Tuesday, April 15, 2008



Concrete pump used to pour the footers. There will be approximately 2,000 yards of concrete in the foundation, half of which is in the pilings that are finished.


Our grade beams for our foundation are being handled in 5 phases. We began the at the beginning of April, and they will be dug and poured over a 7-8 week period. This photo shows the steel that was engineered for the beams. We are building under the same seismographic standards as southern California.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008



The two panels on the right with brick are some sample panels created by Metromont. Metromont is the subcontractor building the structure. These panels are now on our site so that buyers can see them. The tops of the panels are a sandblasted concrete to add variation in color and texture.



This is a photo of the crane that we brought in to drill our auger pilings. We used this method, as opposed to driving the pilings, so that it would be quieter and have less vibration. We drilled 323 pilings at an average of 50 feet deep to pass the load of the building to the rock below. Berkel, the contractor who did the drilling, finished up in late March.



In January of 2008 we installed our underground storm water retention system. This system is to capture the first inch of rain and holding it for 48 hours. This will help the city storm drains from flooding over, and allows us to settle out 90% of the solid particles before they would go out into King's Creek.



We hand sifted through the rubble and removed all of the wood, plastic and metal to recycle. Then we brought in a crusher to run the brick, block and concrete through to reuse it on site in leu of quarry gravel.


Shortly after city coucil's approval of our master plan, we began the demolition of the structures on the block.