It's all just beautiful watching these hard working men putting this house together with so much love. Construction workers are among the hardest working people in our society.
@@madizm05 That's because all you hear is about the bad ones. Even this build looked like the bear minimum cheapest options, just enough to pass code, compared to some I've seen.
I just wondering, why western house (cause i’m living in asia) are not using brick? How long you guys expect for the lifetime of house if only using wood?
"western house"...better to say "american houses". as a European I ask myself the same question, it is certainly a beautiful house to see but from my point of view it is made of paper, without solid foundations or a basement that isolates properly, a roof of sheet metal and tar paper...certainly beautiful but low, very low, standard.
Building materials are largely a function of geography. Wood is readily available in the US (and much of northern Europe @MarchesiEnrico), and is far cheaper and easier/faster to build with than brick. Traditionally, lightweight/wood homes are best in places with small diurnal swings (days and nights don't vary greatly in temperature) and high humidity. A heavy mass structure will hold temperatures, and because the night and day are about the same, you have to heat or cool the actual structure, so your forced to supply more heat, even when its warm and sunny in the winter because the walls are still cold from the night before. In places where night and day are very different temperatures, the structure will help to regulate the temperature between the two extremes, often making it more comfortable inside. Of course this has changed somewhat with modern heating and cooling and insulation, but building practices change slowly. We do use a lot of concrete block, and poured concrete as well... especially in regions where it makes sense, or as part of newer building techniques (insulated concrete forms for example). In the US, we expect a well built wood home to last about 100 years, though if they are not properly maintained they may not last that long. We also have too many VERY poorly built homes that will likely be replaced after significantly less. To make things worse, for the last couple of generations here in the US we are often concerned with the wrong things. We would spend a lot of money to make a much larger home than we needed, rather than spending that money to make a better home that will last longer or be more comfortable. However this trend is slowly starting to change and smaller, well built homes are becoming popular again.
@@MarchesiEnrico A lot of modern building techniques here in the US were first popularized in parts of Europe. Not all of Europe, just like not all of the US builds the same way.
As a ”European”? In Norway, Sweden and Finland I’m guessing 90% of the houses are made of wood. I don’t know any wooden house where it was demolished because of age. Most often is because of design or insulation. The house I live in is from 1963, completely built in wood.
Y'all need to chill the hell out and let this man cook, his house is nice, America is different from other countries, different climate, soil feature(all depending on location) there's a lot that goes into houses so it's probably in a good environment.
These fuckers probably don’t know jack shit about building codes and standards each area requires. America has every known terrain in the universe. So for Gods sake, there’s every building regulations required when planning.
No offense intended, but this construction method is very primitive. This is how garden sheds are built in Europe. Are houses built this way in tornado areas?.
Construction in the U.S. is a very short sighted affair. Europeans think nothing of living in a 300 year old home. Americans have never seen one. This leads to thinking only about the immediate. I only need a home that meets my needs, who cares about three generations from now. Very different from Germany.
A single wetting of your insulation will not hurt anything (at least with most insulations). Most construction materials will be fine as long as they are allowed to dry out. The reason you see so many water related issues with homes is because the builder worries so much about keeping the water out that they fail to account for what happens once it does get in. Good modern builders have learned from the past (or their mistakes) and worry more about bulk water intrusion with a continuous WRB (weather resistant barrier) and flashing details, but leave the structure vapor open/permeable, so that any water that gets into the walls can evaporate and dry to the inside or outside of the wall. The days of putting plastic sheeting in our walls is over. The insulation was likely dry by the next day, with zero lasting effect.
@@ge2719 false... Water still evaporates in the cold. Otherwise our roads would be wet most of the year. Even if it's below freezing, water will evaporate.
@@josephhfry it takes far far longer, and only if you get airflow. so if it takes too long and thy have to finish building, and they close in the walls that water isn't going anywhere it will soak into all the material of the wall and cause mold.
@@ge2719 we can go round and round all day on this. Evaporation, even in cold weather, doesn't require airflow, it requires vapor pressure. Airflow will increase vapor pressure, as does low relative humidity and heat. But there is always vapor pressure if you have a wet surface and relatively drier air. This is how plants draw water up from the ground up to their leaves, and how your kitchen sponge dries all the way to the middle. Sure if they seal up the wall wet with a vapor impermeable barrier, then there is a chance that mold could form. But the reality is that it is very rare for mold to form from a single wetting because walls can usually dry to at least one side. I have never heard of mold problems caused by construction moisture (though I am not in the trades). Every time I hear about mold it is due to water leaking or condensing inside the structure.
I'm a big fan. I love your work and videos! A few questions though: 1) I noticed you installed some of the interior and exterior walls' insulation before polishing the floors - why is that? 2) Why did you keep the bathrooms with this ceiling height. Isn't that too much for a bathroom? Was that a design preference or a mistake? ) 3) The master bedroom door that is under the stairs, couldn't you move it a little to the right to avoid that issue you had with the stairs? 4) the arches' crowns are too close to the ceiling, was that also part of the design or you miss that too? Finally, you built a beautiful home! Well done!!!
Likely a south east/mid west build, very temperate environment down here. Foundation is just fine and the framing is pretty good, looks like mostly dimensional wood, could be improved with engineered pieces but it’s certainly good enough. Lot of northerners and Europeans here that don’t know how much easier it is to build in warmer and more temperate environments.
You understand you should do the Stairs while Framing is still happening so you do not have to call them back out just to do the stairs after Sheetrock and is up right????
Very different to Australia. In our northern area building have to be cyclone rated. Also timber and steel framing is done in factories and trucked to site. I guess the workers are paid a pittance, hence they still frame on site.
Just as strong as brick. The walls look flimsy because they're only braced every 2ft, but the exterior sheathing (plywood) keeps them from swaying. The roof is engineered trusses that are put together in a factory and can withstand thousands of pounds of pressure.
Also in dem Stil baut man bei uns Gartenhäuser! Wohnhäuser werden Stein auf Stein und aus Beton gebaut! Halten bei guter Pflege ewig und fliegen nicht weg! In dieser Bauweise geht es natürlich schneller und kostengünstiger!
If you know much about construction you will see this build was desighnded to look flashy but relatively cheap material and methods..id rather smaller but high quality as that will last much longer and be cheaper to live in.
Dont listen to that guy, idk if he even knows whats going on. Most likely its because its a garage, and the insulation is only on the exterior wall. With the one wall that has no insulation, its bordering the actual house which also has the insulation around the exterior walls. Now i will say that the other guy is kinda right, even though the missing insulation isnt necessarily bad, typically garages are fully insulated just because of how much they are open. Maybe the builder just knew it was gonna be closed a lot or he just didnt really care and wanted ti save a few hundered.
it's so amazing how different people build things in different countries, the typical american house is made from wood but in the caribbean the typical house is made from concrete bricks and steel rods
Ohhh... what is this? A gazebo made from plywood, standing just until the next good wind? It doesn't worth to be called a house. I've built my house in Ukraine with 2 bricks thick walls, now this is a house I can trust.
@yungspitta24 Every time when I see on UA-cam how all these huge timber houses are blown away in a few seconds, I think. Why don't they use a decent structure made of concrete? Of course, sutch a house will be damaged to but it will protect the people inside the house mutch better.
@@jeanpierredevos3137 This is how it works in Germany. All the houses are made out of cement or something, you will never find a house where the wall is smaller than 40cm. Made out of hard solid material.
Not sure how durable those stair treads will be with that mitre edge on the front .!!? Did that thousands of times for cabinets or fire place mantle . But not sure for wear and tear on staircases 😮😮
cost of the operation for this house made of paper and glue? certainly very beautiful to see but a house like this made with the standard levels of European construction costs at least a couple of million if not three. Obviously made with a appropriate foundation, at least a semi-basement and a decent roof...
Allegedly the property is worth $2,5 mill. I once asked a American friend about the same, and he said it's the American way in hurricane and tornado areas - build cheap and fast, and when the house is worn out (or blown down) clean the lot and build a new one.
@@johndoesen1718 No way that home is worth $2,500,000... It cost him under $700,000 to build all in.. That is a ~$900,000 House in Texas all day long..
Not sure what you mean. What part of this is paper or glue? The interior walls? Sure. What is not appropriate about this foundation? It's a concrete slab with engineered footers poured on a prepped surface. In most of the American south, we cannot (or choose not to due to the massive cost associated with) build basements or cellars. The soil is 95% sand and the walls will eventually collapse in on themselves regardless of how you build it.
I agree they act like they were there when the house was built when really they were just sitting on their ass watching the video and decided to criticize to make themselves feel better
I'll wait for the hurricane first, it will do the quality control! Houses like this are carried away like a sheet of paper in a major storm, they're not worth a damn!!!!!
But its true tho that foundation is wayyy too weak it stands no chance, would wipe out like paper, if u gonna spend that much money on a house, make every penny worthy
Yep. It will hurt feelings, but wood frames with plasterboard are not going to hold back a hurricane. Its nice and convenient because it is cheap and looks fine, but if you want to make your house stand a good chance, you need concrete/brick outer walls and much thicker beams in the roof. This roof is going to rip like a can of sardines with a strong gust of wind. Besides that, wood will start rotting over time. Most Europeans stopped building wooden houses quite a while back for a good reason.
I see a weak sediment... I think a foundation is better. It is better to dig then hardcore base and raise the walls from below for greater resistance and a strengthened structure.
Can anyone explane the ground work? I dont understand, he removes the top soil (which is good) but then stops, no more digging to find solid rock or change out the earth masses with more stable bedding like rocks. But then goes ahead and actually puts more soil back on top of the excisting earth? I just dont get it, whats the point of that? And the foundation is not anchored into anything, just floating on top of earth, which is unstable and will definently get setteling issues when you build such a large build on it... (even with the compressing that is done) Genuinely courios to why this is the way its done, anyone knows please let me know, as this is definently not the way to do it where im from.
If it was done right, that should be compactable fill and is common in Texas. But considering how much he cheaped out on the rest of this build, it most likely wasn't.. Also he didn't seem to compact it in lifts, which is not how you do it..
One thing I miss in the US, is heated floors. Do you have that somewhere? Here in Norway that is not even considered a luxury. Perhaps in the whole house (newer) but every bathroom has it.
Koreans have been using that floor heating system called ' Ondol ' over 5,000 years Modern water pipe floor heating system is motivated from Ondol Every South Korean houses have under floor heating system include the bathrooms
The timelapse would condense months of hard work, planning, and craftsmanship into a fast-paced, exciting video that takes viewers through the key stages of the build.
What’s the address of your home. Would like to physically see it. I am inspired, and about to embark on my own journey here in Dallas. Interested in signing up for course.
Its really beautiful built. Respect to the craftsmen but as a German i wouldn´t build walls so wobbly, rather walls made of stone and morter P.S. How about a cellar?
The walls aren't wobbly. The compression is taken care of by the dimensional lumber used (can withstand thousands of pounds of downward force) and the swaying is eliminated by the plywood nailed to the outside. Each wall is incredibly strong even though it doesnt appear so. The roof is engineered trusses. They are 5-10x stronger than traditional rafters.
It's all just beautiful watching these hard working men putting this house together with so much love. Construction workers are among the hardest working people in our society.
But never gets the recognition they deserved
Thank you :) I am a framer
@@madizm05 That's because all you hear is about the bad ones. Even this build looked like the bear minimum cheapest options, just enough to pass code, compared to some I've seen.
As an Engineer and Interior Designer - I must say this man has done some amazing work!
Crazy watching how different building is in different countries
I just wondering, why western house (cause i’m living in asia) are not using brick? How long you guys expect for the lifetime of house if only using wood?
"western house"...better to say "american houses". as a European I ask myself the same question, it is certainly a beautiful house to see but from my point of view it is made of paper, without solid foundations or a basement that isolates properly, a roof of sheet metal and tar paper...certainly beautiful but low, very low, standard.
Building materials are largely a function of geography. Wood is readily available in the US (and much of northern Europe @MarchesiEnrico), and is far cheaper and easier/faster to build with than brick.
Traditionally, lightweight/wood homes are best in places with small diurnal swings (days and nights don't vary greatly in temperature) and high humidity. A heavy mass structure will hold temperatures, and because the night and day are about the same, you have to heat or cool the actual structure, so your forced to supply more heat, even when its warm and sunny in the winter because the walls are still cold from the night before.
In places where night and day are very different temperatures, the structure will help to regulate the temperature between the two extremes, often making it more comfortable inside. Of course this has changed somewhat with modern heating and cooling and insulation, but building practices change slowly.
We do use a lot of concrete block, and poured concrete as well... especially in regions where it makes sense, or as part of newer building techniques (insulated concrete forms for example).
In the US, we expect a well built wood home to last about 100 years, though if they are not properly maintained they may not last that long. We also have too many VERY poorly built homes that will likely be replaced after significantly less.
To make things worse, for the last couple of generations here in the US we are often concerned with the wrong things. We would spend a lot of money to make a much larger home than we needed, rather than spending that money to make a better home that will last longer or be more comfortable. However this trend is slowly starting to change and smaller, well built homes are becoming popular again.
@@MarchesiEnrico A lot of modern building techniques here in the US were first popularized in parts of Europe. Not all of Europe, just like not all of the US builds the same way.
As a ”European”? In Norway, Sweden and Finland I’m guessing 90% of the houses are made of wood. I don’t know any wooden house where it was demolished because of age. Most often is because of design or insulation. The house I live in is from 1963, completely built in wood.
@@MarchesiEnrico It's a very low standard build for US homes too..
Happy builders,happy home! Very nice. 🏠 wishing you many years of happiness and joy!
Y'all need to chill the hell out and let this man cook, his house is nice, America is different from other countries, different climate, soil feature(all depending on location) there's a lot that goes into houses so it's probably in a good environment.
Fr
It looks super clean, just find the acute angle on the one side fairly odd looking, but overall really nice
These fuckers probably don’t know jack shit about building codes and standards each area requires. America has every known terrain in the universe. So for Gods sake, there’s every building regulations required when planning.
For me is the lack of hurricane clips😊
No offense intended, but this construction method is very primitive. This is how garden sheds are built in Europe. Are houses built this way in tornado areas?.
Unfortunately yes
The reason they are constructed in this manner is cost.
Construction in the U.S. is a very short sighted affair. Europeans think nothing of living in a 300 year old home. Americans have never seen one. This leads to thinking only about the immediate. I only need a home that meets my needs, who cares about three generations from now. Very different from Germany.
House fire will be fun
@@madirts1 Europe has resources to make cheap concrete houses. In US that is considered luxury.
Came out beautiful I love the edging of plants all around the house it’s unique
Love the house man, keep up the good work!
you did your thing with this build! I love the design and location.
its one tornado or one fire and your dream its dream again
Guess what?
That could happen to any house on the face of the Earth, every house ever built
@@jaydengray come to europe bro houses are better
Wether self made or not, this guy is living a great life. Good for him.
Real , I want to do something like this in the future but I have to think about my mother first
Id go with a better company..this house is like a cubic zerconiea, looks flashy and yet build with the cheapest of materials and methods.@@xsleet2839
Most likely a life of massive debt, fake it, until you make it.... Dude has Scam Artist vibes for sure..
@@FJB2020Just because he knows how to operate a business with leverage does not make him a scam artist.
@@joepopelas lol...ok
Why did they buff the concrete floor with water and expose the insulation to moisture and possible mold contamination?
A single wetting of your insulation will not hurt anything (at least with most insulations). Most construction materials will be fine as long as they are allowed to dry out. The reason you see so many water related issues with homes is because the builder worries so much about keeping the water out that they fail to account for what happens once it does get in.
Good modern builders have learned from the past (or their mistakes) and worry more about bulk water intrusion with a continuous WRB (weather resistant barrier) and flashing details, but leave the structure vapor open/permeable, so that any water that gets into the walls can evaporate and dry to the inside or outside of the wall. The days of putting plastic sheeting in our walls is over.
The insulation was likely dry by the next day, with zero lasting effect.
@@josephhfry only if the climate is hot enough. if its cold that water wont go anywhere.
@@ge2719 false... Water still evaporates in the cold. Otherwise our roads would be wet most of the year. Even if it's below freezing, water will evaporate.
@@josephhfry it takes far far longer, and only if you get airflow. so if it takes too long and thy have to finish building, and they close in the walls that water isn't going anywhere it will soak into all the material of the wall and cause mold.
@@ge2719 we can go round and round all day on this. Evaporation, even in cold weather, doesn't require airflow, it requires vapor pressure. Airflow will increase vapor pressure, as does low relative humidity and heat. But there is always vapor pressure if you have a wet surface and relatively drier air. This is how plants draw water up from the ground up to their leaves, and how your kitchen sponge dries all the way to the middle.
Sure if they seal up the wall wet with a vapor impermeable barrier, then there is a chance that mold could form. But the reality is that it is very rare for mold to form from a single wetting because walls can usually dry to at least one side.
I have never heard of mold problems caused by construction moisture (though I am not in the trades). Every time I hear about mold it is due to water leaking or condensing inside the structure.
I'm a big fan. I love your work and videos! A few questions though:
1) I noticed you installed some of the interior and exterior walls' insulation before polishing the floors - why is that?
2) Why did you keep the bathrooms with this ceiling height. Isn't that too much for a bathroom? Was that a design preference or a mistake? )
3) The master bedroom door that is under the stairs, couldn't you move it a little to the right to avoid that issue you had with the stairs?
4) the arches' crowns are too close to the ceiling, was that also part of the design or you miss that too?
Finally, you built a beautiful home! Well done!!!
Watch his other build videos. He literally explains everything you asked.
Enjoyed the video but would have liked to see the pool being built and the plumbing and electrical work.
what was the snap-in-like roofing material that they used at the very top? (by the skylights)
Different area, different ways of working, well ,nice work
how long can the woods support the load?
Likely a south east/mid west build, very temperate environment down here. Foundation is just fine and the framing is pretty good, looks like mostly dimensional wood, could be improved with engineered pieces but it’s certainly good enough. Lot of northerners and Europeans here that don’t know how much easier it is to build in warmer and more temperate environments.
You understand you should do the Stairs while Framing is still happening so you do not have to call them back out just to do the stairs after Sheetrock and is up right????
Looks good but I would have rather gone for quaity over size.
what makes this house not a good quality house
Great looking house I'm working butt off to try and get my pen house like this after my mom passed its time I figure out a future :)
Very different to Australia. In our northern area building have to be cyclone rated. Also timber and steel framing is done in factories and trucked to site. I guess the workers are paid a pittance, hence they still frame on site.
Sangat terampil dan cekatan para tukang nya, pekerjaan yg sangat detail dan hasil luar biasa 😊
Beautifully built. Very nice. 💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯
Beautiful home, i love it
why not use real slate for the roof?
THANK YOU! amazing video
How much the whole constructions cost to built this house ?
Trä regel väggarna ser på tok för tunna ut där blir det inte mycket isolering . Men Står huset i Södra USA så räcker det förhoppnings vis till
Americano tem uma tara por madeira né? Eu não me sentiria seguro em uma casa de papel dessa ai não
Масштабно. Супер получилось!
These men are hard working
KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK
In Africa we use brick and mortar to build. I don't understand why in America they like using wood for framing, how strong is that structure?
Just as strong as brick. The walls look flimsy because they're only braced every 2ft, but the exterior sheathing (plywood) keeps them from swaying. The roof is engineered trusses that are put together in a factory and can withstand thousands of pounds of pressure.
Also in dem Stil baut man bei uns Gartenhäuser! Wohnhäuser werden Stein auf Stein und aus Beton gebaut! Halten bei guter Pflege ewig und fliegen nicht weg!
In dieser Bauweise geht es natürlich schneller und kostengünstiger!
Any word on the total cost of the build, including price and location of the land? Great build and finish results 🎉
@25:27 Why doesn't the left wall get insulation throughout? Just curious, not bickering.
If you know much about construction you will see this build was desighnded to look flashy but relatively cheap material and methods..id rather smaller but high quality as that will last much longer and be cheaper to live in.
Dont listen to that guy, idk if he even knows whats going on. Most likely its because its a garage, and the insulation is only on the exterior wall. With the one wall that has no insulation, its bordering the actual house which also has the insulation around the exterior walls. Now i will say that the other guy is kinda right, even though the missing insulation isnt necessarily bad, typically garages are fully insulated just because of how much they are open. Maybe the builder just knew it was gonna be closed a lot or he just didnt really care and wanted ti save a few hundered.
it's so amazing how different people build things in different countries, the typical american house is made from wood but in the caribbean the typical house is made from concrete bricks and steel rods
Cuánto costó hacerla? En U$S...
Ohhh... what is this? A gazebo made from plywood, standing just until the next good wind? It doesn't worth to be called a house. I've built my house in Ukraine with 2 bricks thick walls, now this is a house I can trust.
You would be surprised at how strong this type of thing can be
How many case is this!😮
I think 100 million!!
No decent foundation. A tornado will destroy this in one minute.
The foundation is ok,not the wall,roof.
but the roof had roofnado branded roof underlayment.
Sdfu hater
@yungspitta24 Every time when I see on UA-cam how all these huge timber houses are blown away in a few seconds, I think. Why don't they use a decent structure made of concrete? Of course, sutch a house will be damaged to but it will protect the people inside the house mutch better.
@@jeanpierredevos3137 This is how it works in Germany. All the houses are made out of cement or something, you will never find a house where the wall is smaller than 40cm. Made out of hard solid material.
Not sure how durable those stair treads will be with that mitre edge on the front .!!? Did that thousands of times for cabinets or fire place mantle . But not sure for wear and tear on staircases 😮😮
Why put two types of roofs? Metal and shingle? That makes no sense
Price on the whole build?
Thank you for leaving some trees. Many new properties don't have any greenery and if find it depressing
cost of the operation for this house made of paper and glue? certainly very beautiful to see but a house like this made with the standard levels of European construction costs at least a couple of million if not three. Obviously made with a appropriate foundation, at least a semi-basement and a decent roof...
Allegedly the property is worth $2,5 mill. I once asked a American friend about the same, and he said it's the American way in hurricane and tornado areas - build cheap and fast, and when the house is worn out (or blown down) clean the lot and build a new one.
Dont judge all US built homes based on production built junk..
@@johndoesen1718 No way that home is worth $2,500,000... It cost him under $700,000 to build all in.. That is a ~$900,000 House in Texas all day long..
Not sure what you mean. What part of this is paper or glue? The interior walls? Sure.
What is not appropriate about this foundation? It's a concrete slab with engineered footers poured on a prepped surface. In most of the American south, we cannot (or choose not to due to the massive cost associated with) build basements or cellars. The soil is 95% sand and the walls will eventually collapse in on themselves regardless of how you build it.
Are wood structure like this good for tropic n humid countries like Indonesia? Which is extremely rainy n humid
Think of buying your course but I live in Australia wondering whether this is compatible to the Australian building standards
Now this is the true American dream
Muy bonita la casa felicidades!!
New truck?
Hey Case, am I right in saying you have built 2 duplexes and now a house? At age what 22?
He is 27 or 28
That is very beautiful house do you have that house's floorplan if you have pleace give me it
Hi bro excellent video, I watched whole you already have another subscriber.
The house looks good 👍, but why did you make it with wood and not brick and concrete 🤔 ?
Great job! I was expecting to see the interior.
you the man, man
Wao espectacular como trabajan is amazing
This guy worked so hard to build this house and y’all are criticising him saying the house isn’t strong enough and it’s useless get a grip man 😑😑
18:13 oh look he is building a cement,see it’s strong
I agree they act like they were there when the house was built when really they were just sitting on their ass watching the video and decided to criticize to make themselves feel better
@ agreed
I wonder how long this took to build
You can easily tell This guy worked his ass off anybody throwing shade down below in the comments still need guidance from their parents 😂❤
❤ congrats!!!
Salute my guy. Great job
Hope (someday) you fellas got in touch with mansory. Wood SUCKS!
I'll wait for the hurricane first, it will do the quality control! Houses like this are carried away like a sheet of paper in a major storm, they're not worth a damn!!!!!
Yeah it was built like shit..
Wow what a weird comment to make on someone's unbelievable efforts at building their own home.
@staceycohen7395 He didn't build it.. He hired the whole thing out to third-world laborors..
But its true tho that foundation is wayyy too weak it stands no chance, would wipe out like paper, if u gonna spend that much money on a house, make every penny worthy
Yep. It will hurt feelings, but wood frames with plasterboard are not going to hold back a hurricane. Its nice and convenient because it is cheap and looks fine, but if you want to make your house stand a good chance, you need concrete/brick outer walls and much thicker beams in the roof. This roof is going to rip like a can of sardines with a strong gust of wind. Besides that, wood will start rotting over time. Most Europeans stopped building wooden houses quite a while back for a good reason.
I see a weak sediment... I think a foundation is better. It is better to dig then hardcore base and raise the walls from below for greater resistance and a strengthened structure.
tolles Haus-wunderschön !
Congrats!
Kudos too you but damn if I’m ever in the position to build my own home in a area prone to hurricane or tornados I’m getting metal framing done
Where would the construction sector in the US be without Mexican contractors? Very well executed project, well done.
Mexican contractors are the reason many US homes get a bad reputation on quality
We would have better built homes...
Are there a way to cover the green poop containers in the ground? :P
How much?
thats beautiful
Can anyone explane the ground work? I dont understand, he removes the top soil (which is good) but then stops, no more digging to find solid rock or change out the earth masses with more stable bedding like rocks. But then goes ahead and actually puts more soil back on top of the excisting earth? I just dont get it, whats the point of that?
And the foundation is not anchored into anything, just floating on top of earth, which is unstable and will definently get setteling issues when you build such a large build on it... (even with the compressing that is done)
Genuinely courios to why this is the way its done, anyone knows please let me know, as this is definently not the way to do it where im from.
If it was done right, that should be compactable fill and is common in Texas. But considering how much he cheaped out on the rest of this build, it most likely wasn't.. Also he didn't seem to compact it in lifts, which is not how you do it..
amazing work !
the big cabin👍🏻
Instead of wood why not using concrete blocks , on the outer part of the house .And
for the roof why not metal sheetings on the whole roof ......
Because it’s a different country my nigga
One thing I miss in the US, is heated floors. Do you have that somewhere? Here in Norway that is not even considered a luxury. Perhaps in the whole house (newer) but every bathroom has it.
He's located in Texas, and heated floors would be bonkers down there. It make sense in most of Scandinavia, but not in the southern states of USA.
Koreans have been using that floor heating system called ' Ondol ' over 5,000 years
Modern water pipe floor heating system is motivated from Ondol
Every South Korean houses have under floor heating system include the bathrooms
Awesome paperhouse
7:45 magical pipe from the sky gives the concrete😂
I love it🎉🎉🎉
Whats the cost for something like this?????
Paper houses are pretty cheap
The timelapse would condense months of hard work, planning, and craftsmanship into a fast-paced, exciting video that takes viewers through the key stages of the build.
Just Curious, what, or How Much Coin did YOU DROP on this House!!!!
Shop build? 👀👀
Day ?
Heel goed gebouwd, gefeliciteerd
What’s the address of your home. Would like to physically see it. I am inspired, and about to embark on my own journey here in Dallas. Interested in signing up for course.
He didn't build this house.. he had shoddy laborors do it.. He isn't even a GC. He's just a dude the has money and films it..
amazing, impressive congrata
All out of wood?
Its really beautiful built. Respect to the craftsmen but as a German i wouldn´t build walls so wobbly, rather walls made of stone and morter P.S. How about a cellar?
The walls aren't wobbly. The compression is taken care of by the dimensional lumber used (can withstand thousands of pounds of downward force) and the swaying is eliminated by the plywood nailed to the outside. Each wall is incredibly strong even though it doesnt appear so. The roof is engineered trusses. They are 5-10x stronger than traditional rafters.
Bit fragile. sandpaper instead of tiles but I do live in the UK where we use brick instead of flammable and breakable wood.
This construction would never get the permit to build here in QLD. I know every council is different but mine wont let me.
"Hello, I'm from OSHA state of Oregon" vibes all over this video
my dream home ❤🎉
cb?
As a swiss carpenter this is horrible
Fr
All the experts in the comments I see 🥱🙄
120% fire 🔥 resistance 😂😂
awsome job