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French drain and new home advice Posted by shall5867 on January 30th, 2005 12:15 AM In reply to Superior wall drain by Unregistered-HarryC on January 29th, 2005 10:10 AM [Go to top of thread]
Actually he never intended to put a sump pump in and said the french drain was included with the house all along--but he was very good at not puuting details in writing. A sump pump absolutely was never in the plans and was not something I would have wanted. He had a $2000 allowance to construct a small portion of a new driveway because my new house sits right behind my old house which will be torn down. What he did was pad the allowance for the driveway with $300 for the french drain and a few other questionable items in order to try to "use up" that allowance so that he wouldn't have to pay it back to me. The section of driveway he constructed is not 50' long and was to lead into a two car garage. I got stuck trying to get my car in the drive on very soft partially frozen slag because he quickly threw down some limestone slag the day before the bank inspector came. There were 2 loads of rock that went in last October, but they were not dumped far enough over to completely cover the primary usage side of the garage. For this half-unusable small section of drive he charged $1500 and I now know that a french drain is an entire system and you don't pay extra for the part outside the house generally. He tried to tell me the section outside the house was extra. This modular house was begun last October 1 with Superior walls that took less than 1 day to put in. The house took 1 day to set about 2 weeks later. It is now almost 4 months later and I just got the keys to the house today. That is after they nearly destroyed the water supply spring on the property, started numerous jobs and everytime they ran into a snag (usually caused by lack of materials on site in a timely manner by the builder) would quit. The sub-contractors doing the work were great, when they could get supplies and assistance from the builder. I actually had to tell the electrician where to place the recessed lights over my kitchen cabinets (which were suppose to have been factory insalled) because the builder's project leader told him he didn't know and walked away. This was just one of many nightmares. Hopefully I can begin to have my life back now. I let him have the money to get them off my property. Now I have to clean my new house because all the builder did was attempt to sweep the carpets with a shop vac. All the woodwork, counters, vinyl floors and doors are covered with dust. I could write a book. My advice -- GET EVERY DETAIL IN WRITING. My builder was suppose to be reliable with a good reputation, but every good company that goes bad begins that change one house at a time. This company will not survive. Was this post helpful? Yes: or No:
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