Pulling permits - looking for trouble?

   / Pulling permits - looking for trouble? #41  
Unless you are a plumber, you can't get a plumbing license in the state of MA. They can give you (as the homeowner) the electrical permit at the town's discretion.

You may or may not need a building permit depending on the nature of the "carpentry".

I have a "walk up" third floor complete with dormers. When they built the house, they called it an "attic" - the floor joists are sized / spanned for 30 lb/sf live load although they should have been sized for 40 lb/sf as it has "reasonable expectation of future expansion".

I'm adding a play/media room - I had to get a structural engineer to sign off on the floor. Also have to rip out & upgrade the bearing wall between my living room & dining room as they didn't double up the studs there to support 2 floors above it. Lastly I have to add three columns in my basement complete with footings since the beam isn't sized right. This is all on a 10 year old house that clearly wasn't built to code. Turns out in MA that legally the builder is responsible for meeting code, not the inspector. I don't have any legal recourse since I bought the house (3rd owner) and there is also a 6 year "statute of limitations" (It's called something else) protecting the building industry.

I can't fault my building inspector as he is doing it by the book. What is frustrating is that the floor spans & bearing wall code is based on deflection (1/360) so that plaster doesn't crack which works out to a safety factor of ~8:1. Personally I'd be willing to risk a cracked ceiling...

So to anwser your question -they very well can make you fix existing problems. My inpsector wouldn't issue the permit until we had worked out a plan for upgrading the bearing wall, columns and got the floor signed off.
 
   / Pulling permits - looking for trouble? #42  
Unless you are a plumber, you can't get a plumbing license in the state of MA. They can give you (as the homeowner) the electrical permit at the town's discretion.

You may or may not need a building permit depending on the nature of the "carpentry".

I have a "walk up" third floor complete with dormers. When they built the house, they called it an "attic" - the floor joists are sized / spanned for 30 lb/sf live load although they should have been sized for 40 lb/sf as it has "reasonable expectation of future expansion".

I'm adding a play/media room - I had to get a structural engineer to sign off on the floor. Also have to rip out & upgrade the bearing wall between my living room & dining room as they didn't double up the studs there to support 2 floors above it. Lastly I have to add three columns in my basement complete with footings since the beam isn't sized right. This is all on a 10 year old house that clearly wasn't built to code. Turns out in MA that legally the builder is responsible for meeting code, not the inspector. I don't have any legal recourse since I bought the house (3rd owner) and there is also a 6 year "statute of limitations" (It's called something else) protecting the building industry.

I can't fault my building inspector as he is doing it by the book. What is frustrating is that the floor spans & bearing wall code is based on deflection (1/360) so that plaster doesn't crack which works out to a safety factor of ~8:1. Personally I'd be willing to risk a cracked ceiling...

So to anwser your question -they very well can make you fix existing problems. My inpsector wouldn't issue the permit until we had worked out a plan for upgrading the bearing wall, columns and got the floor signed off.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2019 Kubota SVL 95-2 (A47477)
2019 Kubota SVL...
2012 Chevrolet Traverse LTZ SUV (A53424)
2012 Chevrolet...
GODWIN CD150 DRI PRIME PORTABLE PUMP (A51406)
GODWIN CD150 DRI...
Super Star Smithco Bunker Rake (A50324)
Super Star Smithco...
(NEW) 2025 DOWN 2 EARTH GOOSENECK TRAILER (A51247)
(NEW) 2025 DOWN 2...
Utility Trailer (A52377)
Utility Trailer...
 
Top