Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Home Improvement, Design, and Decorating
Reply to "Is there any way to add space to a house for $50K-ish or less?"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Absolutely bone-headed building code changed in MoCo and Arlington are responsible for a big part of the skyrocketing cost of additions. You basically can’t put an addition on top of a crawl space and concrete footers anymore. Everything has to be on foundation. And what’s more, that new foundation can’t just be next to the old one, it has to dig down underneath it to connect or some nonsense. So if you want to change your footprint you have to call in an excavator and a cement truck, engineers, etc. [/quote] This is the International Residential Code. Different jurisdictions are more aggressive about adopting the latest version and enforcing it but it's the national standard. Making houses have appropriate foundations is not a bad thing. [/quote] Yes, but I’m pretty sure people have been building houses on crawl spaces and footers for a long time and there’s no good reason to make that illegal. Just a dumb regulation adopted without any cost benefit analysis. [/quote] Nothing in the IRC precludes crawl spaces. From the way you use "footers" I think you mean piers, nothing in the code precludes that either. It's just that when you size them appropriately for soil conditions the cost advantage over a trench foundation disappears. It's not that there was no cost-benefit analysis, it's that they stopped discounting the future so severely. [/quote] What’s funny is that I already had an addition on my house from the 1980s, built on crawl space and footers, and after we had an engineer analyse it we concluded it could support a second story. Seems like whoever built the thing had a pretty good grip on “the future”.[/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics