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Construction
Defects Inspections
If you have a residential property that has undergone a
remodel, addition, or “OTHER “ renovations and
modifications (such as upgrades and/or replacement of electrical,
plumbing , heating and air conditioning, roofing ,pool/spa,
etc) it is likely that some construction defects and/or violations
currently exist, unbeknownst to you. Even if the work was
preformed by “Licensed “contractors and has been
inspected and approved by the local building department,
this is no assurance that the property is defect-free! If
you currently own a property fitting this description, it
will benefit and behoove you to consider scheduling the building
for one of our detailed, comprehensive, and independent “Construction
Defect Inspections”
It has been my experience that especially in what I refer
to as the “out-of-sight. Out-of-mind” area such
as attics and sub floor crawlspaces, the highest number of
defects will be located. Contractors and tradesmen often
compromise work quality in these difficult-to-access regions
as they know the likelihood of their work being seen by you,
much less inspected by qualified individual, in theses limited-spaces
and not-often-seen areas is very low. Our inspections have
revealed that the type, severity, and resulting significance
of these defects can range from simple workmanship/quality
issues to serious health and safety concerns for the building
occupants- YOU!
You are most likely now asking yourself the question “How
can this be?” The answer to this perplexing question
can be traced to three contributing sources:
1. Contractor Qualifications:
As an independent 3rd party professional inspector with over
35 years in the professions, I can tell you from first-hand
experience that the knowledge, experience, qualifications,
and resulting work quality will differ dramatically from
various contractors. While it is always advised that you
only enlist contractors/companies that are “legitimate” (i.e.,
licensed, bonded and insured), this IN ITSELF, is no guarantee
your project will be completed in a proper workmanlike
and safe manner. You are typically (naturally) assuming
that the contractor/company you hire are professionals
and know what they are doing, Even if you did attempt to
inspect their work for yourself , would you know what to
look for?
2. Inadequately Trained Contractor’s WORKFORCE :
This may be the single most contributing factor to our ever-increasing
crisis of sub-standard construction, while the contractor
you hire may be licensed and qualified, who is actually performing
the work? More and more, in an attempt to cut job costs,
and secure more projects, contractors are only bidding the
project, signing and submitting the contract, with very minimal
( if any ) actual hands on work or project supervision preformed.
The majority of the actual work is usually completed by unqualified,
poorly trained, illiterate “laborers” who are
often unable to read, write, or converse in English. You
may never (or at least rarely) see the contractor of record
on site after the project commences, and quality control
suffers:
3. Municipal Building Department Shortcomings:
As a sub-contractor I have scheduled and witnessed first-
hand many project “progress” and “final” inspections
preformed by the various local city and county building inspectors.
Much like their contractor counterparts, government inspector’s
experience and knowledge will vary significantly, even within
the same department! It has been my experience that: 1) Some
inspectors do not know the applicable code sections exist,
2) They incorrectly interpret/apply the applicable code section
to the installation, 3) Elect to waive the code completely,
if THEY feel that the installation meets the “intent” of
the code . ( Which is highly subjective), Add to this the
fact that nearly all building departments are understaffed
and overworked/overscheduled, making 15-20 + inspection stops
a day. Generally, this only allows for cursory, (15-20 minutes
maximum) oftentimes only random, inspection of jobsite conditions.
Finally, be advised that municipal inspectors, unlike private
inspectors are protected by “sovereign immunity” meaning
that they cannot be held liable for their negligence (i.e.
missing defects or code violations) unless it is an intentional
act or malice or criminal intent. In summary , city/county
inspections should realistically be thought of (at best)
as only :speed bumps” to building a defect-free building.
Not the “roadblock” they are often incorrectly
assumed to be .
Thank you for visiting the site of Sam Jabuka Certified
CREIA inspector. CCI
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