New House on a Hill: 3 Meter Deep Foundations!

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  • čas přidán 11. 07. 2024
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  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 235

  • @josephzimmer5385
    @josephzimmer5385 Před 24 dny +222

    I saw one of the guys wiping away concrete splatter from the glass door, and I've gotta say, that's how you know someone is a professional. Cleaning up the small messes as you go is so crucial.

    • @Hubris2
      @Hubris2 Před 24 dny +13

      I agree. They were pouring a retaining wall beside my house so they could build another one into the hill, and not only did they not clean up the glass that had concrete splatter, they walked into my garden to wipe their boots. It's a sign of a professional group when they take care and clean up after themselves.

    • @fantasticfox411
      @fantasticfox411 Před 24 dny +2

      ​@@Hubris2Thats when you retain payment until it's fixed

    • @jesseking7668
      @jesseking7668 Před 24 dny +7

      In my opinion it's better to cover aluminum windows and claddings prior to pouring with thin sheet plastic like what painters use. But yeah good job 4 wiping off before concrete sets hard on it

  • @jbickel7575
    @jbickel7575 Před 24 dny +91

    I live in the USA and wait for “Each Exciting Episode” of your videos. I’ve enjoyed all of them! But this is the type of video/series I enjoy the most. Having worked residential construction years ago, I’ve always been interested in how it’s done in other places/countries. Well done, and I hope there’s more to come!

    • @TpetPlayr
      @TpetPlayr Před 24 dny

      THIS. I always love to see construction in other places/countries.

    • @TBird89
      @TBird89 Před 24 dny +2

      Do you have internet in the USA ?

    • @TBird89
      @TBird89 Před 24 dny

      You know I’m just farkin with ya right 😆😆😆😆😆

  • @JaredMcEntaffer
    @JaredMcEntaffer Před 24 dny +51

    Best lead in to the square space add in a long time! Nicely done.

  • @totodave266
    @totodave266 Před 24 dny +65

    "Don't use that" 😂 How could you not?

  • @klim_klimov
    @klim_klimov Před 24 dny +34

    House remodeling and cabinet building was fun but we finally have some top notch NZ construction content. And BTW - awesome content.
    Where are you operating is completly oposite part of the world from me and it's so interesting to watch how you guys handling somehow same challenges but in your kind of way.
    P.S. And this "Square Hole" - nailed it))

    • @rogerallred7525
      @rogerallred7525 Před 24 dny

      Missed you last week. Good to see you back! Where is our buddy Ray?

  • @Pauly5150
    @Pauly5150 Před 24 dny +16

    Impressive! Foundation work transforms a hillside into a structure, and it's a real work of art that gets covered up and forgotten. Totally enjoyed that.

  • @johnstran
    @johnstran Před 25 dny +25

    Nice to see you're back on the field.

  • @yingle6027
    @yingle6027 Před 23 dny +12

    There are people who wear stubby shorts everyday of the year no matter the weather. Even when there's ice on the ground.

  • @more.power.
    @more.power. Před 24 dny +5

    "Great video, Scotty! You covered everything-from understanding different personalities on the job site and the heroic rescue of a chicken to the special criteria required for construction on sloping ground and a scientific study of Earth's geography. Excellent work, thank you, Scotty!"

  • @terrytopliss9506
    @terrytopliss9506 Před 24 dny +11

    Nice to see you back on site Scott, how were the aches and pains? Liked the attention the cement guys poured the concrete so carefully and cleaned up the splash marks. Thank for the latest exciting episode.👍👍

  • @Kelvallontan
    @Kelvallontan Před 24 dny +7

    Yes!
    Glad to see you back on the field, although I'll still be following your house renovation with great pleasure.
    Coming back to the bases once in a while is great.

  • @HaLkon2728
    @HaLkon2728 Před 24 dny +10

    it will be interesting to watch the further construction of this house

  • @geneard639
    @geneard639 Před 24 dny +7

    South Alabama born n raised. Yeah, the home I grew up in the home was slab on grade with about 2 foot of sandy soil on clay, and the slabs not more than 4 inches thick with no rebar.....last I heard, most of the mid-century homes built like that had failing slabs. Mama's family most of those homes are raised on either 'ship stone' piers (ship stone is old ballast stones from all the ships that wreck up in Mobile Bay, its good solid hard stone from Europe sitting around a few centuries no one was using) or bricks... don't know about foundations for them. I had one GreatGreat....possibly add a Great to that, Aunt who was Indigenous and refused to have a floor to her shack. So, her place was just some scab wood (those outer planks of wood cast off when milling wood, still has the bark on it, that was free back in the day) and living trees, with a dirt flour. She had a old wood burning cook stove and a small pot belly in a two room shack in the woods. You parked up on the dirt road and had to follow a track thru a jungle of plants about 100-150 feet to find her place. She tended her entire property, and all of the 'jungle' was her grocery store. She lived to be in her 90s, and ....some of her children insisted on giving her a Christian service and burial, the one thing she had demanded in her old age not to have since she was never a Christian and hated them her entire life. I got no idea what happened to them cousins......she made her wishes known, and they rejected them, her and her own faith. We kept with the old ways, honored her best we could, and forgot them cousins......and never invited them to another family gathering.

  • @TheRupes
    @TheRupes Před 24 dny +1

    Hey Scott, Little Tip with tying steel, put the N12's on saw horse's then hang the stirrups over the bars and tie them. This way no bending down or falling in the dirt!

  • @cameronhesling6189
    @cameronhesling6189 Před 24 dny +5

    Yes i love these videos, this is what your channel needed

  • @ryanhernandez8388
    @ryanhernandez8388 Před 24 dny +5

    Loving the jobsite vids. Its a cool mixup of your house content and other site content

  • @katrinabell7684
    @katrinabell7684 Před 24 dny +6

    Wow .. a big house to be built!! So good to see you out in the field SBC.😎

  • @rakanishu531
    @rakanishu531 Před 24 dny +3

    Awesome Scott ! This was just amazing to watch, and the fellow dog and cat beside all the work :)

  • @imgfiveeight1
    @imgfiveeight1 Před 25 dny +11

    Well, that is a first one for me :) Well done Scott. Greetings from Greece!

  • @jn35353
    @jn35353 Před 24 dny +3

    Great to see you out on site again Scott! 👍👍👍

  • @rodneypurbrick7899
    @rodneypurbrick7899 Před 22 dny +1

    Nice work lads...you too Scotty. Something calming about seeing skilled blokes do their thing n making it look easy.

  • @buddybear3120
    @buddybear3120 Před 24 dny +7

    Classic SBC content, keep it up

  • @jeremym4104
    @jeremym4104 Před 24 dny +3

    Yeah love this series keep following around full builds please!

  • @OCPYT___
    @OCPYT___ Před 24 dny +3

    Good stuff brother, Keep em coming.

  • @HerbaceousM8
    @HerbaceousM8 Před 24 dny +3

    Ive never thought of using the arrowpress upside down like a french press, but that brilliant

  • @JohnDaley-tf9yn
    @JohnDaley-tf9yn Před 24 dny +3

    Very fun to see you back on other projects

  • @iteachtime
    @iteachtime Před 24 dny +1

    Love this! Thanks guys!

  • @jasperkemp9025
    @jasperkemp9025 Před 24 dny +2

    nice, oldskool. and at the same time so koel, cauz we're watching from all over the world. thanks Scott, for doing what you do

  • @steenfraosterbro3268
    @steenfraosterbro3268 Před 24 dny +3

    Freaking love this episode. Thank you Scott

  • @ROSCOGB
    @ROSCOGB Před 24 dny +2

    Concrete !
    Love it
    Already done 300 cube this year for footings & floor slabs
    Keep up the great content Scott

  • @remiewatkins8032
    @remiewatkins8032 Před 24 dny

    Awesome job Scott its a great video looking forward to more thanks for posting

  • @warrenw2u
    @warrenw2u Před 24 dny +10

    Scott, I loved this new episode. It took me 3 hours to find the location of this build. Scenery and triangulation were necessary. It looks like a great location and what a challenging lot to build on. Looking forward to more on this build. (I am a retired builder in the USA.)

    • @iwb70
      @iwb70 Před 12 dny

      Are you going to watch the build from space, with yearly updates?! I've done that before with other builds I've seen on CZcams and architecture websites.

  • @indyfastal
    @indyfastal Před 25 dny +5

    Great video, really liked the dog...

  • @samedwards6276
    @samedwards6276 Před 24 dny +2

    Great way to start my weekend
    Cheers Scotty

  • @jamesmurray9481
    @jamesmurray9481 Před 24 dny +5

    These vids are why I subscribed

  • @houseandponds4789
    @houseandponds4789 Před 25 dny +18

    In northern Iceland we call that a shallow hole. Or a lucky dig.

    • @truus5653
      @truus5653 Před 25 dny +2

      aswe in The Netherlands

  • @robstevens2076
    @robstevens2076 Před 24 dny +2

    Nice editing and content Scott.
    Cool job

  • @arendhoeve2199
    @arendhoeve2199 Před 24 dny +1

    Nice video. Its nice too see how different every 1 builds in the Netherlands you always need too make some kind of wall and then pour concrete

  • @mgmoody42
    @mgmoody42 Před 23 dny +3

    @9:40 A chicken can fall into trouble like this and NOT MAKE A PEEP! I can't count the number of times I've had a hen go missing and finally discover her in some predicament that if she had simply made a noise to make her presence known I would have discovered her sooner. But it's a self-preservation technique that would work fine in the wild but not so well in the domestic world. As an example, I once found a hen that had found her way into an idle home landscape leaf and limb chipper. She was lucky I thought to look on a slim chance. The opening of that chipper has been blocked since.

  • @jayd421
    @jayd421 Před 23 dny

    This is the type of video. I've been waiting for.

  • @TheMadMan2477
    @TheMadMan2477 Před 19 dny

    Loved this video!

  • @michael-james1970
    @michael-james1970 Před 23 dny

    I like the videos of you doing the reno on your own house but it is nice to see videos of you back out on the tools again. Keep em coming.

  • @Kelvallontan
    @Kelvallontan Před 24 dny +3

    That was quite interesting.
    Over here in Europe, where use of concrete is much more common, there is factory built rebar pieces so what you were doing at the start is mostly pre-made.
    Also, the clay in those trenches looks stunning. That would make for awesome plaster and wall coatings (if not on drywall of course).

    • @nakedapprentice
      @nakedapprentice Před 23 dny

      We often get them pre cut and bent here. I guess it's really a balance between cost, availability and how much work is on

  • @KolyanichNZ
    @KolyanichNZ Před 24 dny

    That's exactly what I need for my apprenticeship to finish the course! Looks great!

  • @michaelburton4521
    @michaelburton4521 Před 24 dny

    Nice to see you working on another job Scott

  • @AntonyvanIersel
    @AntonyvanIersel Před 24 dny

    I like the idea that you make the site flat with foundations, and not bulldozers. This is fun to watch, so is the house, the kitchen and garden :)

  • @simon6629
    @simon6629 Před 23 dny

    As a new journeyman im always impressed watching these videos

  • @shaunray6660
    @shaunray6660 Před 24 dny +3

    Back to the real world scotty 😄

  • @Sabreshift
    @Sabreshift Před 24 dny

    Love this content 👌

  • @moe_1886
    @moe_1886 Před 24 dny

    Great video of the foundations getting done... decent fall that's for sure. I'm glad the chook is all good though!

  • @painterdave1998
    @painterdave1998 Před 24 dny

    Fantastic video.

  • @ajjuney
    @ajjuney Před 11 dny

    That was surprisingly interesting. 🔨

  • @meestahwah
    @meestahwah Před 24 dny

    I dig seeing the difference in building styles. In the US, the footing would be formed only at the bottom with the wall built up to above grade. Keep bringing us back to the project. It's fun to see the progression.

  • @caveweta
    @caveweta Před 24 dny +3

    Just seen that gizmo on PBB on their steel footing mega house, makes wire tying so easy.

  • @scottstewart6624
    @scottstewart6624 Před 23 dny

    I remember a while back Scott mentioning that you were mostly doing renovations, rather than complete builds. Nice to see you getting to work on a complete build.

  • @bentakai
    @bentakai Před 24 dny

    great episode...hope you work on the build till the end...I enjoy this material the most.

  • @timbobau
    @timbobau Před 23 dny

    You earned my like with the Squarespace segway.

  • @B.A.SuparCarpenter
    @B.A.SuparCarpenter Před 25 dny

    Sir, it is very beautiful, I feel very 👍

  • @brycestapleton182
    @brycestapleton182 Před 24 dny +4

    A sheet or towel over the windscreen stops it icing over

  • @edwardharlem9588
    @edwardharlem9588 Před 24 dny +1

    Concrete, cooooncrete!.. And everyone is either going mad or showing stoicism!
    5:06 drainage metal?!😂
    Gonna be an awesome build!.. another absolutely exciting epppisoooode!🤘🏻

    • @oliverbrockie6816
      @oliverbrockie6816 Před 24 dny

      'Drainage metal' is what we refer to 20/40 Drainage gravel as in NZ

    • @edwardharlem9588
      @edwardharlem9588 Před 24 dny

      @@oliverbrockie6816 oh! Here i am beeing convinced the 'metal' was a typo for 'material'. But i got my self another google research topic haha thank you

  • @DGALVIN45
    @DGALVIN45 Před 24 dny

    Always a good day when there's a Scotty B video to watch 💪

  • @erinlemke4031
    @erinlemke4031 Před 23 dny

    Having nothing to do with the building industry in any way, i just found this so interesting. Love to know how things work.
    Plus best Segway to square space ad!

  • @TS-wi8ew
    @TS-wi8ew Před 24 dny +1

    Why did the chicken cross the bridge?... 🤣🤣🤣 Love the variety in your vids!

  • @muzzthegreat
    @muzzthegreat Před 24 dny +1

    I find the footings/foundations/piers interesting; probably because they are simple-enough [my limited knowledge] to compare.
    I am in Queensland: houses had wooden 'stumps' [as we call the piers] up until perhaps the 1940s: and when I say wooden, I mean "a cut tree-trunk in the dirt"; durable species of timber were chosen and "ant-caps" of metal put on the top to stop termites from getting higher.
    Later [1950s] timber stumps were concreted in place; but that was quickly superseded by pre-cast concrete stumps about 230mm [9-inch] square, that themselves were concreted in-place.
    When renovating an old house the front [street-facing] stumps are usually replaced with H4 treated round hardwood concreted into the ground to maintain the original 'heritage' appearance - indeed some councils demand that - and some councils demand a degree of 'dressing' around the stumps with 'palings' to maintain the 'enclosed' look under the house.
    But these days all other replacement stumps [not visible from the street] would be pre-galv steel RHS 90square, 3mm-wall; they change to 100square around 3metre height, and cross-bracing is strategically applied.

  • @thisoldproperty
    @thisoldproperty Před 23 dny

    9:12 love the coffee distraction time!

  • @user-vh7yk6ds5u
    @user-vh7yk6ds5u Před 23 dny

    Isso aí Scott novos rumos novos avanços

  • @johnzbeats
    @johnzbeats Před 18 dny

    So intrigued by the use of wooden piers vs concrete or steel in such a moist environment. . .

  • @SteveAndAlexBuild
    @SteveAndAlexBuild Před 24 dny

    Yep enjoyed this one 🧱👍🏽

  • @barryrobbins7694
    @barryrobbins7694 Před 19 dny +1

    There is a movie called “Locke” starring Tom Hardy. It revolves around a construction manager that needs to get to a huge concrete pour two hours away, but is torn between his professional and private life.

  • @jasonbyarschannel
    @jasonbyarschannel Před 24 dny +1

    Please keep us updated on this house. Where I live pier and beam is pretty much nonexistent since the 60s

  • @michal1975fly
    @michal1975fly Před 22 dny

    The procedure is very similar here in the Czech Republic. The minimum foundation depth is 80 cm, frost-free depth. Only the crawl space is hardly made here, the entire space is poured with concrete.

  • @zephyr1408
    @zephyr1408 Před 20 dny

    There is always the man who when it’s snowing he is in shorts !

  • @jamesthebuilder3141
    @jamesthebuilder3141 Před 24 dny

    Nice to see my trracksaw box still going strong Scott lol

  • @Sildenafil_Damages_Eye_Retina

    A seismic damper device developed for the typical modern Japanese home. Design. They cost about $2,200 each and you need four usually. Tested to M7.0, no damage at all.

  • @iamie153
    @iamie153 Před 24 dny +1

    That is quite the floor area. It will be interesting to see it when the floor is down and so that you can stand on it and really appreciate the view over smoko. It is amazing how much concrete goes into the pole holes. We have just completed a large retaining wall post cyclone Gabrielle damage and we pumped 11 m3 around the poles...they are 3.5m in the ground and holes were 600mm dia. Personally, it seemed rather over engineered but the owner doesn't get a lot of say in the design. 😐

  • @thomashverring9484
    @thomashverring9484 Před 15 dny

    John really puts the short back in shorts!

  • @JohnsTinyWoodshop
    @JohnsTinyWoodshop Před 24 dny +2

    That guy in the shorts is an absolute unit

    • @nofam
      @nofam Před 24 dny

      Yeah, you don't see many skinny concrete pumpers/placers - it's full-on work!

  • @timb37
    @timb37 Před 9 dny

    How is the music always perfect

  • @grahampurvis5160
    @grahampurvis5160 Před 23 dny

    Ahh!You gotta love concrete fever!You know you’re getting somewhere then.😊👍

  • @livingimprovements4382
    @livingimprovements4382 Před 24 dny +1

    this episode gave me anxiety and flared up my ptsd

  • @brucelee3388
    @brucelee3388 Před 24 dny

    For a moment there I thought you were going to introduce us to a new Makita battery powered coffee machine - I'm pretty sure they have at least one coffee machine in their lineup, as well as fridges and boom boxes for the job site.

  • @micromacmacca1170
    @micromacmacca1170 Před 22 dny

    That build would be fun to work on. Hopefully you can get back and get some more footage.

  • @mgmoody42
    @mgmoody42 Před 23 dny

    @2:51 What a time saver!!

  • @Erelyes
    @Erelyes Před 24 dny +1

    Cool job! Throw your hammer in the ring for the whole build mate!

  • @finley888888
    @finley888888 Před 23 dny

    i'm surprised to not see a footing inspection pre-pour, i would have expected one

  • @22kmclaren
    @22kmclaren Před 24 dny

    New Zealand folks even brew their aeropress upside down 🤣
    It totally makes sense to steep more the way you did it, but the instructions that came with mine had a different brewing procedure where the filter is down and it drips a little through the whole steep and press.

  • @jimsum
    @jimsum Před 24 dny

    can almost see my house from there!

  • @kevincorbin6273
    @kevincorbin6273 Před 24 dny +1

    That’s definitely a little different than what I do here in the U.S.

  • @RedBearCarpentry
    @RedBearCarpentry Před 20 dny

    Canadian carpenter here from the Yukon, interesting building practices over there. I prefer how you fellas install your bar in footings. I thought I'd ask and see if you had any idea where to get another Dalluge Titanium hammer? Impossible to find lately.
    Fan of your channel, amazing work and attention to detail!

  • @artemriazanov2452
    @artemriazanov2452 Před 24 dny

    WoW, historical moment in NZ, finally start build houses on foundations.

  • @josephking6515
    @josephking6515 Před 23 dny

    Skip forward to 9:25 to see Scott rapidly shaking his wood. 😲
    If you have a teaspoon of cement in the morning then you're set for the day. 👍
    It's a *Pole House.* Many of those round Diamond Harbour, Lyttleton and other locations that have steep slopes.

  • @johnfitzpatrick2469
    @johnfitzpatrick2469 Před 24 dny

    G,day Scott Brown Carpentry from Sydney Australia.
    Footing classification
    Reactive clay.
    Options
    1. Don't build on such sites
    2. Use steel screw piles down to specified depth.
    I've seen these in western New South Wales.
    🌏🇦🇺

  • @ws6619
    @ws6619 Před 24 dny +1

    Many of the older smaller homes in DFW are "pier and beam" foundations like this and I'm very perturbed by the modern strategy of just dropping a slab on grade.. which inevitably fails due to shifting and expansive clay soil during the heat and winter heaves. I love the concept of extra cost to build an immutable (or easily adjustible) foundation pier system like this. Lots of extra work... but for 50-75 year longevity on a new house worth it.

    • @Syncop8rNZ
      @Syncop8rNZ Před 24 dny

      I haven't heard of slabs failing here (except in the Christchurch earthquakes). We also have waffle slabs which work better under seismic loads.

    • @tutekohe1361
      @tutekohe1361 Před 24 dny +1

      “Heave” is not a thing here in New Zealand. There is only a few degrees (Celcius) difference between Winter and Summer. It rarely gets below freezing except slightly in a frost. The ground never freezes.
      My house is over 100 years old on untreated wooden piles and has never moved.

  • @marktahu2932
    @marktahu2932 Před 24 dny

    You need a labourer Scott - cutting and tying steel has gotta be the pits.

  • @tweake7175
    @tweake7175 Před 24 dny

    Aeropress in use, at least someone is making decent coffee. Tho get the flow valve so you don't have to do the inverted method.

  • @mac8179
    @mac8179 Před 24 dny +1

    Smoko time! Have you ever heard the song “I’m on Smoko” from The Chats?

  • @FreeLander5280
    @FreeLander5280 Před 24 dny +1

    July12th the high for the day in New Zealand south island says 48°F. Hellllllo from Denver Colorado

    • @TheDarkhorse82
      @TheDarkhorse82 Před 24 dny

      where is the south island? Nelson, where Scott is, a high of 11c (52f) or where I am 4c (38f) which is a 10 hour drive away

    • @FreeLander5280
      @FreeLander5280 Před 24 dny +2

      @TheDarkhorse82 was a broad Google search answer, so I assumed. 👍🏼 I was just curious what the ballpark weather was over there while it's 101°F on my jobsite lunch break.

  • @kevinrhodes335
    @kevinrhodes335 Před 24 dny +2

    We have it easy(ish) in SW Florida. Our houses are usually just sitting on concrete slabs floating on the sand that makes up most of Florida. Interesting that basements don't seem to be a thing in New Zealand. Not cold enough for frost issues? Houses on posts with a crawlspace are not unusual north of here, but not so north that it hard freezes. It's fascinating seeing the difference in how houses are constructed. I am originally from Maine in the COLD far northeastern corner of the US, and homes in Florida are built VERY differently from up there, and both are quite different from your house. Fo example, it was hilarious watching the inspector walk on the roof of my house down here with it bowing under his weight with every step for example - no need to hold a meter or two of snow here, so the construction is more than a tad bit lighter! You must not get any real snow in Nelson either to have such a light structure with just the galvanized roof with nothing under it. .
    I'm having a new home built in FL now, the engineer just finished the plans that get sent off to the county for permits, so things will be revving up soon. Steel structural insulated panel construction, designed for 230mph winds, and LEED-certified for energy efficiency. But I am installing the kitchen myself - though I am not nearly so skilled or ambitious so mine is coming from IKEA! This will be my third IKEA kitchen, good stuff, and a massive cost savings over having the builder build something that wouldn't be nearly as good.

    • @gabsi64
      @gabsi64 Před 24 dny

      We have earthquakes so basements require expensive engineering

    • @jaredgreen5305
      @jaredgreen5305 Před 24 dny

      Basements just arent a thing in Australia or New Zealand mate..

    • @TheDarkhorse82
      @TheDarkhorse82 Před 24 dny

      @@jaredgreen5305 "underground basements" there are plenty of houses that have garage basements cut into a hill

    • @tonylittle3508
      @tonylittle3508 Před 24 dny

      230 Mph? Wow! That is close to 400Kph, category 5 is above 252Kph. Nothing would be left standing around here.

    • @tutekohe1361
      @tutekohe1361 Před 24 dny

      No Hurricanes here in New Zealand.

  • @Xsilent227
    @Xsilent227 Před 24 dny

    Gotta be honest , did not expect you to say the chicken was alive, strong chicken 💪🏽

  • @bigkevcanb
    @bigkevcanb Před 24 dny

    Funny we do foundations a little like that in northern Australia because of cyclones