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24 January 2019 | 14 replies
Our closest office is at 2420 NE Sandy Ave.
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11 July 2015 | 49 replies
Bringing in the extra dirt to raise the lot also required a Soil Engineer to be ONSITE for several days to test the compaction of the soil as we lifted the site, and also some additional heavy machinery that we don't normally run across...like a "Vibratory Sheeps Foot" which kinda sounds like something you would find at one of those trucker stores...After a hundred and twenty something loads of dirt, we were close...but not quite close enough, so we decided to stop bringing in dirt for the moment, and incorporate a SUBWALL into our foundation so that we could bring in dirt only for where out house sat and stop "bringing up" the whole lot.With the "development" portion almost done, it's time to go vertical!
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2 March 2014 | 37 replies
More cost and you need to prepare soil/foundation on lower course but will be a much stronger and attractive wall.
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26 August 2014 | 9 replies
During a soils inspection, part of the foundation of the house was discovered exposed so it needs to be filled in and compacted.My loan officer is ready to close as soon as these repairs are made, I even said to forget Fannie Mae and we would pay for the repairs to get it done.
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20 March 2017 | 11 replies
@Jeff Wallenius I grew up in Sandy and was looking to 1031 some family SFRs into multifamily up there.
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15 February 2017 | 8 replies
Yours looks good to me tho.No , not at all , its sandy soil , put some dirt in hit it with a tamper around the sides , not a problem .
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3 October 2016 | 6 replies
But here's a rough idea of the basic steps involved and what it cost when I did it:STEPS:~ Drain the pool~ Remove pool equipment & cap off water lines~ Remove/cap off any unused electrical~ Knock down the edges around the pool and make holes in the bottom of the pool for drainage ~ Fill pool with "clean fill" material (i.e. soil, gravel, rock, sand, etc)~ Tamp the fill material as you put it in to compact it and reduce the chance of it settling over time once it's all fullCOSTS: (we did the labor ourselves so this is just for the material)~ $450 to buy a jackhammer to knock down the edges around the pool and also to make the holes in the bottom (we could have rented a jackhammer for cheaper but this way we own one and can use it on future jobs)~ $1600 for the fill dirt (it was a lot of dirt!)
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11 November 2016 | 8 replies
Soaking in a tub full of beach sand is less fun :)
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8 November 2016 | 19 replies
I specialize in failing concrete and expansive or collapsing soils.
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26 November 2017 | 3 replies
Both properties are victims of hurricane sandy.