Monday, November 16, 2009

County Rejection and Storage Woes

Permitting

I wish I could blame the county for potentially delaying our project, but I can't. After clearing the first hurdle of the Arlington county permitting-zoning-we were rejected again by inspection services. Apparently, our plans are missing some relatively minor details about wind shear, leger board locations, etc. The architect's draftsman has graciously moved our plan revisions to the top of his list and I hope he can get them back to us before Wednesday so we at least have a chance of getting inspection services to review the plans before Thanksgiving. *Note to future Arlington renovators: be prepared to make no less than one trip a week to the county offices. They do virtually nothing online (except tell you if your plans have been rejected). You have to check out the hard copies of your plans with each rejection and resubmit them, in person, after waiting in line to be seen, with revised pages. Fingers crossed that these revisions will be the last!

Storage

As you may have guessed, this rather large renovation requires us to move nearly all of our possessions (and ourselves) out of the house during construction. We looked into renting a Pod or other household-name-brand onsite storage unit, but they are all small and relatively expensive. My parents had rented a repurposed steel shipping container (the kind you see stacked up in ports) when they renovated their kitchen. These things are huge-ours is 20 feet long x 8 feet wide x 10 feet tall. It seemed perfect for what we needed.

Well, turns out the space is great, accessing the space is another story. There are two doors at one end that swing open, each with two rods that lock at the top and bottom. There is one master handle in the middle that opens the unit. We had successfully, and with relatively little effort, opened the doors on two previous occasions-once to check it out and once to begin moving things into it. This past Sunday we had planned on spending many hours moving many boxes and bits of furniture into the unit. That was before we tried to get the unit open again. Let's just say it took both Jody and I throwing our backs out yanking on the main handle, and our neighbor with a steel mallet and a crow bar to get it open. And an hour and a half later, we were finally ready to move things in.

Take home message: do NOT rent a unit from Mobile Mini. Not only are their units unsuitable for frequent entry (as needed in a residential setting), but their customer service is terrible. I emailed our salesperson when I though the unit was leaky (turns out the wood floor was moist from the condensation of the grass it was sitting over), and he did not even have the courtesy to respond to my complaint. He only responded when I emailed him asking a question about our billing invoice (which confirms I had the correct email address on file).

This weekend is the big move to Jody's parents' house. Looks like we'll have a little bit of time to get the house totally cleared out after that. Stay tuned for permitting updates....




2 comments:

  1. This is an official announcement of our readiness for you to move in to our house while your renovation is underway. At 9:30 pm, November, 19th, 2009 we finished moving out of our upstairs and you are authorized to move in any time after 6:00 am, November 20th.

    Gradpa Bob

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  2. Thanks Bob! We're all moved in now-we'll try to get those boxes out of the dining room before you get back from Kansas ;-) We really appreciate you guys giving up the second floor for us. It's so nice to be in a homey household again!

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