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ICF? What is that?
How does it vent? Gable vents?This is a fireproof eave. Convex, not concave, stucco, not woodView attachment 97889
How does it vent? Gable vents?
I've heard those work well. I've also heard that half the time it doesn't matter because the fire burns so hot it just cooks the whole house.Products - O'Hagin
ohagin.com
I've seen 1 foundation with those. Id be nervous about EPS foam on the exterior. Lots of mold lawsuits with the EFIS stucco system. My liability insurance specifically excludes it.BuildBlock Insulating Concrete Forms (ICFs) Energy Efficient & Disaster Resistant Housing
BuildBlock Insulating Concrete Forms (ICFs) are used to cost-effectively build extremely energy efficient and disaster resistant homes and buildings.buildblock.com
I'm seeing more and more of this.
That's just the last line of defense against blown embers. It's part of a bigger plan of keeping combustsbles at a distsnce.I've heard those work well. I've also heard that half the time it doesn't matter because the fire burns so hot it just cooks the whole house.
Where I live is a mixture of open grasslands and timber. In the 50s and 60s the old growth doug fir was basically clear cut and in this climate (lots of rain in the winter), along with this geology, basically Franciscan Melange which moves a lot, the '55 and '64 floods did a lot of damage to the South Fork Eel watershed. To the point that the Eel River has silted in and will recover maybe in a 1000 years. There used to be beautiful deep pools all along the river but sadly they're now filled in. Anyway, what has come in after the clearcutting has been lots of Tan Oak, Huckleberry brush, poison oak, that sorta thing. All very flammable. So the changes I've seen around here aren't necessarily related to climate change, they're more related to human activity. But what has happened has been that since the logging where everything was trashed by running dozers all over the place has now filled in with the aforementioned stuff. In this area the tourist tree is the Redwood but you don't see any old growth fir forests. BLM has an 80 acre parcel up here that is old growth fir and it's spectacular. The huckleberry bushes are old growth! I'm sure that's what this whole area looked like for thousands of years.What has changed in your area in the 40+ years you’ve lived there? Insight on why?
Those sound a lot better than the original EPS foam onesWhere I live is a mixture of open grasslands and timber. In the 50s and 60s the old growth doug fir was basically clear cut and in this climate (lots of rain in the winter), along with this geology, basically Franciscan Melange which moves a lot, the '55 and '64 floods did a lot of damage to the South Fork Eel watershed. To the point that the Eel River has silted in and will recover maybe in a 1000 years. There used to be beautiful deep pools all along the river but sadly they're now filled in. Anyway, what has come in after the clearcutting has been lots of Tan Oak, Huckleberry brush, poison oak, that sorta thing. All very flammable. So the changes I've seen around here aren't necessarily related to climate change, they're more related to human activity. But what has happened has been that since the logging where everything was trashed by running dozers all over the place has now filled in with the aforementioned stuff. In this area the tourist tree is the Redwood but you don't see any old growth fir forests. BLM has an 80 acre parcel up here that is old growth fir and it's spectacular. The huckleberry bushes are old growth! I'm sure that's what this whole area looked like for thousands of years.
I'm a big fan of ICFs...my wife and I just finished our house built with ICFs--they're made by Faswall. They are a block that looks like a standard CMU but they're made of ground up pallets, concrete and fly ash. We tried to light one on fire with a torch and couldn't do it. So we have 37 yards of concrete in our walls plus a bunch of steel. Then stuccoed on the outside. Fire proof.View attachment 97912
Yeah, I was gonna go with those...a buddy was a dealer for the Polysteel ones. But when you're working with them they leave little white poly pellets all over the place. The Faswall blocks can be worked with anything that cuts wood.Those sound a lot better than the original EPS foam ones
Unbunch your panties for a second.In the local news here.
Santa Cruz county is not allowing fire victims to clean up their damaged/destroyed property on their own. Fire damaged materials will not be accepted at the local Santa Cruz county landfill.
That means all of these already harshed people are going to have to hire an approved, licensed contractor to clean up thier properties, with inspections, permits, ect, ect, ect. before they can even attempt to begin the process of rebuilding.
Pretty harsh. But it's not surprising.
Stick to payroll accounting. You are was waaaaay out of your lane.So you wear a ventilator, rent a front loader or a bobcat, scoop it up and drop it in a dump truck. Some other bastard is going to do the exact same and charge you through your teeth for it. And the county will get their permit fees.
It's not going to be recycled. No poor landfill worker is going to be sifting through that sh!t....
Why are you builders building such toxic houses of horror in the first place? "Hey Rick, roll another coat of lead-based paint on there and we'll pound a sixer!"Unbunch your panties for a second.
What do you think is in a burned down house? How much lead and asbestos?
LOL such ironyUnbunch your panties for a second.
What do you think is in a burned down house? How much lead and asbestos? My friend the payroll clerk, do you know anything about what that stuff will do to a family, kids and all, picking through it, breathing it in?
What does it do to the landfill/ recycling workers, when they breath in clouds of it?
I invite you to huff a big breath of it through that bandana.
We can get to covid breathing after you put a fresh pair of knickers on.
No you don't, you've explicitly said so here.I usually try to educate myself before I form an opinion
Damn businessmen trying to shave I nickel.Why are you builders building such toxic houses of horror in the first place? "Hey Rick, roll another coat of lead-based paint on there and we'll pound a sixer!"