bigmig
Structural
- Aug 8, 2008
- 401
I have been getting more and more projects that have common characteristics:
1. Owned by slum lords
2. Building Department has required them to hire an engineer because of life/safety issues reported by a complaining neighbor.
3. The owner conveys that they actually are interested in maintaining their building for the tenants life and property safety, despite the fact that they haven't done so in about 35 years, and every other sentence is "How much is this going to cost?".
I inspect these places, and issue a letter stating that their property is about to kill someone and that we need immediate shoring until a permanent fix can be implemented. Once the job is temporarily shored, the owner disappears into the horizon, never to be heard from again. In their mind the problem was "fixed", despite numerous points of communication stating that this is a temporary shoring fix. I feel frustrated because my recommendations for a permanent repair were ignored, the problem is not fixed, it is patched. I feel like the owner never had intended on fixing it, they just conveyed that to me to pacify me and the building department.
Do I go to the building department? If the building gets shut down, the owner's tenants move out, and then I get a letter from their lawyer stating that I just cost them $10,000 a month in rent for a problem that they shored per my directions.
What I want is for the building to be safe....permanently. How do I go about getting that to happen when the owner is too cheap and slimy to take that responsibility?
1. Owned by slum lords
2. Building Department has required them to hire an engineer because of life/safety issues reported by a complaining neighbor.
3. The owner conveys that they actually are interested in maintaining their building for the tenants life and property safety, despite the fact that they haven't done so in about 35 years, and every other sentence is "How much is this going to cost?".
I inspect these places, and issue a letter stating that their property is about to kill someone and that we need immediate shoring until a permanent fix can be implemented. Once the job is temporarily shored, the owner disappears into the horizon, never to be heard from again. In their mind the problem was "fixed", despite numerous points of communication stating that this is a temporary shoring fix. I feel frustrated because my recommendations for a permanent repair were ignored, the problem is not fixed, it is patched. I feel like the owner never had intended on fixing it, they just conveyed that to me to pacify me and the building department.
Do I go to the building department? If the building gets shut down, the owner's tenants move out, and then I get a letter from their lawyer stating that I just cost them $10,000 a month in rent for a problem that they shored per my directions.
What I want is for the building to be safe....permanently. How do I go about getting that to happen when the owner is too cheap and slimy to take that responsibility?