Amazing cliffside home… built in 10 Minute Timelapse
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- čas přidán 10. 03. 2022
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This is just the framing phase of the project… Later the structure will be insulated, sided, and finished out. Check out the playlist with all of this:
• Building A Mountain Ca...
Join the Perkins Crew for an EPIC Timelapse of a build on a cliffside in the mountains of Western North Carolina. This video is a high speed compilation of the complete build, from footings, to dried-in framing over a time period of about two months. Make sure to check out the complete series playlist for over 20 full videos explaining how we did everything in this time-lapse! • Building A Mountain Ca...
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#amazing
#construction
#timelapse - Jak na to + styl
These type of time-lapse videos are so satisfying to watch! You should do one for every project when the houses are 100% complete as the final video in a build's series!
They could construct a more robust stand for the phone and leave the stand in place for the entire build so they can consistently get the same Timelapse angle every day.
@@GCubedProductions That's also a good idea, but I actually really like the format of this video, a nice mix.
I think 10 minutes is a bit slow guys, should be possible in 9 .......... ;-)
The globe made in china
Unidentified 77
I can’t believe they built that house in 10 minutes. Truly impressive.
They didn't do it in 10 mins.
@@ItsJustFrag just a joke mate
@@rudihowe8816 alright mate
@@ItsJustFrag no, they obviously did it in 10mins.
@@ItsJustFrag you’re right. 9 minutes and 39 seconds. My bad.
A little landslide can work wonders in getting a house like that realistically re-positioned.
I was just watching the end shots and yes that dug out cliff doesn't look too sturdy
I thought the same, the house looks nice but the security for it is very concerning. Not only that, its between two slides. Uphill and downhill.
Glad I’m not the only one who thought that. This seems like a pricey construction, I hope the owners actually spent the money to get experienced surveyors and geologists to check out if the site is feasible for the lifespan of the house. Otherwise one 1 in a century storm and that cliff side and the house is gone.
@@youcantstopme6181 there’s also a very very thin layer of foliage and trees and what seems like the access road above on top of the hill. I highly doubt that little tree coverage will be able yo stably hold the soil in place, even if they’re a long root species, which seems they are not. As far as I see it a once a century storm is all it takes (they’re far more common now) and the top section collapses into the house which will not stand cause it’s made of solely wood. I hoped at the least the main sections of the building were made with steel beams and a thicker foundation, but North American architecture and construction.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
What a beautiful plywood and duct tape house. I especially love how it takes full advantage of that view with tiny windows placed in a few locations.
In most of Western Europe it is even illegal to build like that, not safe and well built at all.
cant tell if you're trolling or not because you are a complete clown if you're not joking...
Exactly! Americans pay millions for THIS?
Did I see them literally glue the floor down? This thing looks like it's going to collapse under a slight breeze.
@@rkuzmic That just means it's perfectly rated for tornado alley.
If you're the company building houses I mean.
I think it's interesting how the requirements for a sound foundation varies across countries.
Growing up on the East Coast, but working out west, it’s amazing how different the soil is. Everything from density, clay vs sand vs rock and even how much natural electricity is in the soil varies greatly across the planet. It’s amazing.
Didn't look right to me
@@darkesttemplar07 I'm curious why the the foundation was so shallow and how it will deal with frost heave, house seems to be pretty big
I'm not civil engineer but mechanical engineer...
.i have seen the houses from its digging....and that foundation is so shallow ....I'm not sure how strong the soil is but still foundation looks not strong enough
@@prasadk3802 most mountain side homes have very solid ground to build on, most mountain ranges in the US are comprised of rock, clay and other compacted minerals from what I’ve seen that foundation was actually overkill as most homes in my area in similar conditions have just been built on stilts with concrete anchor points
We had a house built this winter. We live in a cyclone prone area (Odisha, India) and hence, we had to get in a 17ft deep foundation. I am quite amazed at how the styles of construction vary from region to region.
Also, our home is made completely out of brick, cement and concrete. Wood was used only in the interiors.
Built to last
The only way homes should be made. To protect and last. No matter which area.
Yours will last theirs won't 👍
Where did all the trash go? India has no epa environmental protection agency. No osha. I work for Indians in the USA. Lots of homes are not as nice as you describe. Nor built to those specs. My friend smitha is back in India now building her home (having it built) and they DO NOT have a foundation that deep 😂 and it’s in south India. Also in the states ground freezes and pipes bust in some areas. Many homes are built raised like this. In the event they have a plumbing issue that requires attention under your home. You don’t have to break your cement slab. This is why they chose to build it this way
@@Monst3r614 Hopefully. 🤞🏻
Glad I bought this one czcams.com/users/postUgkxT9ExVpR-3A-9rpRqx8vzXKZ3BMMTg_KH . I had a customer looking for a shed that didn't look 'prefab' and was rustic, but "cute" (her term). I showed her the cover of the book and, with a few modifications, she was sold. I've never built a shed but I do have some framing knowledge. The info on roofing is very helpful to me. I was also psyched that the section for the shed on the cover had measured drawings for the trim boards and keystone pieces for the gable ends and over the windows. Should make life a little easier for me.
The builders are all seems to be hard working, harmonious and it looks like every one knows their duty. Wonderful collaboration
can't wait to see the 10 minute time-lapse of the rock slide or erosion of the cliff that will eventually take that thing out.
I can't believe that the windows were so small. A view like that should have glass everywhere.
Probably a consideration of the cost of winter heating. The windows are large enough to enjoy the view. And there’s wall space for the interior design.
@@louisemackintosh4204 Can't be. Here in Northern Europe is common to build new houses with large windows. It's quiet cold here, so our walls are twice as thick (10 inches).
@@BirkAxarberi “quiet cold?” Learn your damn grammar.
Probably, that because glass is heavy material and it needs stronger support than a wooden walls. That means whole project needs to be redesigned and house must become much expensive to build.
@@BirkAxarberi and in Europe much common material for building houses is concrete and bricks rather than wood. That's why houses in Europe can be few hundreds years old and still have a nice condition for living.
US have a big developers lobby and they relay on building new houses at constant rate. That's part of the reason why they building prefabricated wooden homes which can be cheap and very fast to build, but do not last very long. So the next generation wants to build a new home from the ground rather than live in old one.
That was so nice of them to leave that space under the house so all the creepy crawlies can have a place to live too.
Framework and plywood. Nice shed.
As a European, this style of building is kind of cute.
No offense, it is a fun video and probably a nice house to live in - as long as the weather plays nice.
Americans have the habit of building their houses out of paper and cardboard
And as long as the ground doesn't subside, since it's on a slope, and the increased mass over the land area with very small foundation, no compaction and no sub, could lead to breakaway slippage.
@@anonymanonym6472 That's like saying Europeans have a habit of building there houses out of dirt and sand...
@@solideogloria7987
Concrete and brick and sometimes solid stone.
@@VaderWhoop Exactly, stone and masonry vs wood and concrete. Not paper and cardboard vs dirt and sand.
Even as the video started, part of my brain was still thinking the house was “built in 10 minutes”. On a more serious note, I don’t care what anyone says about a beach house, there’s something way more calming and soothing about the peacefulness and serenity of being surrounded by the hilly countryside.
Right up until rainwater saturation of the soil kicks that entire house down to the bottom of the valley.
@@jgt2598 I could never sleep soundly in such a house...
@@jgt2598 💀
A hose surrounded by trees etc on the beach
@@Toromboloize why
I am not sure I am as impressed watching this go up as I was dreaming about a home made of wood. I must have had something else in mind for sure, as the weather/elements and noise carrying across rooms starts to play in mind.
Plywood, plastic and concrete go along so well with this beautiful landscape
The way they make a house in under "10 minutes", gives me the inspiration to run around the globe in 2 minutes. Yeah, I can totally run around the world in 2 minutes.
Edit : Those who are saying that they have already mentioned "timelapse" in the title, I would like to make it clear that the title has been changed. The word "timelapse" wasn't there when I wrote this comment. Hell that was the reason I had to make a sarcastic comment. 😐
Hahahaha
Very deceiving thumbnail
Well technically you could by video run around the world in a 2 minute long clip lol but physically mAh
do it then
Same goes to me😂
Timelapse is great, but the way you've included snippets of real-time makes even better. It's like talking a much needed appreciation breather every so often.
Hey thanks!
@@PerkinsBuilderBrothers Amogus
Nice work guys, really fun to watch. I was also wondering about total time, and also other details like expense, geological, etc.
@@ProfessorBoswell they have a series of a video each day they were building the house, so thats probably the place to go for more detail😊
@@PerkinsBuilderBrothers That’s about the only good thing that can be said about this video. The house is horrendous.
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It is interesting to see how different US and European style of building is. I've never seen this light type of building style before, here everything is just masive.
You’d think it’d have bigger foundations and much bigger windows with a view like that.
a foundation
That's not a small foundation at all, it's just shallow. That's a perimeter footing, and it's over two feet wide. That's quite large. All of the 6 foot deep poured foundation walls you see in cold climate North American homes are sitting on perimeter footings the same size or smaller, they're just deeper for the sake of a basement or in order to get the footing below the frost line. But the perimeter footing is actually what's holding up the house, and it's depth isn't terribly relevant aside from being climate appropriate.
A lot of people confuse cosmetic elements for structure. Most homes outside of arid climates have perimeter footings, like this, and then they'll often have non-structural slabs poured in between the footings, that act as a sub-floor to the basement. That's not actually holding up the structure though, it's just the perimeter footing doing that, and it's not usually bigger than this for a normal house.
Windows are good enough
Stop complaining and think!!!! If the windows and foundation were bigger they would not have been able to build it in 10 minutes!! Hello!!!! Come on man use your brains like we do here in Canada!!
@@_hector__everybody's eyes are glued to TV computer or IPhone anyway, they could be in a bunker and not know the difference.
I could not bring myself to live in a house like that. The anxiety of thinking about all the ways nature can topple it like a house of cards would kill me.
I'm used to living in a brick house with a foot and a half thick walls of solid fired clay brick and cement, and in comparison this house looks about as solid as the shed in our backyard...
It must suck to live in fear
@@BeLikeNexus it must suck to be stupid enough to think that a house like that would last in nature. A house like that would collapse in no time. It’s not fear but it’s being smart enough to not die of a stupid cause.
Exactly ^^^
Do You go outside ? Cause you can get hit by a car.
Do you do sport ? Cause you can always fall, hit something, ecc..
Do you work ? And where ? Cause you can always hurt yourself and die.
Do you take a car ? You can lose control,or somebody else can hit you.
There is always a reason to worry about if you live in constant fear. It doesn't mean is rational.
@@bazingapuzza Thats literally my point.....
Absolutely beautiful work. Looks so gorgeous. Well done boys.
Builders bravo! 👏🏾 I really hope I can get a team of great builders for my floorplan one day. This was amazing to learn and watch how it was done. Thank you for allowing us to experience it as you all did it.
9:33 huge respect for 7 fingers worker
I was like, damn finally a house properly build with concrete and an actual architect design and then I was like, nope just the foundation and it ended up looking exactly like every single cookie cutter american house ever, sad...
Very few people want to live in a unique architectural home. I'm sure the buyer of this home got exactly what he wanted when he signed the contract and paid his money.
Thats not a house... thats a fancy cardboard box...
Exactly, instead of building a solid well insulated house that will last forever they settled for a flimsy construction that will fall apart in a few decades. The absurd heating costs would have paid easily for the extra expense for doing it right. Never mind the comfort, peace of mind and increasing value. Stupid is as stupid does Forrest would say.
@@simbayukiwolf they haven’t put the insulation in yet. This is just the first 20% of the work
Without solid/thick corner pillars, this house is going to fly in a strong storm.
That time lapse episode where you caught that two by four, that was excellent. Your face was as calm as it could possibly ever be.
“Cliff side home” a concept bound to bring excitement in the times to come.
Something about seeing everything in sequence going up so rapidly does amazing things for integrating everything you learned while watching all the previous videos detailing each stage of the process. When watching each of the videos leading up to this I was trying to take in and learn everything you were sharing about the process so I was zoomed in on exactly what you were doing, your thought processes and methods, etc. But just now watching the time lapse I had a flood of memories of everything you were teaching/demonstrating before only it all got knit together into one smooth flow. I don't know how else to explain it, but a bunch of things fell into place watching this and the whole process feels less intimidating...
Do you do a lot of drugs? The only thing to learn here is what NOT to do. This is the worst workmanship and poorest construction practices I have ever seen. I am willing to bet this house is in serious jeopardy in a matter of a couple of winter seasons.
@@lolahunter8851 I would be terrified to live there with the foundation they laid. I don't think they ever heard of something like reinforced concrete piles.
Alot of people don't like the house lol. I just like watching it all come into place over a time lapse. It's satisfying.
I now understand why people calls them cardboard house
Nicely done. I hate to be a nitpick, but up here in Canada, when using concrete block for a foundation, it has to be "H" block, fully grouted throughout to prevent water infiltration through a mortar joint. Footings look awfully shallow, but I guess it depends on what part of the country you're in. Ours is 4' frost cover, looks like you guys are lucky. Also, the ceiling ties need to go into tension at the flush beam to prevent rafter spreading. Hopefully you installed ties at the beam, but I doubt it. Finally, that slope looks awfully precarious, and it looks like your foundation could be undermined., I hope you guys had a geotechnical engineer addressing slope stability. Sorry for the criticism, but as a retired structural engineer, I can't help myself. Cheers.
This content exists for views and likes, not rigorous assessment.
I was thinking the same thing
100% the slope is wrong. it looks like the people just dumped dirt on a hill at 0:33 . not the builders themselves but whoever designed the "cliff". and whoever did it was an idiot and put the house half way down the cliff/hill (you can see the hill retaining wall at 0:18). you never want that amount of dirt above your house, and never like 10 feet near your home 1:16. more money than brains i guess.
@@apples5565 .....this video will probably be used by the owner's lawyers to sue the builder, especially if it was built without a geotechnical engineer. Would not surprise me at all
@@markstevens1729I would want someone to rigorously assess where I'm going to be living lol especially after spending who knows how much money
It's so crazy that they managed to build this entire house in only *10 minutes!*
Grow up buddy, it's just a edited video for your convenience
@@sandip0503 hey did you hear that? Probably not because of just how far that joke flew over your head.
@@sandip0503 it's a bird! it's a plane! no, it's the joke flying over your head
@@sandip0503 they should have made another CZcams app for people like you 😂
New 3D Printers are Amazing and fast
The view from this site never gets old. The porches will be well used!
Until a few days of decent rains sends the house into the valley below
@@zeushighlights5891 Yeah but. . . imagine the view on the way down. Even *more* exciting!
BEAUTIFUL. And inspiring. Thank you so much for sharing this 🙏🏽🔥💪🏽
Big money on this one. I like the fast frames. Shows all the work in a sec. Know what you in for. A penny and pound.
Nice. Foundation looks too shallow. Retaining wall may be necessary or pile sheeting.
For a hillside, I would have expected a couple of reinforced beams (at least at the 4 corners). Imagine that slab of concrete on an eroding mountain. I would be afraid if a landslip or hurricane passed through. But it came out looking real good though!
My exact issue, its way too prone to scouring.. It needed a perimeter retaining wall with a rcc strip foundation. The blocks are in danger of washed away.
haha like what is this foundation. we dig to bedrock build it up with 3 inch minus and we pour level footings not whatever this is hahaha
wtf they didn't even grout it soon as you get pressure good bye house
Man, I wanna work w/ you guys. Using all the zip system, framed perfectly, man y’all got a dream gig you have created for all those workers.
Such a well structured video
Just watched the 2hr vid of this build...1st class work guys
5:51 love the little smile on his face sayin' :"Yeah, that's right! I'm the man of the situation, eh!"
Building on a mud slope will bring all kinds of thrills and entertainment when it slumps.
Can We Say Slide?
I doubt it's mud. Not many places in the US you can get away with building a structure like this without getting everything signed of by a geological engineer, and they make their money by not losing their stamp because your house fell off a mountain.
@@rockerpat1085
slump
noun
Definition of slump (Entry 2 of 2)
1a: a marked or sustained decline especially in economic activity or prices
b: a period of poor or losing play by a team or individual
2: a downward slide of a mass of rock or land
@@toiletdoritogatoradegaming9719 Who Said Slump? I Said SLIDE!!!! As In Landslide!!!!
Its just magical to me how grows from nothing to something perfect and beautiful, but I really miss the finishing part, its the most value one, when the diamond is polished to perfection.
thank u for making this cuz i love watching builders build with brick
Here in Brazil houses are normally made of bricks, we use wood mostly for decoration. Amazing to see how different it can be on other countries!
Europe as well. I was wondering where they put water and electricity...
Timber is actually an alternative to concrete and steel, which has excellent compressive and flexural properties. However, depending on local building codes and design standards, it must be treated to withstand different climates/moisture levels. For most dwellings, it is strong enough and is a cost-effective way to build houses.
@@Electricity0 I guess I don't live in Europe. Here in Scandinavia most houses are made of wood.
thats the case everywhere except for americans..then they complain, storm took their house..such dumbness
@Birk i geuss i dont live in Scandinavia. Here in finland-
What a beautiful place to frame a house. I would love to work in that environment
You guys just get yourself a new subscriber, I’m impressed ❤❤
Remember the „Underground Swimming Pool Palace in the Jungle“ videos?!? That’s the behind-the-scenes footage! 😂
I hope what's left of the hill behind the house is very stable ground during snow and the wet season. Definitely a beautiful view.
Such a beautiful location! I admire the owners for having the vision to build this house. I hope it gives them (and their children and grandchildren) many happy years of enjoyment 🙏😊
Maybe owner to have vision, but not physics education. That place is created by human, both sides (under + above) home is weak soil. Childrens or grandchildrens maybe will got problems. :)
I was guessing that little plateau has already been there for a few thousand years?🤔
@@CzKaa I'm glad you made the trip out there and drilled the samples for your geological analysis, I'm sure they'll find that very helpful.
@@CzKaa Thank you for cutting up one of the few nice comments on this video. Bahhhhhaaaaa
It's pretty nice to see that how the made this house, i am seeing this kind of house first time cuz in India we made house with bricks, concreat and cement (and the foundations are usually 10 to 12 ft deep) but because of this it's hard to made houses in different designs
Beautiful home, congrats! How long does construction take until this stage? Here in Brazil we are still behind with our construction models.
Wow, this Minecraft texture pack looks so good. Those machines are awesome, I wish they had included the mod list
😂
Definitely a Mod Pack... no way to build such thin walls in Vanilla
This genius position, if you want to move just wait until a landslide to do it for you and it's free.
Im just wondering why you have no rebar uprights in your block tying it to the footing. And then you didn’t fill the block wall either. Please explain Thanks.
PS im from Cali and we do it a bit different.
Awesome crew there. It's a wonderful setting and the workmanship looks first rate. Can't wait to see the inside.
It’s amazing that any of your timbers aren’t bowed, bent or twisted. Great video, great job 👍👍👍
2:47 that was smooth...
How my attention divided in this video:
The view: 20%
The weather: 20%
The guy who caught the block of wood one-handed two stories up: 5%
The guy who had the CRAZY COOL metal prosthetic on his hand: 5%
The actual build: 50%
This is first time when CZcams recommended a video where people are not using mud and sticks to build their houses
This has been suggested to me for weeks and I've been skipping it because I thought it'd just be a stationary time lapse video.
This is so good!!! Thanks for putting all the effort into getting great shots. Really makes for an interesting video.
Was the grading done through your company or a different company? I'm curious how much it costs to grade an area like that. Must have been a pretty shiny penny.
Such a beautiful location and beautiful house 🤌🏼🤌🏼✨
Great video, great views from that house, that dirt cliff behind the house scares the sh!t out of me.
That, and the slight concern about someone driving too fast around that curve in the road, and going off straight into the house. Might not even be due to speeding, but ice.
It's always nice to see that there is good, high quality work being done in the construction trade. My whole family worked construction until my brother and I were encouraged by our father (RIP) to go in a different direction. That being said, I did my fair share of home builds with the family business and can see that quality here.
Wish you guys worked in Michigan...I have a renovation that needs to be done, haha.
This is a very crappy house have you seen the walls i could knock it down if i ran into it hard enough
high quality? what high quality?
@@aswinverghesemappilai2623 Pretty standard construction in most of North America. These homes stand up just fine.
The house in mountain. Awesome😊
Incredible construction method. Amazing professionals. Greetings from Brasil.
This house wouldn't last for one Canadian winter ... Snow and frost is a killer!
it won't survive there that long either. That's why you ask people with skill to work for you - and not those who can only make some nice video content
@@gajustempus what were the problems you identified with the build?
@@selfrighteous88 it’s basically made of cardboard
@@selfrighteous88 it's loose soil. That's why they had no problems moving it with that tiny excavator and shovels. That kind of soil is known for both erosion and warping due to weather. That's why you need a sturdy foundation to build upon, something MUCH deeper than what they did - preferably pillars you place deep into the ground (at least 2-3 meters / 6-9 feet). You can then go ahead and place beams onto those pillars and construct the floor beams on those beams. That way the house won't warp, develop cracks or rot away within just a few years.
And the whole construction out of wood-only...not even a composite material is nothing but cheap. As I said: Material to build a little shack from
@@selfrighteous88 moisture problems as I didn't see anything preventing water from seeping up the foundation. That's why sensible builders replace the bottom soil with gravel that stops water.
I didn't see any water drainage channels either so all of it will flow directly to the foundation. Nice
Nice timelapse! I live in Slovakia and here all houses are fully built from bricks! ( but if you have an old house it's usually made of Adobe)
great video and content, sooo satisfying. from the Philippines here!
Beautiful job brothers!!! Keep it up!!
Loved the slo mo shot of Jaime catching the off cut, pretty cool
If said it before. The production value of your channel is so good.
This video is made so well. The editing between the timelapse and the non sped-up clips is awesome.
Hope these timelapses are coming to every project from now on.
I don't know even where to start... In EU an house like this is unthinkable on so MANY levels
i started my 4 week vacation today and im already watching construction videos...
The end result wasn’t what I expected, I would have thought they’d be something like a huge floor to ceiling windows or wall to wall glass doors that you can slide to get full sunlight in seeing as it’s such an awesome place to build a house, and also, is that normally all the cement and steel bar used for the foundation of a home in the US?
No, not at all.
It differs greatly depending on the region, but even I as a builder was surprised that was all they had to do for footings.
The structure was fairly weakly built to what I'm used to as well, must have been all the code requires for that area.
Not many people have the funds to do it in the most bullet proof way.
in North Carolina, yes. my house was built pretty much the same way, though we're in the center of the state (not in the mountainous west).
@@ajs96350 I'm just wondering how solid that cliff is. Would've been interesting to see that being reinforced before building work properly commenced.
being from Germany, I can tell: Wow, even the shack in my garden has thicker walls and a stronger foundation than this "house". And I only store garden tools in that...
I was wondering the exact same thing, in my country the footings would be notorious along with the "chained" I don't know if that's the proper word in english, but is the cement connecting the footings, anyways, taking into account the location of this house, I wouldn't feel safe in there.
Love a good time-lapse! Well done!
I have to say, even knowing that houses out of wood and standard in American for many reasons like the ground structure, costs, etc., as a european, this looks so instable. Never the less. great video and AWESOME looking house!
And built very good and strong it looks like. I like the cement block wall as the base . You don't see that allot anymore
Great video, loved the bit where Jamie caught the timber with his hand! Very inspiring, keep it up
Beautiful home with a million dollar view. I think I'd be spending most of my home time on the deck! Great job, everyone 👏 👍
more than a million
Super cool video!
As a brazilian, the concept of building houses almost entirely made of wood is alien to me. Most houses here are made from bricks and concrete
I was surprised to see the deck support uprights, bearing on those poured pads were then back filled with soil. Where I live, Italy, those uprights would rot and/or be totally eaten away within two years, no matter what they were treated with (although they looked pretty untreated in the video). Are things that different where this house was built?
No, it's actually a pretty bad build.
That drop off out front looks scary...
Looked like standard pressure treated lumber. I don't think it's a problem.
It looks like a bad build, terrible
Starting with the “foundation “ it’s shifty
My compliments to the video editor (Eric)...nice job! And super build.
Thanks! We had a great time
When imagination turns into reality ❤
# From India ❤
Just wondering when did you install the plumbing pipes and and is the base of the home left open with vents and no insulation? I didn't notice these steps in the video. Just curious about your process regarding these two areas. Thank you! Great video!
That 10 minute is the ressult of 10k working hours of such hardwork ...
You guys are great and your editing is well done. It makes it easy to watch and be entertained as well as learn about home construction. One thing I would love is if you have a compilation of all the different tips you guys have had in the past about exterior trim and flashing. I'm having a house built this year and I want them to do my house like you guys, you all pay a lot of attention to detail and I am confident your flashing/trim work will make your homes last for years to come.
Love the interior design! Very modern and minimalistisk. Can I ask where you found the inspiration?
Next video: Amazing cliffside home buit on unsound foundations… destroyed in a landside 10 Seconds Timelapse
Im loving this build. Keep up the good work.
Good work? Its probably the worst workmanship and choice of building materials I have seen since touring Mexico
Love the house and that build time is amazing. If only most homes could be build in 10 mins. Curious, what's the concern on the possibility of a slide in the back? It looks mainly like loose dirt and a road above. Wouldn't that put a lot of pressure on the face of that cut?
I know, those guys work fast! Well, except for that one slacker who was sipping coffee and gazing out at the view.
Amazing how fast they are moving!
It's Starbucks' new ''super caf'' blend. They actually guarantee a 10-minute house after drinking 3 cups a day for a week. You see the results here on video!
I live in new england, and i am always amazed that not that far south from here.....a days drive, how much different the requirements are to have a sound foundation you feel confident to build on. With the difference in frost lines the amount of time and labor u guys save is astronomical, especially when you add up multiple projects.
That was my first reaction as a Minnesotan. "Where the heck is this being built that doesn't freeze?"
@@BoberFett Probably NC, GA or TN. Frost lines for footing purposes are quite shallow in these areas.
Watching Jamie catch that board reminded me about my thoughts today. I was at work working in our wood shop using the jointer. Part of my job is to teach students how to use the wood shop safely. And boy I tell everyone of my students to watch those episodes about that horrible day. I had no idea that effected me so much. Great video today
Turned into a great learning tool for safety and character. Jamie’s resilience and recovery, nothing short of amazing.
What happened?
I'm new here. What happened?
@@robertdog Jamie had his hand caught in a jointer and lost a good portion of all 4 fingers.
@@robertbeirne9813 Wow. I'm sorry to hear that. It's crazy how quickly something like that can happen.
That's a very interesting way of doing foundations - probably common where they are build it though...
Retired architect here. Most of my work involved commercial construction - Schools, hospitals and high rise office buildings. My father and his two younger brothers were carpenters in Texas. They took me out to my first job site when I was about six and let me hold a ten pound hammer which was about how much I weighed at the time. Message delivered. Lesson learned. Hats off to anyone who works in the trades and does a good job. They have always held my deepest respect and appreciation. Thanks for posting.
Amazing!!!!!!
Congrats and enjoy this beautiful home!!!!!!🤙🏼💪🏼
The place, the scenery, the view, the house, the build, the timelapse... WOW 😍