Anonymous wrote:I raised a small house after Hurricane Isabel in 2003. It was a single story mini-rancher style house, on a 25x35 crawl space.
Was pretty straightforward. Hired a house moving company from Calvert County and they came out, put a lifting framework under the floor joists, and just jacked it up with hydraulic jacks about 6 feet. Then they built the foundation walls up to the new height, and sat it down on the new foundation. Took about 3 days total. Paid about $9,000 (in 2004).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone done this in the DMV? I live in an old craftsman in MD with a low ceilinged basement and I’d love to finish it and gain more natural light (versus digging down). Where do I start, a structural engineer? Thoughts on cost?
Spent $15k in 2018 just on the house lift. Extra for demo, new foundation work. Worth it!!
Please share the contractor who does this. Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone done this in the DMV? I live in an old craftsman in MD with a low ceilinged basement and I’d love to finish it and gain more natural light (versus digging down). Where do I start, a structural engineer? Thoughts on cost?
Spent $15k in 2018 just on the house lift. Extra for demo, new foundation work. Worth it!!
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone done this in the DMV? I live in an old craftsman in MD with a low ceilinged basement and I’d love to finish it and gain more natural light (versus digging down). Where do I start, a structural engineer? Thoughts on cost?
Anonymous wrote:A neighbor did this with a 100yo victorian. Lifted the house, dismantled the original basement dungeon and built a new, airier basement.