reading rmpls thread on us/Russian and capt comment about a bunker brought back a project.
I thought this was already posted but couldn't find it...
-----
fella had a crawl space under house that went from 6 ft to 2 ft.
fella needed more storage and had desire for a "storm shelter"
in his neighborhood the word bunker would not have been a good idea.
so..
he dug out crawl space using pick, shovel and 5 gallon buckets.
as possible, dirt that was dug was moved to areas where dirt would insulate walls so that he didn't have to exit house with buckets walking across white carpet!!
most days, no neighbor knew what was going on under the house.
clear space of 450+ s.f. was dug out 8 ft high.
original foundation was concrete block.
concrete truck with a pumper unit was brought in to pour floor.
neighbors did notice that! answer to nosey neighbors... "reinforcing foundation... I've got some cracks...
house built on sand." solved most of the curious that stopped by.
interior walls were concrete block. with dirt fill from digging floor on exterior side.
1 exterior wall was not double concrete block.. 2x6 framed. load supporting.
(that wall was lined with very heavy metal fireproof storage cabinets that were 5 ft high and 2x4 framed shelves for heavy, closely packed storage items above and around the cabinets.
the other 3 walls were at least 2 concrete block thickness.
1 normal door access. separate hidden access via a crawl only doorway. normal door opened to what appeared to be a small storage area.
since area was under the main house.. water lines were visible and available. hvac was visible and left exposed. a couple of small vents were installed. drain lines were visible and exited house through floor. no access (commode) was installed, but tools to cut into line were left at area for emergency. w/c was in plan but never completed. fella was able to move his supplies/storage to a hidden and very secure area. construction material was stored for emergency use.
fella thought that there would be an increase in electric bill... opposite was true... electric went down! this area had been crawl space. now highly insulated!
fella has now moved... he misses his storage space.
when he sold house - 2 military men looked.. both immediately responded positively. second prospect bought. house was not the fanciest in neighborhood, but sold for more than any other.
digging a new one might just be a good investment in time and resources!
captain, your comment could be real valuable to a bunch of folks. a backhoe! can you see the jealousy?
I thought this was already posted but couldn't find it...
-----
fella had a crawl space under house that went from 6 ft to 2 ft.
fella needed more storage and had desire for a "storm shelter"
in his neighborhood the word bunker would not have been a good idea.
so..
he dug out crawl space using pick, shovel and 5 gallon buckets.
as possible, dirt that was dug was moved to areas where dirt would insulate walls so that he didn't have to exit house with buckets walking across white carpet!!
most days, no neighbor knew what was going on under the house.
clear space of 450+ s.f. was dug out 8 ft high.
original foundation was concrete block.
concrete truck with a pumper unit was brought in to pour floor.
neighbors did notice that! answer to nosey neighbors... "reinforcing foundation... I've got some cracks...
house built on sand." solved most of the curious that stopped by.
interior walls were concrete block. with dirt fill from digging floor on exterior side.
1 exterior wall was not double concrete block.. 2x6 framed. load supporting.
(that wall was lined with very heavy metal fireproof storage cabinets that were 5 ft high and 2x4 framed shelves for heavy, closely packed storage items above and around the cabinets.
the other 3 walls were at least 2 concrete block thickness.
1 normal door access. separate hidden access via a crawl only doorway. normal door opened to what appeared to be a small storage area.
since area was under the main house.. water lines were visible and available. hvac was visible and left exposed. a couple of small vents were installed. drain lines were visible and exited house through floor. no access (commode) was installed, but tools to cut into line were left at area for emergency. w/c was in plan but never completed. fella was able to move his supplies/storage to a hidden and very secure area. construction material was stored for emergency use.
fella thought that there would be an increase in electric bill... opposite was true... electric went down! this area had been crawl space. now highly insulated!
fella has now moved... he misses his storage space.
when he sold house - 2 military men looked.. both immediately responded positively. second prospect bought. house was not the fanciest in neighborhood, but sold for more than any other.
digging a new one might just be a good investment in time and resources!
captain, your comment could be real valuable to a bunch of folks. a backhoe! can you see the jealousy?
Comment