Cool stuff! This same video with a voiceover explaining what’s going on would be GOLD! Took an ugly partial basement and turned it into a full basement that can be finished
@@raymond19001yeah. Seems like there was an option to actually work, and reduce that to 25-30 days. Seems like quite a few days of guys just standing around, or sitting on the tailgate of their utes.
@@andrewallason4530 waiting for supplies. Hence why the foam foundation blocks were only half assembled for a day. Had to wait for delivery. Logistics will take over a decade to recover from the Suez Canal fiasco.
I had a new foundation put in and the cost for that was $92k. Lifting the house including dig-out was $120k, roughly. Purchased my home in 1973 for $37k. Home value is now $675k. So we'll worth it.
WOW ! I cleared my 2.5 acres, poured my 150 ft. long driveway, did all the landscaping, and built my 3500 sq. ft. house with a full basement ALL for $ 93k in 1986. My father and I did all the work. Just goes to show how much prices have changed since then. We have 43 windows and 9 exterior doors ( two of which are double doors ) for $10k from Pella Windows and Doors. And we are assessed at $650k. I don't plan to ever sell, so I have not checked to see what market value might be.
It's amazing what he have done but I believe he made a big mistake and missed out on a big opportunity. I would have took a loan off my house and tore down the house and built the whole house in ICF you would approve your house tenfold and better weather protection and probably for the same amount of money. If I had the same choice that what I would do. 01-14-23
my grandfather in the 1950s owned a father and son concrete company in Chicago that specialized in putting in full basements under existing houses using conveyors to bring the dirt up to the ground level. Basically done by hand.
This video is absolutely amazing. I actually enjoyed EVERYTHING about it. Especially watching Autumn turn to Winter. The actual construction of the addition was just wonderful to observe. It was educational and extremely calming. For a little over 19 minutes, I was truly at peace. Thanks for sharing this exceptional video. This actually made it to my playlist. ❤❤👍🏽👍🏽
My grandfather did this to our family homestead back in the early 1900’s, by hand, without the benefit of power equipment to created a second housing unit.
That’s really cool , I just can’t help but think tearing down and starting fresh be best but I’m sure there was a valid reason behind this , I didn’t even know this was a thing 👍🏻
Then you are throwing the $100,000 in lumber, labor, and other materials to make the house to a landfill. If the house is in good shape, why throw it out?
I think an enlargement project of this size would normally require a budget of about $200,000 dollars (depending on finish quality of the new basement-floor fittings etc)
I had to do something similar to my place. The county would not let me tear it down to rebuild. They said my house is on a lot that (under new building code restrictions) unbuildable if I were to tear it down. What I did was, tear off the second floor, rebuilt it, lift that up, then tore down the first floor and foundation, once that was done, set the second floor down on top of it. It was the only way I could circumvent the new building code. Added about $80k to the project, but it was that or nothing.
@dennismikhailitsky3735 lot size. Once the grandfathered structure is torn down, you conform to new building code, which my place didn't qualify as a "buildable lot".
Why all the criticism? They did exactly what they wanted done. It’s their business and they’re happy. I loved watching this video! We added a 12’ x 36’ addition to our ranch house back in ‘93 for $35k adding a new living room and a 4th bedroom PLUS a basement under it. Bought our house, a 2 bedroom with basement, in 1972 for $26k (our “started home” 😂). When our 3rd son was on the way we had our 1 car attached garage turned into a bedroom. We’ve been here 53 years. Adding on was cheaper than moving.
So not really a new first floor but a new fully insulated basement instead. Nice ICF build👍. House lifting is always a fun watch for us spectators. Probably not so much for the home owners though, LOL.
But the house wasn't that great, so seems like it would have been smarter to just demolish the entire thing and start new? Sure it would have cost more but in the end you get a brand new house with new electrical (this one prob has knob and tube) and much more functional and better insulated.
Yes I expected them to build another floor, but I was realizing that they don’t have time left to do that. Seems like a lot of work for a full basement
Seems like that backhoe was more trouble than it was worth. Seems the hoods were up more than down and seemed to hold the project up many times. Maybe I see it wrong. Cool project theo? We're you living in it while working on it?
Excellent content, I would love to have viewed the completed project. I must have missed the part where they poured the concrete for the basement floor. My dream would have been to have a 12 foot deep basement. Amazing content!
Did it a little different lifted mine and replaced the foundation and framed a new 1st floor under the lifted home turned a cape into a federal with a covered front porch. Cost me 150k in nj
Not sure if this is the case in this video but some places have strange restrictions on new construction in older areas, lot is possibly not big enough for new construction but remodeling is a whole different ballgame. I’m always amazed by what they will permit me to do with existing structures in my area but will not give us permits to tear down and rebuild.
I’m curious of the decision to add on under the existing house vs raising the roof and adding a second floor. I can think of a few, like Twsp code, total cost, able to continue living in your house, as opposed to having no roof during construction. What was your reason?
I think it would depend on if the brick is Veneer or not if it’s a veneer and the house is wood framed this should work but if the house is solid brick on the outside it probably would have to have each wall of the basement dug out and new bricks put under the existing blocks for each wall. Then the basement floor could be removed and any pipes and wires would have to be adjusted. Poor a new slab and it should be done. :)
@TheNightshadePrince , you have to support the brick close together at the point you pick it up with steel beams. If it is especially delicate the brick can be supported with vertical support pushing it towards the house walls
In Houston TX if you live within a few blocks of a big bayou raising you house 3ft would be a waste of money your house would still fool. You would need to raise your hose 6 to 10 ft to keep it from flooding.
My house was moved to a new spot in 1950. We found a newspaper article about it shortly after we got it. New foundation and all. It was supposed to be demolished but some rich guy did not wanna see that happen for some reason so here we are.
I want to do this to my house to add a foot or two of height to my foundation walls so I can get the basement floor repoured higher. Whoever built my house (at the bottom of a hill) built the foundation floor level with the ground. When it rains heavy the water creeps up towards my garage doors. Adding 4-6" of floor height would raise the floor above the potential flood level while increasing the overall ceiling height in my basement. I'm guessing this isn't a cheap process.
I'm doing two houses at the moment that you basically describe. Turning a 6ft basement into an 8ft basement. We are underpinning the whole house first, and chopping out the floor, digging down 2 feet by hand, then pouring a new floor. You might not necessarily need to do a lift.
I am in a summer cottage "upgraded" that was built w/basement on hillside which I am guessing was a bit less than a an 8/10 pitch roof. The basement came thru fine but the plan to concrete UP and DOWN sides with 16 foot porch and sidewalk lacked, sidewalk sank a 6 " to the house basement. 4 slabs of 4x8 concrete have some tilt, the 'scooped out' uphill side should have had a porch cover from the house to the garage.
I'd guess it's marginally cheaper. There's another guy in the comments somewhere around here who claims a house bought cheap back in the day was easier to lift than to tear down and rebuild. Seems like a ton of nerve-wracking work though.
Do you have video after lifting the house and restoring the house inside and out? I love watching videos before and after results....I love watching ( austin flippers ) in texas.
Wondering how much stress that puts on the framing. If you take apart the console of a car it squeak forever afterwards because everything is loosened up, I'd imagine that every nail and screw would have the same effect.
They added a better and up to code basement, it can’t be considered a living space or “extra floor” unless it has an exit directly to ground level, not a set of stairs to a door the same height as the main floor of the house. We spent a tom of money converting a basement into a living space with 2 bedrooms a family room and a full bathroom. We had it appraised and what we did added no value to the original 2 bedroom house. Actually had it appraised by 3 independent appraisers and one bank financed appraiser with the same results.
you added finished space but you added no bedrooms even though you technically did add 2 bedrooms. They need egress exits in each room to be considered a bedroom by NBC (national building code). I think it's hogwash but I do understand it.
War bestimmt eine teure Angelegenheit.........aber ich finde diese Aktion sehr mutig. Schade, dass der Film nicht alle Bauarbeiten zeigte bis zum Einzug.
Interesting time lapse. I am curious why a concrete vibrator wasn't used during the pour though. Pretty standard practice regardless of the cement type.
@@eastpark4864 I’m no construction expert. But you are correct if there is an issue with power then the sump pump will not work, you might be able to add an alarm, just in case, you can also have a manual backup, and then have a back electric pump around if not too expensive. I believe the goal of these drainage systems is to keep ground water from directly impacting the foundation if you have a groundwater challenges at your home? I assume if The drainage systems if not collected into a pit, if possible they might directly connect it to the main sewer but I don’t know if that is acceptable? If a pipe breaks they will have to dig up and replace it, but most ppl used very thick, robust pvc looking pipes if they don’t want issues with collapse or breakage it seems. Again, I’m no expert, just here learning and taking tips and tricks.
You can clearly see they don't have a problem with ground water or only problem they might have is with run off but im sure that's minimal and they added a French drain for redundancy.
In 1980 my wife & I had some friends who did exactly that. He paid a co $10K to raise his ranch house and put in on cribbing THEN he build the lower floor. We moved so I did not get to see the finished product. (my wife said he finished the house) THEN they got a divorce. Too much construction pressure? !
this is wicked and something I would love to do BUT I have to ask....you're telling me this was cheaper than just dozing the house and building a legit house from ground up that is already 2 stories? I suppose what is making me scratch my head is that now the first floor, I'm assuming, is going to be the second floor? I admit im commenting only 5 minutes in without seeing the final result. This process CAN'T possibly be cheap.
So referring to the title, you didn't really add a floor, you just put a new basement under the old house? or is there going to be a part 2 showing lifting the house back up and adding another floor?
I'm assuming if they tore it down they wouldn't be allowed to rebuild. I lived in a rental like that and the owner had to "remodel" it one section at a time until the house was completely new. Ridiculous
This would have been much better if you were to slow it down a bit and show HOW the house was lifted and shifted sideways. There are a bazillion videos showing foundations going in.
Unfortunately, these were the only two places that timelapse cameras could be placed during construction. If there is enough interest, I will cut a followup video using the piles of videos and photos that were taken from all angles before, during, and after construction.
Cool stuff! This same video with a voiceover explaining what’s going on would be GOLD! Took an ugly partial basement and turned it into a full basement that can be finished
Yeah, I'd like to see that. I was also wondering how long this took.
@@raymond19001yeah. Seems like there was an option to actually work, and reduce that to 25-30 days. Seems like quite a few days of guys just standing around, or sitting on the tailgate of their utes.
@@andrewallason4530 waiting for supplies. Hence why the foam foundation blocks were only half assembled for a day. Had to wait for delivery. Logistics will take over a decade to recover from the Suez Canal fiasco.
I had a new foundation put in and the cost for that was $92k. Lifting the house including dig-out was $120k, roughly. Purchased my home in 1973 for $37k. Home value is now $675k. So we'll worth it.
WOW ! I cleared my 2.5 acres, poured my 150 ft. long driveway, did all the landscaping, and built my 3500 sq. ft. house with a full basement ALL for $ 93k in 1986. My father and I did all the work. Just goes to show how much prices have changed since then. We have 43 windows and 9 exterior doors ( two of which are double doors ) for $10k from Pella Windows and Doors. And we are assessed at $650k. I don't plan to ever sell, so I have not checked to see what market value might be.
So this is why zoomers can't afford anything
It's amazing what he have done but I believe he made a big mistake and missed out on a big opportunity. I would have took a loan off my house and tore down the house and built the whole house in ICF you would approve your house tenfold and better weather protection and probably for the same amount of money. If I had the same choice that what I would do. 01-14-23
@@beetlejuice3x309 Nothing happens overnight. Patience and early planning are required. Too many people seem to think everything comes easy.
I had wondered about that! That seems like an expensive job.
That foundation wall system is pretty slick.
This is one of the most fascinating things I have watched. I would love to see the finished product.
Comin up soon
This was really cool to watch. I would love to see a follow up video of the finished house and yard.
I'm putting one together!
@@mtanton That will be nice to see. Can't wait.
@@mtanton when do u think it will be finished
my grandfather in the 1950s owned a father and son concrete company in Chicago that specialized in putting in full basements under existing houses using conveyors to bring the dirt up to the ground level. Basically done by hand.
This video is absolutely amazing. I actually enjoyed EVERYTHING about it. Especially watching Autumn turn to Winter. The actual construction of the addition was just wonderful to observe. It was educational and extremely calming. For a little over 19 minutes, I was truly at peace. Thanks for sharing this exceptional video. This actually made it to my playlist.
❤❤👍🏽👍🏽
Ahh, machinery! Don't you just love them. They make the impossible, possible.
to be fair, its not a huge house. we built pyramids and castles with sticks and stones :)
@@slurker3788 The difference is, pyramids, castles etc were built over vast amounts of time and at the cost of many lives.
The night to day transitions were pretty cool. I liked seeing the basement walls go up and then the house be put down.
It’s more adding a basement than a second a new first story. I think I would have preferred it because a two story house with a new basement. :)
Very impressive, thanks for sharing!
My grandfather did this to our family homestead back in the early 1900’s, by hand, without the benefit of power equipment to created a second housing unit.
Wow big respect to your grandfather
@@Grateful_wolf my mother said that he didn’t want to have to remove a perfectly good roof to add a second floor, lol
@@bapi6643 that’s so awesome what a legend! 💪🏼⚒️🧰🛠️💪🏼
those were the days when Men were Men and Women were Women.......😊
@@petermcgreevy6386 and today girls will be boys and boys will be girls
That’s really cool , I just can’t help but think tearing down and starting fresh be best but I’m sure there was a valid reason behind this , I didn’t even know this was a thing 👍🏻
Then you are throwing the $100,000 in lumber, labor, and other materials to make the house to a landfill. If the house is in good shape, why throw it out?
@rpvitiello Well ONE THING to consider is whether or not you are OVER INVESTING in the neighboorhood?
Overreaching democrat city policies. Guaranteed!!!
Or just, building a floor on top.... Roughly same cost, and you'd have two floors AND a half basement...
What@@americansfirst1095
Where I have a getaway camp in Mississippi, every trailer/house if lifted off the ground about 20’ high as it tends to flood with bad weather
How much did this project cost
costs zero ,good samaritan project
The house probably cost a million dollars being it's in Canada
48 million. But they saved themselves the headache of buying a new home!
I think an enlargement project of this size would normally require a budget of about $200,000 dollars (depending on finish quality of the new basement-floor fittings etc)
I had to do something similar to my place. The county would not let me tear it down to rebuild. They said my house is on a lot that (under new building code restrictions) unbuildable if I were to tear it down. What I did was, tear off the second floor, rebuilt it, lift that up, then tore down the first floor and foundation, once that was done, set the second floor down on top of it. It was the only way I could circumvent the new building code. Added about $80k to the project, but it was that or nothing.
Nice ship of Theseus method :D
@@ikani1 exactly
Wow!!! That's crazy. I hate when regulations get in the way of logic.
what was making the lot unbuildable under the new building code?
@dennismikhailitsky3735 lot size. Once the grandfathered structure is torn down, you conform to new building code, which my place didn't qualify as a "buildable lot".
Why all the criticism? They did exactly what they wanted done. It’s their business and they’re happy. I loved watching this video! We added a 12’ x 36’ addition to our ranch house back in ‘93 for $35k adding a new living room and a 4th bedroom PLUS a basement under it. Bought our house, a 2 bedroom with basement, in 1972 for $26k (our “started home” 😂). When our 3rd son was on the way we had our 1 car attached garage turned into a bedroom. We’ve been here 53 years. Adding on was cheaper than moving.
People who know nothing about this criticize the most
Why no egress windows after all that work to make the basement habitable space?
There are 2 on the north side
@@continentalbuildingmovers357 it’s still odd to have those tiny vent windows way up high, when they could have been placed several feet lower. 🤷
@@rpvitiellothey are not vents they are beam pockets
@@continentalbuildingmovers357 they may also be a slot for the beams, but they were clearly framed out to stay as windows after the beam was pulled.
So not really a new first floor but a new fully insulated basement instead. Nice ICF build👍. House lifting is always a fun watch for us spectators. Probably not so much for the home owners though, LOL.
But the house wasn't that great, so seems like it would have been smarter to just demolish the entire thing and start new? Sure it would have cost more but in the end you get a brand new house with new electrical (this one prob has knob and tube) and much more functional and better insulated.
Yes I expected them to build another floor, but I was realizing that they don’t have time left to do that. Seems like a lot of work for a full basement
Seems like that backhoe was more trouble than it was worth. Seems the hoods were up more than down and seemed to hold the project up many times. Maybe I see it wrong. Cool project theo? We're you living in it while working on it?
Excellent content, I would love to have viewed the completed project. I must have missed the part where they poured the concrete for the basement floor. My dream would have been to have a 12 foot deep basement. Amazing content!
Excellent!
Did it a little different lifted mine and replaced the foundation and framed a new 1st floor under the lifted home turned a cape into a federal with a covered front porch. Cost me 150k in nj
I'm in Jersey and interested in this type of project for my cottage. Do you have pics or recommendation to the company that lifted yours?
I would love to have this done to my house
I wanna see the rest of it. When the house gets done.
Good choice using ICF
Phenomenal amount of work! Great job
Now take off the roof and add a top level......
Fantastic video of a truck in front of a house...😂😅😊
How much was doing this as opposed to just taring down the old outdated house and building another house with full basement
Not sure if this is the case in this video but some places have strange restrictions on new construction in older areas, lot is possibly not big enough for new construction but remodeling is a whole different ballgame.
I’m always amazed by what they will permit me to do with existing structures in my area but will not give us permits to tear down and rebuild.
I’m curious of the decision to add on under the existing house vs raising the roof and adding a second floor. I can think of a few, like Twsp code,
total cost, able to continue living in your house, as opposed to having no roof during construction. What was your reason?
Wait-wait- wait-wait! How did they lift it? What was happening on the other side of the house?? I have so many questions!
Me too!
In most cases hydraulic jacks designed for this purpose are used.
Lifting is NOT the magic. How did they move it forward and back to its original position?????
@@SteveBueche1027 we build our own
@@mistersniffer6838our finest levitation pads😅
Awesome! Is it possible to achieve a ranch brick house ? We want increase head room of the basement.
I think it would depend on if the brick is Veneer or not if it’s a veneer and the house is wood framed this should work but if the house is solid brick on the outside it probably would have to have each wall of the basement dug out and new bricks put under the existing blocks for each wall. Then the basement floor could be removed and any pipes and wires would have to be adjusted. Poor a new slab and it should be done. :)
We ( the industry of professional house lifters ) can lift any type of brick structure whether veneer or solid brick .
@@Abodemover How do you keep the Vermeer from coming off when you lift it? it become very delicate after a few decades. :)
@TheNightshadePrince , you have to support the brick close together at the point you pick it up with steel beams. If it is especially delicate the brick can be supported with vertical support pushing it towards the house walls
@@Abodemover Interesting. :)
In Houston TX if you live within a few blocks of a big bayou raising you house 3ft would be a waste of money your house would still fool. You would need to raise your hose 6 to 10 ft to keep it from flooding.
You didn’t show how the house was being moved! Surely that is the part of most fascination!!?
My house was moved to a new spot in 1950. We found a newspaper article about it shortly after we got it. New foundation and all. It was supposed to be demolished but some rich guy did not wanna see that happen for some reason so here we are.
Very cool.
I would like to know how they keep the basement dry, in a downpour, considering the base is sitting in a pit below ground
I want to do this to my house to add a foot or two of height to my foundation walls so I can get the basement floor repoured higher. Whoever built my house (at the bottom of a hill) built the foundation floor level with the ground. When it rains heavy the water creeps up towards my garage doors. Adding 4-6" of floor height would raise the floor above the potential flood level while increasing the overall ceiling height in my basement. I'm guessing this isn't a cheap process.
I'm doing two houses at the moment that you basically describe. Turning a 6ft basement into an 8ft basement. We are underpinning the whole house first, and chopping out the floor, digging down 2 feet by hand, then pouring a new floor. You might not necessarily need to do a lift.
I am in a summer cottage "upgraded" that was built w/basement on hillside which I am guessing was a bit less than a an 8/10 pitch roof. The basement came thru fine but the plan to concrete UP and DOWN sides with 16 foot porch and sidewalk lacked, sidewalk sank a 6 " to the house basement. 4 slabs of 4x8 concrete have some tilt, the 'scooped out' uphill side should have had a porch cover from the house to the garage.
If there is room it's probably better to move it off the foundation completely and install a new one
How did they move it forward and back to its original position?????
Going to have to make a followup video with all the additional media captured by the homeowners.
@@mtanton - That would be cool. Thanks.
fantastic
How is this cheaper than building a new house? Structual engineering involved is amazing
I'd guess it's marginally cheaper. There's another guy in the comments somewhere around here who claims a house bought cheap back in the day was easier to lift than to tear down and rebuild. Seems like a ton of nerve-wracking work though.
It is a lot cheaper
I wish you could see a lot more
only missing is the pole to dance with the background music!
Was a drain tile added as well. Water proofing the exterior walls with parging?
Can we see the finished product?
Amazing...
Do you have video after lifting the house and restoring the house inside and out? I love watching videos before and after results....I love watching ( austin flippers ) in texas.
I love Lincoln and Lauren!!
whats the cost?
Good job fellas.
Thanks
Awesome, I've lifted a building before with a bunch of jacks and blocking. But how do they move it over like that?
Going to have to make a followup with all the random videos and photos that people took during the process!
Mike Holmes would be screaming "Where is the drainage system?"
Did you see Holmes scandal with the houses he “approved” in Canada, guy screwed so many people!
If he did, then I would ask if he's blind, because I saw a drainage system installed in this video.
Pretty crazy.
From the title of the video, I thought they were adding a complete new basement and main floor, underneath the existing house.
Wondering how much stress that puts on the framing. If you take apart the console of a car it squeak forever afterwards because everything is loosened up, I'd imagine that every nail and screw would have the same effect.
Somebody spending big bucks. 👍
Gramps 1875 house was lifted 3’ and they added 50% larger addition.
Wouldnt taking the roof of and building up be easier and cheaper??
In a big city like Toronto, it probably would have cost 5x for the permitting process.
No it's much easier to lift the house
They added a better and up to code basement, it can’t be considered a living space or “extra floor” unless it has an exit directly to ground level, not a set of stairs to a door the same height as the main floor of the house. We spent a tom of money converting a basement into a living space with 2 bedrooms a family room and a full bathroom. We had it appraised and what we did added no value to the original 2 bedroom house. Actually had it appraised by 3 independent appraisers and one bank financed appraiser with the same results.
you added finished space but you added no bedrooms even though you technically did add 2 bedrooms. They need egress exits in each room to be considered a bedroom by NBC (national building code). I think it's hogwash but I do understand it.
if you added the egress in each bedroom that should allowed them to be counted as an additional bedroom.... just an FYI.
War bestimmt eine teure Angelegenheit.........aber ich finde diese Aktion sehr mutig.
Schade, dass der Film nicht alle Bauarbeiten zeigte bis zum Einzug.
Do you plan to finish the basement.
It looks like most of the addition was underground.
Damn, that was interesting.
how do they know where all the "anchor bolts" are?🤔
initiate new worker, by having them "separate the snow from the dirt"🤣🤣
Cool timelapse but they're out by about 5" on the corner of the entryway 19:35.
🤩 wow
damn! full size basement now
why build down vs adding a second floor?
How is this more cost effective than demolishing the house and rebuilding it?
It's much cheaper
Concrete wasn’t poured for the basement floor?
It was poured after
Company info who those the work and in what states they work?
Warum wird so ein Aufwand betrieben? Oder ist das Haus ein Denkmal und darf nicht abgerissen werden?
You couldn't move a new house today like this old house and that's because they're poorly made with cheap materials.
Cool
Interesting time lapse. I am curious why a concrete vibrator wasn't used during the pour though.
Pretty standard practice regardless of the cement type.
How do they keep it from flooding?
French Drainage system it seems you can see them adding the tube in the lower corner of the basement, which will catch and pump out ground water
@@rickyshinobi2303 it wont work if power is off, pipe breaks and nobody's around to turn the water off.
@@eastpark4864 I’m no construction expert. But you are correct if there is an issue with power then the sump pump will not work, you might be able to add an alarm, just in case, you can also have a manual backup, and then have a back electric pump around if not too expensive. I believe the goal of these drainage systems is to keep ground water from directly impacting the foundation if you have a groundwater challenges at your home? I assume if The drainage systems if not collected into a pit, if possible they might directly connect it to the main sewer but I don’t know if that is acceptable? If a pipe breaks they will have to dig up and replace it, but most ppl used very thick, robust pvc looking pipes if they don’t want issues with collapse or breakage it seems. Again, I’m no expert, just here learning and taking tips and tricks.
You can clearly see they don't have a problem with ground water or only problem they might have is with run off but im sure that's minimal and they added a French drain for redundancy.
you could definitely take a city and push it somewhere else with this strategy
Very odd they are not wearing hard hats while under the house. Bet the neighbors loved this but well worth the effort.
Won't help when 50 tons drops
In 1980 my wife & I had some friends who did exactly that. He paid a co $10K to raise his ranch house
and put in on cribbing THEN he build the lower floor. We moved so I did not get to see the finished
product. (my wife said he finished the house) THEN they got a divorce. Too much construction pressure?
!
this is wicked and something I would love to do BUT I have to ask....you're telling me this was cheaper than just dozing the house and building a legit house from ground up that is already 2 stories? I suppose what is making me scratch my head is that now the first floor, I'm assuming, is going to be the second floor? I admit im commenting only 5 minutes in without seeing the final result. This process CAN'T possibly be cheap.
if yer inna flood plane stick some poles under it.
Wouldn't this be considered a basement and not a floor?
This kinda looks exactly like my house in Fallout 4
The music is so annoying but the video was cool to watch
Does your volume button work? Just turn it off.
So referring to the title, you didn't really add a floor, you just put a new basement under the old house? or is there going to be a part 2 showing lifting the house back up and adding another floor?
I'm assuming if they tore it down they wouldn't be allowed to rebuild. I lived in a rental like that and the owner had to "remodel" it one section at a time until the house was completely new. Ridiculous
That seems insane to do to this house on a busy street.
This would have been much better if you were to slow it down a bit and show HOW the house was lifted and shifted sideways. There are a bazillion videos showing foundations going in.
Unfortunately, these were the only two places that timelapse cameras could be placed during construction. If there is enough interest, I will cut a followup video using the piles of videos and photos that were taken from all angles before, during, and after construction.
That is something we cannot do in South Africa as our houses are made of brick.
Zoomers: Can’t find/afford a house
Boomers: Let’s take out another $200k loan on this little cash cow I bought for $20k in 1975.
Why not build above?
It's cheaper to build under and the foundation was in bad shape
I dunno why the music had to sound like Spiderman was on the hunt for Doctor Octopus lol.
that's the advantage of living in a shed.
Cool, but why? I would love to hear why! You might have explained it in a voiceover but I turned my volume down because the music was killing me.
Looks like the cost of the project would exceed the sale price of the house, but prehaps it is located in a third-world area like California.
I bet it would have been cheaper to knock it down and start over.
No rebar
What a waste of money, why didn't the owners pull down that slum and build a brand new home in its place
Did they use your money?
I’m just trying to understand Why? It just seem cost effective for this House.
Whatever you paid , it was money well spent
It's money pit!
@@eastpark4864 every house is a money pit bro 😂