Concrete Home Building Council - 04/20/2006 (Plain Text Version)CHBC Chairman View Graphical Version | Subscribe
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Editor... In this issue: "The Dragon House" Basement of The YearIn today’s booming housing market, consumers are demanding more than ever in their new home constructions, and housing plans have become increasingly more complex and detailed. The Concrete Foundations Association (CFA) – an international association dedicated to improving the quality and acceptance of cast-in-place concrete foundations – 2006 Basement of the Year competition salutes some of this year’s most challenging home projects and their cast-in-place concrete foundations. The 2006 winner has such a complex foundation design that the crews who worked on it named it “The Dragon House” and “The Spaceship.” According to Ed Sauter, executive director of CFA, the Basement of the Year competition enables foundation contractors to display the wide range of projects that are being completed today. “The technological advancements that have been made in the poured wall industry allow contractors to complete complex projects more efficiently, which helps ensure homeowners’ dreams are realized,” said Sauter. “Each year the projects submitted to this competition get more complicated and demonstrate the diversity afforded through poured wall foundations.”
While it is not the largest foundation that they completed last year, Jerry Balmer, President, stated that this project was the most complex that they have probably ever completed. With very few right-angled corners, the project kept Balmer Brothers’ crews on their toes. Many corners went from straight to curved walls with a multitude of corners, T-walls and Y-sections coming in at various angles. One of the jumps, from nine-feet to a three-foot wall, occurs in the middle of a curved wall. “It seemed like every corner we came to brought on a new challenge, especially the Y areas, where we used various sized ties as the two walls turned into one,” says Balmer. “Most of the time crews were transitioning curved into straight walls and sometimes curved to curved.” Adding to the complexity are stone ledges
Balmer Brothers is a three-time winner of CFA’s Basement of the Year award. The company was founded in 1973 when two brothers poured sidewalks and curbs in the summer months. Today, Balmer Brothers has four working owners -- Jerry Balmer, Gary Balmer, Dennis Balmer and Jay Balmer -- along with nearly 30 employees including two office personnel and one mechanic.
The overall complexity of the project involved very limited access to the site, because trees are as close as three feet from walls on all sides. The end walls have No. four bars on one-foot centers each way. Additional details include 26 total footing steps, 220 feet of 5-foot-wide footings, 70 feet of nine-foot, six-inch-wide footings, and all other footings measure 20 to 30 inches wide to 10 to 16 inches deep. The competition’s third place goes to the Cahn Residence project in Cherry Hill, N.J., submitted by
This year’s competition is the largest in CFA history. Contractors cast votes for Basement of the Year in the CFA booth at the 2006 World of Concrete trade show in Las Vegas. The formal award presentation will be made at the Awards Banquet Luncheon during the CFA’s Annual Summer Meeting July 19-22 in Wisconsin Dells, Wis. For more information or to contact us directly, please visit www.NAHB.org | ©2005, National Association of Home Builders |