"The great thing about SIPs is..."
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Perhaps we have just been unlucky, but our SIP saga continues. I have already documented the story of how the panels were not as expected. Well, a month later and we still don't have all the pieces. They should arrive tomorrow, but I was told that last Thursday as well so we will see.
In the mean time, the second floor decking has been up for two weeks waiting for the roof panels to go up. It has been raining much of the day and I wonder how much rain plywood decking can take before it begins to delaminate. The more I examine all this, the more I see the benefits of traditional stick-built construction. So far, SIPs have taken way longer to get to the site, the first floor took forever to erect, partly because the foundation wasn't as plumb as the panels and partly because the tolerances were too tight, many were made 1" too short so they are not as STRUCTURAL as they should be, the electrician and plumber are going to have fits working with these things, etc. SIPS sounds great in theory, but in practice, the devil is in the details.
Oh, and we just discovered another major screw-up left us by the foundation guy. Of course, I am not sure you can call it a screw up if it looks purposeful. Basically, he cut a corner and stuff will have to be ripped out and redone.
In any case, the house is starting to look great from the inside, but it is looking larger than I would have expected on the exterior.
It is strange that with so many issues popping up every couple of days, none of them bother me THAT much. Whereas, if most everything were going smoothly, the little problems would have sent me over the edge. There is a psychology dissertation in that somewhere.
Anyway, here are some photos.
By the way, since I wrote this last night, I can now report that the final SIP pieces didn't arrive today either... Maybe tomorrow.
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The final pieces arrived!... sort of.
keep on swimming...
don't kill the messenger
Knowing this project intimately (I helped design it) I'm not sure this blame can all be laid at the foot of the "system." I think it bears elucidating that the company in question went through some HUGE upheavals during the production process of this package, and sadly this and a few other projects I know of (schusterHOUSE, the Wright's project in Florida, and others) were and are caught in the middle. For one, all of the panels have been coming out of a new facility, which is obviously implicit in many of the bugs inherent in the screw ups. Are they unfortunate and irritating? Hell yes! Are they issues that take away from the validity of the system? Not really.
Then factor in the fact that some very grave and serious personal upheavals occurred with the panel company during the middle of their establishing of the new manufacturing facility, which lead to understandable grief and later to internecine squabbling. Talk about drama! and I don't even know the half of it.
Then factor in that the original design wasn't conceived around this system, but rather this panel system and steel framing was a late-comer to the party, and that the panel manufacturer was the entity that "modified" the plans to "suit" their system. This I feel was the biggest issue. Things would have gone significantly smoother if the original designers were involved in the translation. This is no indictment of Jeff, but rather an indictment of the panel guys. The money they spent on "shop drawings" and "engineering" would be much better spent on having the original designers implement the necessary changes to the construction parti. This is a lesson I've now learned firsthand twice, and I won't let it happen again, no matter how well versed a manufacturer thinks they are in translating a design to fit their system. They simply don't have the overall vision to see all the issues that will arise by their conceivably simple modifications.
Don't even get me started about the weather. Texas is becoming a promordial swamp, and I swear the squirrels are sprouting gills. That being said, I think the panels will actually shine in this respect. Many of them have sat out in the rain for months at this point, and they are still as good as new (barring some obvious mud and dirt) You can't say that for wood frame construction.
All in all the system is a good one. Currently buggy, yes, but highly efficient, and once it is complete I'm sure you'll grow to appreciate it again, Jeff.
assuming of course you don't float off down the creek...
Parts have arrived.

Well, tomorrow is over and...