
07-13-2007, 07:27 PM
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Re: Walkthrough?
Becky, Vilages07 is quite accurate about the walk-through being a non-event. The builder is the guy with the license and insurance and has several superintendants or foreman who actually oversee the construction of dozens of houses at any one time. If you discover anything at all before or during the walk-through, it's quite common for the builder\foreman to call the subcontractors right on the spot to come right over and fix the problem. The walk-through takes less than an hour and is intended to be informational. The Villages Warranty office is very eager (and very efficient) at this point to cooperate and fix anything reasonable. The problem is, you're able to see only the obvious deficiencies. Other stuff, like vinyl siding issues are a little harder for a layman to identify.
The suggestion to hire a professional is an excellent idea because the Villages strictly adheres to the 1 year rule and generally won't honor your claim, even a day beyond the 1 year anniversary. An article in The Reporter may be of interest to you because it mentions a professional siding expert for $70. http://www.ocala.com/article/2007070.../1131/REPORTER
Last week while visiting my brother in law in Virginia Trace, he asked Ray Micucci (who is the subject of the article in The Reporter) to inspect his vinyl siding. Needless to say, Ray found dozens of defects with the vinyl siding which unfortunately are consistent with vinyl siding problems observed in Duval. Some folks have naively believed that the vinyl subcontractors started doing slipshod work in Duval. I suspect Duval is no better or no worse than the vinyl siding in thousands of homes throughout the Villages. The problem is the Villages (and Sumter County) did not inspect the work, and now there are just too many homes to even consider correcting the problem.
Getting back to your walk-through, like any large project, break up your home into byte-size chunks. For example, take your kitchen cabinets.
1) Are all the cabinet doors (and hardware pulls if any) the same style. We've seen one designer home where every cabinet door except one was a raised panel and yet no one seemed to notice.
2) Do the cabinets (and doors) line up correctly or are some doors higher than others.
3) Is the countertop free of defects, especially the edges. Is there caulking wherever the counter meets the backsplash. I've seen a countertop where the glue may not have been applied evenly and a small area, maybe a 4' circle had lifted. Shining a light across the surface would expose this defect. Is the sink installed squarely with the front and back of the counter top and caulked around the perimeter of the sink.
I think you get the point. Take one room at a time and look critically; and make notes. For example, we checked all of our electric outlets. In the bedrooms and living rooms, some of the outlets are spilt: one-half controlled by a wall switch, the other is hot always. In spite of our initial testing, we missed the fact that for one outlet, the half controlled by the switch worked just fine but the other half which was supposed to be hot all of the time was dead all of the time but they fixed it 9 months into our ownership.
Good luck. This post is not intended to make you anxious; only to encourage you to consider a professional inspection especially if you have vinyl siding on your home.
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