Modern House Part 1- Basement Walls
Вставка
- Опубліковано 20 тра 2024
- This will be the first in a series of videos about a current work project of mine. Much of my work deals with framing and fabrication and this new modern house start includes both of them. I will do my best to capture and chronicle the process as I work to complete the project. The series will be mixed in and amongst other personal and small work project videos so there will be gaps
I'm a big fan of this style and this architecture firm produces really beautiful and well sited buildings that are a treat to work on.
This past week saw layout and construction of the basement walls, some floor protection as well as layout and prep for the installation of main floor steel. Hopefully you see something here that will make you stick with the series as it will only get more dramatic as it progresses.
Thanks for watching.
0:00 Trim and clean anchor bolts
2:47 layout and anchor green plate
16:30 Floor protection
17:07 Pack lumber
19:20 Frame walls
24:01 More lumber
26:48 Move telehandler and unload steel
27:47 Lol I skipped ahead on the video and landed on this exact moment. I thought the truck was driving that fast in real-time. 😂
Hahahaha, COMING IN HOT!
I worked framing track homes in SoCal when I was in college and I was tired at the end of the day. Jake! Full respect! Enjoy watching a pro in action!
Those were the days, When I started framing in the late 80's I was fascinated by all the concepts that were born down there out of speed and repetition. Cannot imagine the heat you must of worked summers in, that I could not do:-)
Great looking forward to this....
Very relaxing to watch, great video
Another matter class!
Can you show us the design drawings of the house?
I"ve added a quick shot of the rendering of hte back of the house which faces the forest early on in episode 5 and plan on including the floor plans as I get to them by episode 6. Thanks for tuning in!
Awesome Job!!
Right on, I plan on building a modern concrete home, so will be interesting to follow!
A one man gang.
Do you have a floorplan or rendering of what it will look like when done? I love how's taking shape, but would love so see what to expect.
It has been requested and I will be adding it in within the next couple episodes, thanks for tuning in.
15:03!!! Love the vids, man.
Nice video!
I'm really enjoying your stuff keep it up!
Thanks for that!
Очень приятно было смотреть. Хорошая крепкая работа. Удачи и Процвтания!
Спасибо, что нашли время на просмотр!
@@ShredPile russian?
No but my grandfather was from Belarus. I feel though that if someone takes the time to comment here in their language that it is polite and fairly simple to use an online translator to reply :-) @@bradzdanivsky
nice concrete job
I'll pass that on :-) The outfit that did it did a fantastic job with the forming and placing. If they would put even 5-10% more effort in to the pour finish they would be legendary.
this is amazing. question tho why dont you go wider in the 2x4 spacing since its non structural so you can maximize insulation?
That's a great point and were it mine I probably would but at this point I'm just following the plans. I feel like I saw in the plans that they intend to spray foam and then batt all the furring walls which should make r-21 so as to meet local code.
The reality is tho that nearly the entire back of the house is glass so......:-)
Can you explain the process of putting that plywood over the sub floor? Did you roll out a slip sheet first? Are the two layers of plywood screwed down or just screwed together?
Oh sure, It's truly just a protective cover over the slab at the builders request. It allows me to build the furring walls now instead of later were we to pour the garage floor after the fact. It also allows me some decent storage space for material since I have nearly none outside.
It's actually not fastened to the slab at all, there is a layer of cardboard floor protection I put down first in the hopes it would mitigate any resin bleeding into the slab and then the plywood which is taped together at the seams with a good house wrap tape. For the most part it's sticking well except for the spots where the plywood is twisting at the edges. I did nail it to the concrete form at the edge to protect that as well.
To it's credit we have gotten nearly a foot of rain on it since I laid it down and it's doing better than i expected.
Pretty impressive concrete work! Is there a chance somebody videoed that part of this build?
No, no chance. It was somewhere between 230 and 280 yds though.....
Cela me paraît intéressant, je vais regarder chaque vidéo, dans quelle région et ville êtes vous.? Bon courage. Bonjour de France
Hello Georgio!
Thanks for tuning in.
I'm located in the coast range of Northwestern Oregon about 40mi/65km west of Portland.
💯✅✅✅
Nothing between the concrete and the wood?
Any wood touching concrete is pressure treated. There is sill seal at all exterior pressure treated- concrete connections, it's not needed on interior walls. There is also a 1" separation between the back of the furring walls and the concrete.
@@ShredPileBlödsinn. Trotzdem gehört da eine Sperrung aus Bitumen hin. Schon immer. Kesseldruckholz für innen!!!😅😅😅😅
Really like your content and how things are done in USA. What is your original trade?
I appreciate that.
I've worked primarily as a framer (carpenter) starting in the late 80's but got way more diverse with what I did in the mid aughts. If you stick around you will eventually see a really wide range of different projects, I hope you do!
@@ShredPile Thought you had all the pro framing tricks. 😉
Like you I enjoy variety in my work and seem to do many of the things you do in your videos. I Plan to stick around for sure. Cheers . from a cold/wet UK
👍
Cover bolts with an aluminum foil before pouring concrete.
Yeah that's a good one, unfortunately that was out of my control....
Hi, was there any in floor heating installed! cheers
Thanks for tuning in and no, there was not. The main room on the lowest level is a family room / den with a full attached bathroom so it could be a bedroom if it needed to be. The furnace room is right next to it so it will be simple to heat.
porque cubres un hermoso muro de concreto!!!!!!!!?????
Entiendo. Soy un perdedor :-) No es mi elección y preferiría ver el concreto expuesto.
do you have any footage of the form work/pour?
I do not, it was a different contractor for the foundation.
how do u call the name of this bolt you are using on the 2*6 wood?
They are called split pins and go into a 1/4" hole. 2 or 3 nails into the same size hole works just as well.
www.strongtie.com/mechanicalanchors_mechanicalanchoringproducts/sd_anchor/p/csd.dsd
Apologies if already addressed, but why the "SHREDPILE" intro?
Oh sure Phil, it’s placeholder as a logo or brand if you will. I wanted to start the channel with the ability to add merchandise at some point and I felt that more people might go for a coffee cup or a graph paper doodle pad with ‘Shredpile’ on it than ‘Jake Rosenfeld’. So that’s what I went with and it’s currently in place where it belongs. No immediate plans for that now but you never know. Thanks for watching and I hope you stick around!
@@ShredPile Certainly! Really enjoying the videos Jake.
whats the thickness of those basement walls?
It varies, all the uphill retaining wall stuff is 10 inches with the remainder at 8 inches with the exception of the garage door wall, which is 18 inches or so in the area of that concrete beam to create the opening.
Thanks for watching!
*edit added thanks!
@@ShredPile Thanks for the feedback. Do you know which grade of concrete is used? like M20 ....can I have your contact please
I'll look at the palns today to see what was spec'd. The channel email is jake.shredpile@gmail.com and also in the 'about' section of the main channel page.@@lifestoriesfromearth6271
Looks like neat project but we have no explanation. Just I guy on a job site.
I appreciate you tuning in. I left a pretty good explanation in the description of the video and since this part is fairly mundane wall framing, there’s not a lot of commentary but if you have a specific question, I’m happy to answer them in the comments. The channel is not really how-to channel, but more of a how-I-do channel where the content hopefully speaks for itself.
Hopefully I’ll be here with another episode on it next week and you’ll come back to check it out.
Thanks for watching!
Also there is CC enabled if you’d like to read along with the commentary.
When you're building a house yourself, sometimes there isn't enough time for explanation/ VO - as a GC myself, I'm grateful for this guy taking the time to put up a camera and take us along somewhat!
I appreciate that, I'm glad you're enjoying it! I try catch the fun stuff and to remember to hit record when I do:-) @@Ninjump
I don't build houses for a living, but even I can tell when you messed up. You didn't put any sort of foam barrier underneath the wood you bolted into the concrete. That's a no-no, according to every other professional I've seen doing this.
Incorrect. There is sill seal everywhere there needs to be sill seal. This same issue is covered in the comment section here; ua-cam.com/video/USG_N8aHizI/v-deo.html
Thanks for watching!
@@ShredPile okay, thanks. Sorry I missed that detail in your video.
You took all that time to build a basement and then when you those boards on the bottom to frame the walls, there was no foam pad to protect the wood. You do know that wood will rot after a few years from the moisture coming out of the concrete, but it's your house and I guess you can have a house with rot in it
Hey thanks for the comment but I feel like I addressed this in a previous comment. There is no foam seal required in conditioned space so there is none installed. It is however installed at the building envelope. This is evidenced by the foam sill seal I installed under the 3x sill plate between the basement (conditioned) and the garage (unconditioned).
You do realize that foam sill seal is not a water or vapor barrier right? It's intended to fill small voids in the hopes of mitigating air and insects. In decades past we also used 30# or 60# asphalt roofing felt or even a simple thin roll of fiberglass insulation. The foam is way easier to use nowadays though.
Thanks for watching!