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30 April 2019 | 4 replies
I have had cement in pipes, water left on to flood basements, ripped out copper, etc.In higher end homes, the risk is owners that have lawyers or are smart enough to know that they can fight the system and resist leaving with legal tactics for several weeks.Occasionally you get both issues but not normally.Of course, if the occupants are tenants with a lease it brings up other issues.For me, here is the key tip for what you are really asking....which is... how the hell do I make sure I don't lose money when I can't see the inside?
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20 January 2021 | 12 replies
Keep landscape/dirt from touching anything but cement.
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26 April 2021 | 6 replies
Then I found out even if it's approved, 2 families are built to different standard than 3's, like requiring fire escapes, sprinklers, and cement walls for furnace rooms.
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7 April 2021 | 4 replies
Basically, something like a 2x4 or 2x6, between each pair of studs, with the broad side towards where the cement board/tile will go.
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11 November 2020 | 10 replies
Plus, none of them consider the popular multi-generational style living -that is the future. lolI love the style of modern cement homes like in Merida, Mexico for example and many other parts of the world.
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9 December 2020 | 26 replies
Then he used metal studs to build a frame to attach cement board for tile and that part was a pita.
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5 July 2022 | 4 replies
.* Minimal landscaping and plenty of parking, more cement!
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21 July 2022 | 8 replies
Once that water is trapped between the vinyl plank and the floor underneath, it's all over if cement is underneath, it'll eventually dry in 3 or 4 days but it just wasn't worth the constant risk of threatening lawsuits from tenants thinking they are sleeping in urine and feces.
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10 April 2023 | 9 replies
I would call it a non-issue as long as you plan a siding over-lay and the property does not have any structural issues form the added weight of the chosen material, ie don't go cement board, think vinyl or engineered wood product.
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12 July 2017 | 13 replies
You can also seal the cracks with a cement product that has some flex agent in it, and stain the entire patio to blend it in.