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#21
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What have you guys seen? Don't limit this to your house, this is an
aviation group. Ha! In 5 years of remodeling at the hotel we have found... - "Emergency" lighting that had no battery backup - "Fire alarms" that did nothing. Pull 'em all you want... - Plumbing that was apparently soldered by my daughter, when she was 8 years old - Drywall that was GLUED over old drywall - Balconies painted with sand paint. Walk on 'em and track sand paint EVERYWHERE throughout the hotel suites. - No flashing on ANY exterior boards. None, so that the water can pool on top of every board, and migrate into the buildings... - Popcorn ceilings applied over un-primered drywall, so that over time (and with humidity) it simply falls off in sheets - Unwrapped air conditioning cold water lines that dripped condensation onto drywall ceilings throughout the hotel, ruining dozens of sheets of drywall and all the drop ceilings. - "Window" air conditioners that were "plumbed" with ducting into other rooms (in multi-bedroom suites) in order to provide cooling to multiple rooms without buying multiple air conditioners - Exterior lights that were wired into an individual suite's bathroom GFI circuit - Exterior lights that were not wired into ANY circuit with a breaker on it - A giant hole in the concrete floor (of a first floor room) that was filled with sand and covered with an old rug - 300 pound fire doors held up with 1" screws in the hinges I could go on, and on, and on. It is just astounding what some people will do to save a buck that will ultimately cost $100 down the road... -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#22
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Jay Honeck wrote:
What have you guys seen? Don't limit this to your house, this is an aviation group. Ha! In 5 years of remodeling at the hotel we have found... {SNIP} I could go on, and on, and on. It is just astounding what some people will do to save a buck that will ultimately cost $100 down the road... But it didn't cost THEM $100 down the road it cost YOU $100 down the road. |
#23
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But it didn't cost THEM $100 down the road it cost YOU $100 down the road.
True, in these instances -- but it's an ongoing thing. The hotel has been here since 1980, and I've seen enough to know that this "pennywise-but-pound-foolish" approach to maintenance was endemic throughout its history. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#24
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RST Engineering wrote:
If you would give us the year that you started I could probably guess the year it was done. Plus or minus a year or so. {;-) Jim '98 |
#25
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Ray Andraka wrote:
Margy Natalie wrote: Anyone want to guess how long it was before it was finished? Is it finished yet? ;-) More or less, but some things are wearing out for the 2nd time :-) |
#26
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Mike Spera wrote:
O.K. I have a good one. The doorbell mounted high on a soffit overhead in the kitchen. What could they POSSIBLY screw up? When I tore down the drywall (ALL 4 LAYERS - the DIP****S just kept piling it on for the backsplash) I found the wiring for the doorbell. It was an old 110v system. They used zip cord (brown 18 gauge lamp cord) STAPLED TO THE 2X4 stud. It was wired into one of the legs to the electric stove. Big lug with electrical tape around it. This was on a 50 amp circuit breaker. Remember that lamp cord is rated for 8 amps or so. I found the doorbell shorted, the zipcord completely devoid of the insulation because the short had cooked it off, and the remaining strands of wire burned/buried into the scorched and blackened 2X4. I have no idea how this did not start a fire. I also found a "new" outlet some bubba installed. 2 pieces of insulated wire strung between the drywall and studs, around and inside corner to the new outlet. Real nice. Finally the topper. They turned the former laundry room into a bathroom, complete with shower. For an exhaust fan, they plastered in the wrong sized unit into a big hole high up on a wall (2+ inches of plaster oozing out the back). Now, the $6000 punchline. Since it was too much trouble to run the vent hose properly (through a roof vent), they simply left it hanging IN THE DROP CEILING COLD AIR RETURN. The warm wet air from the bathroom was being pumped into this drop ceiling where it went straight into the roof insulation and finally the roof decking. 80+ sheets of rotted decking (an additional $6k for the roof) because Bubba Jackass did not have the brains to know that you NEVER run a bathroom vent ANYWHERE but out of the house, preferably out the roof. What have you guys seen? Don't limit this to your house, this is an aviation group. I'm sure we have some real winners in the airplane category... Can't wait Mike We took out a DG that had a piece of masking tape that said "$5" on it. Does that count? BTW the system had NO filters, at all. Margy |
#27
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("Margy Natalie" wrote)
If you would give us the year that you started I could probably guess the year it was done. Plus or minus a year or so. '98 Down the hill of our freeway exit ramp, 35W(N) & US10(W), is an expansive new townhouse development. Margene said it took less time for them to build 125 units than it took me to put up the shelves in the garage. In my defense, they used nail guns! http://www.airfields-freeman.com/MN/...htm#university Former University of Minnesota Airport (great nationwide site!) http://www.airfields-freeman.com/MN/Blaine_MN_01.jpg Same page - pic of new townhouses sitting atop the old airport Montblack |
#28
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[quote=Dave Butler;568358]Viperdoc wrote:[color=blue][i]
Hey Dave, please email me at . The former Cathy Croy - a last name you unfortunately know quite well. Just want to catch up. |
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