa, for example, are built on top of shallow ditches filled with loose rock. The ditches are shallow because the ground does not freeze. Frank Lloyd Wright came across the rubble trench foundation system around the turn of the 20th Century. He observed the structures to be "perfectly static", meaning they showed no signs of heaving, because of the complete elimination of water around the foundation. From then forward, he built consistently with what he termed the "dry wall footing". Many time-tested structures stand as testimony to the durability of the rubble trench.
Step-by-Step Process
1. Dig a trench to frost depth. Slope the bottom of the trench so water drains out. This can be a dry well filled with gravel, or the end of the trench can end where the ground is lower. (Slope should be 1/8" per linear foot, minimum.) I usually do a minimum of 16" wide trench, but the width required for structural support depends on the specific soil bearing capacity and your building loads. | ![]() dig a trench |
2. Line the trench with filter fabric. Filter fabric is "geotextile" that allows water to flow through, but blocks small particles, such as silt. The fabric provides a fail-safe to prevent fine particles in the soil from filling in the gravel over me. The goal is to create a drain under your building that removes water. Note: Strictly speaking this is a modern addition to rubble trench detailing. But it is simple insurance to make sure that your structure lasts for centuries. 2b. If your permit office requires a drain pipe, add 4 inches of stone and tamp it once around, by hand is fine. Ensure that surface of the gravel fill maintains the drainage slope and is at or below the frost line. Then Lay 4-inch diameter perforated pipe continuous on top of the sloped stone. Slope the pipe to daylight, as you would for a standard foundation footer. Note: technically the drain pipe is optional, since the entire rubble trench footer provides drainage. In some jurisdictions, I have found that including the drain pipe, even though it is redundant in function, facilitates getting a building permit. | ![]() line with filter fabric & begin to fill with gravel |
3. Fill the remainder of the trench flush to grade, or just below, using 1-1/2 inch angular gravel, tamping after every vertical foot of fill. (See note below on stone size.) Hand tampers work just fine for this application...no need to use a pneumatic tamper. Just walk along the entire trench and drop the tamper over all areas. Tamping locks the stones together to provide strong bearing that won't shift over time. The rubble fill may be stone or crushed concrete, but in either case, it must be washed free of fine particles and should provide a variety of sizes with an average of 1 to 1-1/2 inches and a minimum of 1/4-inch. Fine dusty particles or sand-sized particles can clog you rubble trench and then it will not act properly as a drain. You can test the drainage in your trench with a hose before continuing. | ![]() |
4. Lay out your building perimeter. Once you have tamped your gravel, you will need to re-lay out your building footprint on top of the tamped gravel in order to locate exactly where your grade beam will be placed. | ![]() |
5. Coat your formwork (for the grade beam) with biodegradable oil. This ensures easy release of your form for potential reuse. Any inexpensive vegetable oil works well. I like to use 2x12's for the grade beam formwork and then reuse the same wood for structural framing once the grade beam has cured. 6. Set formwork for grade beam or slab-on-grade thickened perimeter beam. You will likely need steel reinforcing bar (rebar) inside your concrete. Have a structural engineer designate the structural requirements for your grade beam. If you are pouring a slab-on-grade with a thickened perimeter beam over the rubble trench and will install in a single concrete pour, the slab preparation is the same as what you would install with a conventional footer. | ![]() |
7. Pour concrete grade beam. The grade beam can be a discrete structural element around the entire perimeter of the structure (as this photo shows), or can be integrated into the thickened perimeter of a slab-on-grade foundation. Any structural elements above this point are completely standard, whether installing a stem wall and crawl space, stud walls, a post-and-beam structure, or whatever. An engineer should size all structural elements. Note: the rebar still sticking out of the ground to support the wood form until the concrete has fully cured. | ![]() |
Typical Rubble Trench Footer Detail

Benefits | Challenges |
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BUILDING PERMITS
Rubble trench foundations meet the requirements and the intent of U.S. building codes, however, since this system is not specifically identified in current codes, acceptance is provided on a case-by-case basis. Since this puts permit approval at the discretion of individual building officials, it is recommended to initiate a dialog prior to submitting for a building permit. This provides an opportunity to inform and educate permitting staff and provide adequate information to satisfy everyone's mutual desire to ensure a safe structure. The article written by Elias Velonis for Fine Homebuilding magazine provides excellent technical information. Stamped structural drawings are also highly recommended. (I have never had any questions come up during the building permit process when rubble trench foundation systems are stamped by an engineer.)
Yes, very timely! My dad was an admirer of Frank Lloyd Wright.
If I wanted to avoid the use of concrete entirely, how do I ensure the proper connection between the ground & roof when using a rubble trench foundation plus dry stacked rock stem wall (in place of the grade beam and stem wall) for a loadbearing strawbale wall?
Sigi, thanks for writing this up and sharing! I've been reading strawbale house by athena and bill steen, and have been mulling over the different options for foundations within the past week so this was very timely for me. Rubble trench and a grade beam seem like a solid choice for my purposes. Best to you and jim!