Becoming Wise
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This puts me out in the field, where I see hundreds of faulty details, and enables me to share what I observe with my staff so we can avoid making similar mistakes. It's not that my staff and I never make mistakes, but that we do our best to learn from them and the mistakes of others. Because I've witnessed so many of these bad practices over the years — and frankly, because they don't seem to become any less frequent with time — I've decided to share my observations of common problems in a series of articles on this site entitled "Lessons Learned." Someday, I intend to turn the articles into an educational textbook for the watershaping industry. |
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Creating the Proper Separation I'll launch "Lessons Learned" with the following specific incident that exemplifies a whole class of related problems — and which in this case, sadly, had catastrophic results. Scenario: As part of a remodeling project, the clients wanted to include an inch-and-a-half-thick Travertine coping to go with the Travertine decks that were being installed. This material was thinner than the original four-inch-thick, cantilevered coping, so the contractor floated a new top on the pool shell's existing bond beam to bring the new coping up to the deck's level in a smart-looking, bull-nosed edge detail. For his part, the masonry contractor poured a new four-inch concrete base to support the new Travertine decking, then separated the deck from the coping using just an inch-and-a-half of a foam-based mastic joint — one of the most common details in all of swimming pool construction. Problem: When installing the expansion joint between the deck and coping, the flexible material extended down only to the bottom of the Travertine. It did not reach down the additional four inches required to separate the deck's sub-base from the shell and its newly applied bond-beam extension. Thus, when the concrete expanded in warm weather, it pressed against the revamped beam and broke it at the cold joint. |
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To read the entire article, buy THE CANDID CONTRACTOR: Lessons Learned From The Construction Defect Expert Witness Files of Scott Cohen Contractors and homeowners will save thousands of dollars with this new book from Scott Cohen of HGTV fame. Cohen pulls back the veil on common construction mistakes with pools, ponds, decks and associated structures, explaining how to remedy them when they occur – or, better yet, avoid them entirely. |
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Scott Cohen is president and supervising designer of The Green Scene, an outdoor design and construction firm based in Northridge, CA. He provides consultation for clients nationwide and gives seminars on designing landscapes, swimming pools and outdoor kitchens. |
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