04-23-2016, 12:20 AM
Long story short- we had a fireplace right in the middle of our 1950-built house. We wanted to remove it... so I opened up the basement to check out the chimney foundation.
Open up the basement sheetrock and .. whoa, wait a second
Yep, it was time to call a professional... with good insurance When the house was moved here in the 60's it looks like they decided that a couple of trees (not poles... tree trunks with bark and limbs was appropriate for use as a foundation. More "support" appears to have been added on willy-nilly through the years, including loose cement blocks and wooden wedges... also the sheetrock was several layers thick and had "peepholes" which suggest I wasn't the first to see it... though in previous cases they apparently just cursed and then added on more sheetrock) The weight on the main floor included the chimney, a VERY heavy fireplace and a poured concrete pad under the hearth (about 6 feet long x 2 feet and 5 inches thick at its thickest- this is actually the part that made the masons the most nervous as it was resting on a little wooden lip and balanced onto loose blocks which had shifted)
Well, over a week later, the fireplace is gone (brick sitting in my barn for a future project), an 18 foot long, 13.5 inch tall gluelam beam is in place, and the bottom live-in basement is now OPEN.
Our checkbook is a bit lighter, but the contractor commented we're surprisingly well below the estimate because we did so much of the basic labor (prep, cleanup, haul etc) ourselves and I "was on hand to help when needed, but kept my mouth shut and didn't get in the way like most homeowners" (we've gotten to be friends too)
Next up, complete kitchen remodel including electrical, plumbing and cabinets. A peninsula will go where the fireplace was and LOML gets her open concept house.
Gotta love older homes.
Lawrence
Open up the basement sheetrock and .. whoa, wait a second
Yep, it was time to call a professional... with good insurance When the house was moved here in the 60's it looks like they decided that a couple of trees (not poles... tree trunks with bark and limbs was appropriate for use as a foundation. More "support" appears to have been added on willy-nilly through the years, including loose cement blocks and wooden wedges... also the sheetrock was several layers thick and had "peepholes" which suggest I wasn't the first to see it... though in previous cases they apparently just cursed and then added on more sheetrock) The weight on the main floor included the chimney, a VERY heavy fireplace and a poured concrete pad under the hearth (about 6 feet long x 2 feet and 5 inches thick at its thickest- this is actually the part that made the masons the most nervous as it was resting on a little wooden lip and balanced onto loose blocks which had shifted)
Well, over a week later, the fireplace is gone (brick sitting in my barn for a future project), an 18 foot long, 13.5 inch tall gluelam beam is in place, and the bottom live-in basement is now OPEN.
Our checkbook is a bit lighter, but the contractor commented we're surprisingly well below the estimate because we did so much of the basic labor (prep, cleanup, haul etc) ourselves and I "was on hand to help when needed, but kept my mouth shut and didn't get in the way like most homeowners" (we've gotten to be friends too)
Next up, complete kitchen remodel including electrical, plumbing and cabinets. A peninsula will go where the fireplace was and LOML gets her open concept house.
Gotta love older homes.
Lawrence
Shazam!! You could be right!!!!!!!
- Timberwolf, 12/23/14
my portfolio
http://s171.photobucket.com/user/ldr_klr/slideshow/portfolio?sort=6
- Timberwolf, 12/23/14
my portfolio
http://s171.photobucket.com/user/ldr_klr/slideshow/portfolio?sort=6