Paul Kondzich
05-23-2008, 10:14 PM
How many areas of the country have wood foundation walls below grade...anyone. Of about 300 inspections since I have been here I saw a small (1500 sq. ft summer cabin) that was constructed this way. The buyer was knowlegeable about them and said mostly a cost factor. When I left FL. in 05 concrete was about $70 a sq yd. when I got here it was about $160 a sq yd. not including the extra transportation cost for bringing it up the mountain. In the cabin situation the basement was finished so I really could not see the construction technique. After the cabin inspection, I asked a couple of contractor friends, and they said we do that once in awhile...whatever.
Anyway today, 2900 sq.ft house built in 2000 by a well known contractor here as his own house. Now bad news, my camera has been on life support for two days, and I dropped it one last time. All I have is the exterior shot, and the new camera was at my door when I got home, in the rain. You know when the UPS guy makes $29 an hour....never mind that was my past career.
Ok wood frame house on a crawl space. Now we are in the crawl space. Vents at grade level and about 4' of wood foundation wall down to the footer, which is visable. 2x10 bolted to the footer, 2x10 wall from the footer plate to the rim joist all pressure treated including exterior plywood. 2 layers of black plastic wrap on the exterior plywood. Interior walls in crawl space insulated with fiberglass batt insulation. I pulled back the insulation in several locations and checked with moisture meter. Nothing. With the winter snow and the monsoon rain in the summer it just does not seem right to me. But the evidence was there, no moisture that I saw.
As far as the rest of the construction, normally that would have been a poured concrete foundation wall, or less common a block wall below grade. The construction above the wood foundation walls was typical. So is it just me or would any of you not want a wood foundation wall home below grade??
Sorry for lack of pictures, but I have already made a few 90 mile round trips there. Radon inspection etc. Yes I was paid well.
Anyway today, 2900 sq.ft house built in 2000 by a well known contractor here as his own house. Now bad news, my camera has been on life support for two days, and I dropped it one last time. All I have is the exterior shot, and the new camera was at my door when I got home, in the rain. You know when the UPS guy makes $29 an hour....never mind that was my past career.
Ok wood frame house on a crawl space. Now we are in the crawl space. Vents at grade level and about 4' of wood foundation wall down to the footer, which is visable. 2x10 bolted to the footer, 2x10 wall from the footer plate to the rim joist all pressure treated including exterior plywood. 2 layers of black plastic wrap on the exterior plywood. Interior walls in crawl space insulated with fiberglass batt insulation. I pulled back the insulation in several locations and checked with moisture meter. Nothing. With the winter snow and the monsoon rain in the summer it just does not seem right to me. But the evidence was there, no moisture that I saw.
As far as the rest of the construction, normally that would have been a poured concrete foundation wall, or less common a block wall below grade. The construction above the wood foundation walls was typical. So is it just me or would any of you not want a wood foundation wall home below grade??
Sorry for lack of pictures, but I have already made a few 90 mile round trips there. Radon inspection etc. Yes I was paid well.