Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Foundation Forms Up, Inspected and Concrete Poured

Since Friday, the forms for the foundation walls went up and by the time I got back out to the site tonight - the walls had been poured. I did not think they would pour until Wednesday - as this morning, the forms were not complete yet - and those need a city inspection. Turns out, they had it all lined up tightly and it went smoothly.

Weather has cooperated so far, hanging in the 40's and no precip, so all has been well.





Its dark by 4:45, so hard to get good shots late in the day - but walls were poured (and covered to keep them warmer, as it has been dipping down well into the 20's at night).

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Footers Poured

On Thursday the concrete crew was out and poured the footers. They had them laid out and inspected all in the same day. Looked more like an artifact excavation dig than anything, but still amazed at how fast these guys work.


It is amazing the precision and speed these guys work with...



While the garage being on this side of the house saved a lot of digging depth...several good chunks of root system from the right side of the 70 yr old cottonwood got "backhoed" - so hopefully it is not a fatal blow. Tree guy told me saving grace may be that the roots typically support the branches directly above them - and there nearly no branches above this area as they have all been trimmed back.

The house up the block from us in its final stages....it is very similar in style to what our house should appear like (arts/crafts, tapered beams, etc)...we are shooting for a more historic sage color though.


Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Excavation

Well, after taking months to get through permit - things are progressing at a break neck speed for the time being. Same crew that demo'd were out today to start excavating - and as hard as it is to believe - they will wrap up tomorrow!

It is amazing to see them work on such narrow city lots - literally digging within 9 ft of the neighbors house.

The "free" dirt dump site Bridget found out about via a friend worked out well - and given 50+ loads left the site - we saved $70 per load (so 50 loads x $70 each - works out to $3,500 savings). Now, we may not realize all that, as I think they probably spent a extra 20 minutes getting to that site - but either way - we should save some $$$.

So, plan is excavators will finish up tomorrow and the concrete folks will be out early Thursday to start the footings - in fact, they have already called for a Thursday inspection - so they plan to be done in a day as well.

All in all, progressing much faster than I could have imagined, considering I was worried we would not even get out of permit phase less than 7 days ago.





By mid morning the whole was already very deep...

While this kind of teardown is done in nearly every suburb in Chicago, and has been for years - it is certainly a nuisance to others though - as the crane was probably 6 feet from the neighbors the entire day. The house across the street from us (1125 webster) had been on the market as a teardown - but was recently taken off the market and rented out due to the soft market - but its only a matter of time before we get our share of the nusaince.

Friday, November 14, 2008

House "Fall Down"


Finally, after what seems like eternity, the house came tumbling down. Or as Connor said..."fall down."

It is quite amazing that a house that stood the test of time for 70 years, was completely wiped out and hauled away within a few hours. In fact, the house and garage were probably gone within 120 minutes...it was waiting for the dumpsters that took some time.

In the process this morning - all the gawkers were out in full force and we actually met quite a few of the neighbors we had never met - including several with kids Connor's age.

Anyways - I was able to salvage a couple shingles, a plank of flooring and a piece of siding that will go into the new den in some sort of collage of articifacts and articles concerning the house. Not much else was really salvageable.

Kudos to Calacci Excavating - who with a two man crew did a flawless job. I hope all my subcontractors end up being as top notch as they were. They will be back out Monday or Tuesday to dig the hole for the foundation - which again, they say they can do in one day.

Bridget gets major credit for what looks like may be a $3,000 to $5,000 cost savings discovery. Turns out we have a friend (who Bridget works with) who is building a custom home down in Plainfield. Turns out his builder is working on a large church project that is in need of clay/dirt. So I gave the guy a call and he is going to take ALL, yes, ALL, of our dirt that needs to be hauled off site. It may not sound like much - but it had the potential to be a major savings if all goes well. We are estimated to have 50 truck loads of dirt that will need to be trucked off site. At a charge of $210 a load ($140 for truck time/miles, $70 a per load dump fee) we can pretty much eliminate all those dump fees and possibly some of the mileage time.

Another great example how managing this process yourself can lead to big cost savings.

We also had some tree guys out last Wednesday to "prune" a massive 100yr old cottonwood tree, and take down two 70 yr old ash trees that were nothing but trouble waiting to happen. Tree firm ended up being fantastic too - couple guys my age - kind of reminded me of my sisters boyfriend - a real nononsense guy who pretty much came out, looked at the trees, and gave me a price on the spot. Versus a bunch of other guys that had to go back to their office and estimate it out. Plus this guys was 50% less than the others.

Hopefully updates on here will become almost daily now, as work will proceed quickly in the short term. Hope to be pouring the footings by wed/thu.


The tree guy up high bringing down one of the ash trees that would have been overhanging the house.


Takes a special person to being these beasts down...


The trees did not seem this big when looking at them from 70 ft below...


The 1930's 1126 Webster St house about to meets its demise...



I am not sure what is bigger - the 700 sq ft house or the equipment that is about to bring it down...


70 yrs of history about to tumble down.





Naperville requires water to be sprayed on the demo the entire time to keep dust down - with temps in the mid 50's and a light drizzle, probably was not needed.


A few whacks later - a good chunk of the house is gone.


Apparently, Carter was not as happy to see the house go away - although he never went inside, he did like playing in the yard.


Connor was fairly mesmerized..."truck" and "fall dawn" were frequently words out of his mouth.


The final wall still stands...




Who doesn't like an "open concept" kitchen?

Within 2 hours - not much remained.

By the time I ran home for an hour- the conrete foundation was busted up and all the house rubble was at a landfill.


An hour after that, the lot was empty...


And you can see, through the back yard, progress in the neighborhood, as a new house towers over its older neighbors.

Video of Demo

Sound did not transfer to web very good, so video only.


Monday, November 10, 2008

D-Day Nears...

Finally, after what does not even seem like reality anymore, demolition is set for this Friday. Stay tuned...