rookiebuilder
REGISTERED
New here. Family members in process of having new home constructed by general contractor in Washington State. This is a custom home designed by/for the family and has both architectural and stamped/sealed structural engineering which was provided by the client to the general contractor. The contract says to build per plan.
First issue is: Appears framer did not follow the design and built incorrect garage wall heights (2 feet too tall). The design called for specific trusses which established the bonus room floor above and met the design intent for garage ceiling, bonus room floor and ceiling heights.
Second issue: The general must have (on his own) discovered the framing issue because they had a several week delay in framing. (Held for trusses they said). But after the trusses were delivered and installed, decking and roof sheathing applied....the general contacted the client and said: we have a problem with the stairs, they don't fit.
The family member (client) goes to look at house and discovers the upstairs floor is 2 feet higher than the plan, the bonus room ceilings are way too low (compressed) and that the truss design is completely different than the ones submitted with the stamped engineering. The date on the truss design is 6 months after the originals. There is no record of any approved design change at the county (required for structural changes to stamped designs) and the general contractor never contacted his client. He just had the truss design changed and thought nobody would notice.
Third issue: General seems to think he can find a way to adjust the stairs and everything is good. Client says no way.
In order to correct, the house needs a huge section torn down and rebuilt correctly. My view, the general owns this 100%, plus the framing contractor and even the truss company as the original engineering wasn't revised so how did they revise the truss design?
Suggestions on how to proceed from here?
First issue is: Appears framer did not follow the design and built incorrect garage wall heights (2 feet too tall). The design called for specific trusses which established the bonus room floor above and met the design intent for garage ceiling, bonus room floor and ceiling heights.
Second issue: The general must have (on his own) discovered the framing issue because they had a several week delay in framing. (Held for trusses they said). But after the trusses were delivered and installed, decking and roof sheathing applied....the general contacted the client and said: we have a problem with the stairs, they don't fit.
The family member (client) goes to look at house and discovers the upstairs floor is 2 feet higher than the plan, the bonus room ceilings are way too low (compressed) and that the truss design is completely different than the ones submitted with the stamped engineering. The date on the truss design is 6 months after the originals. There is no record of any approved design change at the county (required for structural changes to stamped designs) and the general contractor never contacted his client. He just had the truss design changed and thought nobody would notice.
Third issue: General seems to think he can find a way to adjust the stairs and everything is good. Client says no way.
In order to correct, the house needs a huge section torn down and rebuilt correctly. My view, the general owns this 100%, plus the framing contractor and even the truss company as the original engineering wasn't revised so how did they revise the truss design?
Suggestions on how to proceed from here?