When construction began next door, my biggest worry was noise and disruption. Instead, it’s having to keep repeating “this isn’t your house, this isn’t your issue” as the builders cut corner after corner. After discovering “soft soils” they ran a vibratory compactor back and forth a few times in some of the already-dug foundation trenches, the. proceeded to pump the concrete for the footings. As a geologist who minored in geotechnical engineering, I’m horrified, but… this isn’t my house…
@cassandra17lina erm... aren't you out towards the coast?
@researchbuzz Yup, and our soils - such as they are - are a mix of sand, dredge spoils, and all the other materials nobody else wanted.
@cassandra17lina I am not a geologist, but I've read enough about climate change and changes to coastal groundwater to have an immediate, visceral reaction:
@cassandra17lina is there a way to report that to someone? that's fraud at the very least.
@holon42 I have kept the property owners informed with e-mails, texts, and photos. I don’t know the terms of their contract with the builder. I do know that this builder is notorious for shoddy work (like cutting through our fiber optic cable) and we put the owners in touch with prior clients of this builder who had serious problems. The owners proceeded anyway, because this builder was the low bidder. I can’t save them from their decisions because… you cannot enlighten the unconscious.
@cassandra17lina oh well, they obviously don't care. i wonder if they plan to flip it quickly.
@cassandra17lina very strange way of economizing then.🙄🫣☠️
@holon42 As my design engineer dad used to say: “never time to do it right; always time to do it over.”