So we picked a contractor for the foundation. I figured we might need to wait a while before they would come onsite, I was rather relaxed and my communication was simply “let me know the schedule and when you will be onsite”. So after Christmas I got a call asking if we have reference points in place. Larry was going to come out and mark the lines for the crew (previous post). We did an initial string layout of the house and he wanted to review the plans one more time before spray painting the lines. He returned on the weekend and we spray painted the lines. He said his excavator contractor was hard to pin down on exact dates. Again, I was in no hurry. The next day I learned they would be onsite Monday (12/31).
Tom dug up the footings while Mike moved the dirt to some available corner. They helped me get access to my electrical conduits that were three feet below the driveway. When the excavator was a safe distance away, I jumped into the hole and worked on removing the caps that were press fitted, but now were so tight, only a wrench could break them loose. The 2 inch cap wasn’t moving at all. After 5 hours, everyone took off for their New Year eve plans.
New years day was an off day and no work was done, but I wish I was back in my hole working on that 2 inch cap which was stuck.
On 1/2/2019 (Wed), the crew of Dave, Jerry, Mike, John, and “car dealer” started placing form work. All the while, I was in and out of my hole trying to break that 2 inch cap to no avail. Our second bid from a plumber out of four came in on Wed. We had two bids, a little disappointing, and a need to hurry on a decision. And talking about decisions, we had made the choice on a framer contractor, but I hadn’t gotten around to notifying him. I was juggling family, acting as general of the project, and finding time to jump into my 3 foot hole when the chosen contractor made a courtesy stop. I was able to tell him he had the job and request he come by again this week to mark off his hold down locations. We had two framing bids and I was patiently waiting for a third, but waiting was over.
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On 1/3/2019 (Thu), the crew was back and stuffing the trenches with rebar and more form work. We chose the plumber, Robert, who gave us a bid first and almost two months earlier. Luckily he was down the way on another job moving slowly and came right over. He left some supplies for his sleeves he wanted to place into the formwork and the crew promised to install the sleeves. Throughout the day I was struggling with my 2 inch PVC cap three feet underground until I eventually got the sawzall out and cut the cap enough to loosen its grip (only slightly damaging the PVC pipe). By the end of the day I had my three conduits sweeps (90 degree bends) in place. The crew had most of the other work completed.
1/4/2019 (Friday), with the threat of rain certain on Saturday, there was plenty of pressure to pour concrete on this day. A city inspection was requested the day before for an AM visit (request must be made 24 hours in advance) and a visit from the structural engineer was also requested. The crew had a few things to do, but mostly were waiting for the inspector signoff. The concrete pump was to arrive just before noon and the trucks of concrete at noon. By about 11 am, we still didn’t have the city inspector, but the structural engineer shows up. The engineer finds some deficiencies and notes them and clears up a question I had about acceptable installation of the conduit I installed. The crew quickly resolves the deficiencies while the framer is verifying his hold down placements and the plumber is installing the sleeves which where not installed by the crew as promised.
Around noon the inspector shows up, Chris takes the structural engineer observation form, a soil engineer field report, asks about the sewer sleeves and the UFER ground and signs off. There wasn’t much of an inspection, but a lot of time spent getting the two reports into his email inbox. With the release to pour, we had to now wait for the concrete since it was delayed due to the late arrival of the inspector. At 2pm the concrete was filling the forms.