Ehh it should pass code!!!

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21willys

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 8, 2011
Messages
2,751
This is a house that the home owner is rebuilding after a fire. I'm not sure how anyone can look at it and believe it's ok like this.




Plus I haven't saw any building permits posted. (You can't even put a post in the ground in our town without a permit)
 
Wow! I can see quite a few issues from here. From ground level up, what is he thinking? Is that the original block work on the foundation or did he work hard at getting it that far out of square, level and plumb?[S
Is that beaver board for floor joists too? Don't see anything that looks like pressure treated either...
 
It's all new foundation and footer! In person you can see a huge crown in the entire wall. The nice guy in me wants to stop and say something but how do you politely say "hey your entire project is crap and needs to come down"? The guy building it gets foster kids as a income and works them like borrowed mules. I guess if he has to take it down it will be karma getting him.
 
In Houston you can't even blow your nose without a permit! Built a 2 car carport & it took several months to just get it permitted... a car port... pleeeease! One of the big reasons I moved out to the country!

BoB
 
No permits here. I can build anything, any way I want, without the Govt looking over my shoulder or stealing my money. That being said, that guy needs to invest in a good 4 foot level and a square! I would have to make the suggestion to him, maybe he doesn't know how to use them?
 
He fixed it today. By covering it in osb so that you can't see the big gap. The entire thing is so out of square that it's not even funny. I would guess it's 6" or more out from being square from corner to corner.
 
Ah what the heck, once he gets it dried in, it won't matter, as long as it keeps the weather out and the heat in (or out). I've lived in and done remodel on houses way worse than that. Is it a pain in the rear? Yeah but in the end kids and wife happy, house cozy, life goes on
 
There is nothing wrong with shimming the foundation to level a floor.
Some builders shim, others let the floor be off.
It happens all the time on new construction.
yes optimally you would hope the foundation contractors did their job correctly but you can't go and rip out the foundation because it isn't perfect.
I mean you can but there is nothing to be gained economically or structurally, you would just be wasting money.
 

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