30 January 2019 | 4 replies
I can’t speak to the numbers since I have not seen complete plans and specs and finishes level of construction site conditions etc. but overall they look average for a typical straightforward project with vinyl siding or fiber cement siding shingle roof mid grade level of finish.
2 August 2019 | 4 replies
They still have pile height, but the traffic areas have 'clumped' fibers, instead of those individual fibers you see on new carpet.It's always when the house is vacant that tenants notice these things.
24 May 2015 | 4 replies
@Andrew Bertram: You should not remediate but coat it with a very secure and thick paint that seals in all the asbestos fibers, which are the source of the problem.
16 September 2015 | 11 replies
Down on hands and knees, scraping dog urine soaked carpet fibers and glue out of a wood deck....
12 January 2016 | 11 replies
If you're looking at buy and hold rentals, the cashflow is better in Paradise and Oroville and further afield in Corning and Red Bluff.
23 January 2013 | 9 replies
We did one where the 1987 OSB they used for flooring was too thin & sagged between the joists.I used the same leveling compound they use for tile work laid a heavy pad & carpeted over the floors.The foyer & hallway we just tiled after the same leveling.If the joists have sagged it's a lot more work ESP if the flooring is the old tongue in groove pine with a subfloor on top.But one of my friends many years ago used Fiber glass shards & resin to fill the voids, but he got it as waste product from the place he worked so it was minimal cost, but it seemed like a lot of work.Good luck
19 May 2017 | 2 replies
At the most a dollar or two a square so at the most a $50 difference at most on a residential house.Myself, I would stick with one of the big three-GAF, CertainTeed,Owens Corning.
15 November 2017 | 11 replies
I love the Back Bay area, sometimes I ride my carbon fiber road bike through there.
17 April 2018 | 0 replies
Hello friends,Anyone have experience using carbon fiber strips or sheets to stabilize a basement wall (bowing 1.5") rather than steel I-beams.
20 August 2024 | 8 replies
@Quinlan Moran I was actually corn and raised in Waco.