The Columbus Dispatch

Drawings help you avoid remodeling nightmares

- Ask the Builder

I’d like to share a story with you. This saga transpired over the past six weeks, and I feel it contains a valuable lesson that could save you thousands of dollars, allow you to sleep at night, and go to dinner with your remodeling contractor at the end of the job.

This is a tale about trust, honor and betrayal. Perhaps you’ve been betrayed in the past by a friend, a lover or a contractor. No matter who it is, it’s always painful.

Weeks ago, a woman who lives in Ontario, Canada, purchased one of my short phone call consultati­ons. She was upset about a new exterior door that was installed in the basement of her home. She called to ask me if it looked OK or if she was just being too persnicket­y.

As I always do, I asked her to send me as many photograph­s as possible so I could get a handle on the situation. Fortunatel­y, she sent great ones that allowed me to see every aspect of the job.

This job was very complex. The homeowner had decided to build a new patio beneath a deck. The basement of the house was only partially below grade, and the door was installed in the exterior wall in the basement under the outdoor deck.

To make the whole scheme work, the contractor had to excavate the ground beneath the deck to be able to install the patio. This patio extended to the columns supporting the outer edge of the deck. The contractor may or may not have known this, but the footing piers under these columns would have to be sunk lower into the ground, as they no longer would have enough soil cover to protect against frost heave.

I immediatel­y saw a grave error in one of the photograph­s. The contractor had cut a notch in the house foundation to accommodat­e the new door. But the top of the notch was 6 inches above the basement floor!

Other photos indicated that he had already installed the new patio outside, and that was also above the basement floor. I couldn’t tell if the patio was sloped away from the house so as to direct water away from the basement.

The notch in the foundation was not wide enough. This meant it was impossible to position the door far enough back in the wall in line with the wall framing that sat on top of the foundation wall.

But it gets worse. The contractor had not created a slope on the horizontal part of the notch in the foundation. This slope is necessary to shed water away from the underside of the door threshold. Without this slope, there is a very good chance water will leak into the basement under the threshold.

I told the distraught woman that I could make a simple color drawing showing exactly where the door frame should be in relation to the exterior of the concrete foundation and the existing wood-frame exterior wall. I also sent her several links to great illustrati­ons and cross sections that I found on the websites of leading manufactur­ers of exterior doors.

Furthermor­e, I sent her links to several Youtube videos, including one of mine, that showed how to install a new exterior door in an existing wall. I believe she watched them, but it’s possible she didn’t comprehend all the informatio­n.

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 ?? AGENCY TIM CARTER/TRIBUNE CONTENT ?? This is crude drawing made in just five minutes could save you $10,000 or more.
AGENCY TIM CARTER/TRIBUNE CONTENT This is crude drawing made in just five minutes could save you $10,000 or more.
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