Time for another update!
I'm going to have to keep it brief, though. Work and this project is eating me up.
The next phase of the foundation was to get the upper bay footings formed up and poured. The concrete crew spends 4-5 days getting things ready, drilling rebar into the backside of the poured concrete wall and some of the old footings, compacting soil with a crazy gadget called a "Jumping Jack", and other tasks. That thing pounds the dirt so hard it can be felt inside the house.
We're ready to start pouring concrete again. This shows the vapor barier, the rebar grid, and the steel mesh on top of that. The upper bay also has the thickened section down the middle.
They start at the back of the slab, with the truck sitting partially inside the form.
Still the first truck. It was carrying 8 cubic yards.
The total volume of concrete for each slab is about 21-22 cubic yards. I think they're waiting on the next truck at t his point.
And we end up with this finished slab.
So the foundation is finished at this point, and building the structure can finally commence. Whoohooo! The two apron slabs will be poured later, along with a couple of small items inside the upper bay (steps outside the door into the house, and short wall at the edge where a hand railing will be set).
Now we need some lumber, so an order is made and a truck showed up last Friday evening with a huge load.
I try to clean off a space on the asphalt big enough to stash all this stuff.
One of the bundles is a stack of three 32' long LVL beams. The driver does a good job of twisting them past my trees until he gets to this spot.
We have to have a little driveway pow-wow.
That spider forklift can do a lot of amazing things, but this just ain't gonna work.
He lays it down on the driveway lengthways, and I take one end of it with my tractor.
He picks up the other end with one fork and we get it moved past the choke point......
And into my staging area next to the driveway where all the salvaged materials are stored.
Then he started bringing down the stacks of plywood. They went closer to the jobsite in the area I was sweeping off.
Some assembly required. :W
Before we can build the walls though, some cinder-blocks need to be laid around the perimeter of the slabs. I don't want the siding on the new garage to come down as close to the ground as it did on the old garage. All the materials for that are delivered, and the block masons get busy.
Most of the block wall will just be two block high, but this corner needs to be built up more than that because the grade will be higher over here. The wall will be reinforced wih rebar, and filled with concrete from bottom to top.
The block crew's schedule was busy, so they chose to do this last Saturday.
The weather was crazy that day. There was only about a 20% chance of rain, but we has 3 or 4 small showers pop up right over us throughout the day. We even had a little pea-sized hail!
They kept working though. We'd get wet....then dry off...then get wet.....then dry off....
There were things they could do even when it was raining.
They completed the job, and covered the walls with plastic in case we had a downpour overnight.
They start in the lower bay building the front wall where the 18' wide door will be. The door opening will be 14' tall.
And we finally have the first wall of the structure stood up!
I built a shelf on a nearby tree to take progress pictures as the structure is built. This is a couple of old shelf brackets, a scrap of plywood, and some scrap Ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) to use as stops for our camera. The picture above was taken off this shelf.
Things start moving quickly now, and we have to firm up some details that were just "check with us when you get there" before. The three window rough openings were determined just the day before.
They will be high on the wall so they won't be totally blocked by the camper.
The header for this door is laying on the ground.
That's a heavy glue-lam beam. It's going to take a lift to get it up there.
I'm not lifting that up there! :W
The stud wall that sits on top of the stepped block wall is built.
And the door header is put in place.
Almost there.
OK, nail it.
Attempting to lift the back wall into place.
They made a mistake and set the bottom plate on the wall. That put too much pressure on the top of the cinder blocks, and the wall was damaged.
They know they messed up, and the builder is going to make it right. The block mason crew will be back this morning to fix it up.
The framers continue in the upper bay, and this is how it looks today.
I moved the machine to get a better view.
The header over the double garage doors is in place.
My new door out on to the back patio area has been moved down a few feet.
The look of the house is going to change dramatically from this side.
That's it for now! Sorry I had to be so brief, but I'm staying pretty busy right now. I know most of you just want to see the pictures anyway. :B
:):)
2001 Lance 1121 on a 2016 F450 โScuse me while I whinge.
And for all you Scooby-Doo and Yosemite Sam typesโฆโฆโฆ..Letโs Go Brandon!!!