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4
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Keziah 2 year s ago
Seeing those gives me a slight eyetwitch. I am a german civil engineer.
       
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Tim 2 year s ago
Keziah,

only a slight twitch?36
Dem Ingeniör ist nichts zu schwör.
       
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Josiah 2 year s ago
#23
I realize that's it's unlikely to collapse right that second but I still wouldn't stand that close to a masonry wall with that much of a lean... JC_OMG_sign
       
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Tim 2 year s ago
confused german screaming. 36 how can any of that even be called a foundation. dash
       
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Mally 2 year s ago
Some of these problems were in the building that collapse in Florida last year killing a lot of people
       
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Mally 2 year s ago
This s#it is real, if you see something like that report it right away and get out
       
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Missy 2 year s ago
I'll never understand why Americans built their houses so badly and then wonder why hurricanes disassemble them like garden sheds
       
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yahooshoot

"We did this assessment for a brand-new home in Los Angeles built in 2017. This is a 3.2-million-dollar home. When we went into the crawlspace, we noticed these wood pieces in odd places. We’ve seen a thing or two, so we knew we had to cut these off and inspect behind it.

When we removed the wood pieces, we immediately knew why they were trying to hide what was behind it.

Sloppy concrete work. We found several exposed spots. Leaving components of the home open to the elements can cause problems like this rusted beam. This beam is holding up three stories."

 

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Structural Inspectors Share Their Nightmares
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