Foundation Repair Is Not As Hard As It Sounds

Foundation Repair Is Not As Hard As It Sounds

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I never imagined what scrutiny would occur when I put the first house I ever owned in Plano up for sale. The house looked okay to me; new paint inside and out and fresh oil on the wood floors made me almost sorry to sell it. However, prospective buyers and inspectors completely ignored the face lift. They focused on the feet.

Everyone knows a house needs a firm foundation. Unfortunately, my house was built on sand, and over the years, it had settled a bit. Behind rose bushes and garden gnomes, cracks in the cement reached up like bony fingers from ground level. I was shocked I had not seen them before and close to losing consciousness when the inspector told me how much it would cost for foundation repair in Plano. I made a phone call to set up an appointment.

Early one morning the following week, two trucks drove into the yard. I watched burly workers in T-shirts pulled tight by large biceps wield shovels like they were natural extensions of their arms. They set to work shoveling at the corners of my house. I bid a sad farewell to the rosebush, and found the gnome a new home under the cherry tree. I then watched the process with great interest.

The men shoveled until the entire shovel handle disappeared down the hole. Piles of steel rods were driven, one by one, into the holes with power jacks. Next, preformed cement cylinders as big around as the workman's thighs were pushed one on top of another into the ground, again with jacks. Large concrete blocks were laid over these and compacted forcefully. Lastly, more cylinders were placed on end on top of the blocks and shimmed tight to the cement floor of the house with wedges.

The men backfilled the holes and then watered them down to compact the dirt. They ran out of dirt. How does that happen? I watched them take out the dirt from the hole, I watched them add lots of cement things to occupy space, and then they still did not have enough dirt to fill the holes again. I had to show them a spot in the garden from which to haul more dirt. Finally, just as the sun was setting, the job was done. I talked them into replanting the rose bush before they drove away.

I was assured that with the steel, concrete piers, and blocks, my house foundation would survive long after I had moved to Florida to live happily ever after. However, when I received the credit card bill for the foundation repairs, the house paint and wood oil, I decided to keep the house after all. Not only could I not afford to move at that point, but also the house I hoped to buy there had just been demolished by a hurricane. It appeared I would live here long enough to see that rose bush bloom yet again.


About the Author:
Hargrave Custom Foundation Repair specializes in Plano foundation repair. If you have a crack in your mortar, brick, or foundation, they can repair it for you. (http://hargravecustomfoundationrepair.com



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