
21 September 2022 | 6 replies
Hello BP community, I was wondering if I could get some help from some of the experts in the room.A house I just purchased in central Virginia has a 900 sq ft crawl space with a poorly installed, torn vapor barrier.

13 April 2021 | 21 replies
Put new vapor wrap on the house.

9 May 2022 | 71 replies
More than likely YOU are not going to see any "slowing down" as people scramble to call you and stick a sign on their yard as equity vaporizes.... but "down" will likely be a key word to get used to hearing.

3 June 2021 | 2 replies
Is there a way to get her balance of my report?

7 August 2022 | 1 reply
As supply lines run through here my thought is to put a vapor barrier on the ground (none currently) and insulate the crawl space walls to make it part of the living space that is the basement which it is open into.

13 December 2021 | 3 replies
Not to mention the smell in her u it is so overwhelming my flammable vapor sensor in my water heater trips from the over whelming smell of cat litter.

14 December 2021 | 6 replies
Black mold was found behind the sheet rock and into the vapor barrier.

30 December 2021 | 1 reply
For starters, the slab will never be considered good for a 'living space'...... no vapor barrier, not enough steel.Better to have a contractor come in and make sure the electrical is ok and then leave it at that.You could go down to the city building department and ask vaguely about converting a garage and see what they say.

11 January 2022 | 4 replies
Wrong concrete PSI, wrong steel pattern, no vapor barrier, etc.....we usually had to tear down and build new.

19 October 2022 | 2 replies
The seller was happy to sell the property as it was just an asset on her balance sheet.