At first I was going to say that you may want to throw some plastic sheeting over the steps, but it looks like the steps may have paint on them? Or is that my monitor?It rained today. Hopefully everything dries out well. Should I be concerned when it rains? The stair treads are made of 1.5" particle board.
At first I was going to say that you may want to throw some plastic sheeting over the steps, but it looks like the steps may have paint on them? Or is that my monitor?
If it is paint, I would think that will keep the rain from soaking in pretty well.
I'm guessing they are temp. Real treads are done later.
Good looking build sir. I'm looking forward to seeing it completed.
In the northwest, most people who want to keep their structures dry get dried in by end of September. Most tract builders don't care and built 12 months a year. I wouldn't worry about it too much, nothing you can do.
Nice! We are building a similar house in Arizona. Check out some of the drone videos I have shot good idea of what it will look like with an RV garage.
Ah annoying. You're doing carpet vs hardwood? I can imagine it will be less of an issue, but still, that's annoying.Thanks. I checked on it today and most of it dried out, although the two treads near the edges bulged slightly but nothing to worry about when it's carpeted.
The speed and ease with wich American houses are built still amazes me! Great looking plans, looking forward to see the completed house.
The basics at least take a lot longer, at least that's my gut feeling. A newly built plan house* in NL takes roughly 180 build days, from the first shovel in the ground to the hand-over. Custom houses take longer.
The biggest time consuming factor is that almost all houses are brick houses. New builds are more and more starting to go to block built witch is a lot faster, but even then wooden construction is much faster.
*In NL houses are mostly built in whole neighbourhoods at a time, all in the same plannig permit and style.
This is a shot of the build of my previous appartement, you can see the block walls up and the isolation and brick facade going up (block walls on top of prefab concrete floor plates, 30cm rockwool on the outside and then a brick facade).
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And the almost finished product:
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Sweet build. How did they move the RV roof up into place?
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That's the first time I've seen rafters assembled on the ground before being raised above the walls. Neat idea!
Looks like the crew is cruising right along on your build.![]()
How tall is the rv garage
Seems like just yesterday when the inside of my house looked like that.It's coming right along! Oh and good thing you caught the window problem early, it was all set to end up looking pretty lopsided...that would have sucked.
Coming along nice.
I'm interested to see the details of how this roof section works along the rv garage. Looks like a great place for snow/rain/whatever to accumulate.
Insulation went in. Drywall will be finished this week.
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Are these walls 2x4 or 2x6?
Exterior walls are 2x6, interior 2x4.
Ahhh, look at all that white ****! Have you been shopping for a snow blower yet?
I feel sorry for the poor buggers that have to install siding & whatever else you have going up on the walls, in this weather.
I don't know if they're going to hit that move-in-date. What have they said?