Company Directory
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Dan Smith
Professional Engineer
Over 30 Years of Experience
Dan's Resume
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Andrew Smith
Technical Consultant
Project Manager
Employed since 1999
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Katherine Walker
CADD Drafter
Employed since 2007
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Tara Watson
CADD Drafter
Employed since 2008
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Construction Process
Owner Responsibilities:
- describe in writing to contractor or architect all of your needs, requirements, wishes
and desires.
- review the plans and specifications
- interview 2 architects (see if your general contractor can recommend a practical architect)
- get prices from 3 licensed General Contractors with experience in your area
(check with the Better Business Bureau and check references). Also check that the
GC owns a copy of the Residential Building Code. Walk through a house under
construction, talk to home owners that the GC built houses for.
- when picking finishes, doors and windows get the Manufacturer’s literature or sample
with the product information to be sure the correct finish is applied to the correct
location
Plans and Specifications:
- review the plans to determine if all of your wishes and needs are meet.
- if you are planning to build a large house or you want a perfect house
I suggest that you write up your own specifications. Such as deflection
criteria of the floors, amount of acceptable cracking in the concrete garage
floor, what does “hardwood floors” really mean to you, etc…
- the Residential Code book specifies a MINIMUM standard for housing.
if you want a higher standard, tell your builder up front and write it down.
- your contract with the general contractor should reference the architectural and
structural engineering plans and your specifications.
Permits:
- do not do work for a General Contractor who does not want to get a permit
- a permit gets you a quick review of your plans to make sure that meet
at least the Residential Building Code requirements
- a permit also gets you an inspection, depending you which county you live
in you may get an excellent and training. A third party independent inspection
is very valuable, inspections are performed on the footings, foundation, framing,
electrical, mechanical and the plumbing.
Architect:
- discuss the outside elevations, make sure that all sides are drawn to see how the house will look.
- discuss layout and flow of house. Kitchen should be near the garage so groceries
do not have to be carried along way. Do not locate upstairs bathrooms
over bedrooms (too noisy). Be careful of downstairs bath room locations.
- discuss windows, doors, cabinets, wall coverings and floor coverings.
- the more complete the plans are, the faster the job will go
- some products have 2 to 6 week delivery times.
Structural Engineer:
- make sure engineer has your specifications
- get General Contractor to talk to Structural Engineer
before engineer starts. Engineer should know capabilities
of General Contractor.
- General Contractor should not be responsible for payment of questions by
Building Code Officials
- some products (brick, granite, slate, marble, hardwood floors) require extra support
above the typical finishes.
Payment Schedule:
- reputable General Contractors can started without a down payment
using their credit lines at their suppliers
- an initial payment should be made immediately after the materials are
delivered to the site.
- payments should be scheduled directly to the inspections
- second payment after framing inspection (dry in)
- third payment after HVAC, electrical and plumbing inspections are passed
- fourth payment when Certificate of Occupancy is obtained.
- retainage should be paid immediately after your written punchlist
is completed.
(I meet a person who went to sell their house. There was an outstanding building permit that was 5 years old.
The General Contractor did not frame the two story two car garage to the building code, it failed the framing inspection,
he finished the job, got paid and did not get a Certificate of Occupancy. Owner could not sell the house until he fixed all of the problems)
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