
19 June 2020 | 32 replies
-Rough in top floor bathroom drain and vent lines with PVC-Pex piping for hot and cold water lines-Set bathtub along west wall -Tie into existing top floor piping for the following fixtures - bathtub including tub and shower faucet on south wall - toilet and vanityBasement-Once you walk into the basement, in the southwest corner there's some pipes-Fix 3 inch and half pipe tapping into 4 inch cast iron main drain

18 June 2020 | 6 replies
Also with snow removal who is to say when it needs to get done, do you plan on coming out for several inches sure but if it keeps snowing you have to keep shoveling, do you really plan to either do that or hire someone.

7 July 2020 | 9 replies
Please note that even an inch of water in a home can cause damage north of $30,000.

18 June 2020 | 5 replies
There are two ways to go about marketing/advertising your business...You can go a mile wide and an inch deep, which would be marketing large scale such as blanketing an entire neighborhood with direct mail, door hangers, etc.

30 June 2020 | 5 replies
According to weather data, we get around 33 inches a year.

21 June 2020 | 5 replies
It's pretty hard for something like cat urine to soak completely THROUGH a reasonably thick hardwood floor in decent shape.What can and does happen often however, is that the urine soaks INTO the top 1/16-1/8 inch of the wood.

21 June 2020 | 1 reply
https://www.trophyoutlet.com/ I suggest a handsome yet economical two-tier option, somewhere in the 18 to 24-inch range.

22 June 2020 | 2 replies
I am doing less than 10k of foundation work on a two-story 2 BR, 1.5 BA now and it is sagging 3/4 inch on one side.The main question I have is why did the contractor not say anything and visually wasn't this apparent the whole time?

25 June 2020 | 24 replies
They wanted over asking for a property they were inches away from losing to taxes.

6 July 2020 | 132 replies
She also thought putting the cats food and water on the carpet would be a good idea rather tile floor inches away...