quicksandfarmer
Elite Member
I have a project to take down a small house. The catch is that it is 42 inches -- yes inches -- from the property line and the other side of the line is national park land. The National Park Service says I can't enter their property for the purpose of doing work, and I can't injure any trees on their side of the line. So any kind of machinery is ruled out, I think I have to disassemble the house by hand. It's not a big house, just a story and a half and the roof has about a 4 in 12 roof that is easy to walk.
My plan is just to do it in the reverse order that it was built. Work on the inside first, strip out all of the fixtures, then drywall and tile and floor coverings. Then take the roof off and the rafters. From there brace all the exterior walls, and cut through the top and bottom plates to cut them into manageable sections and pull them onto the floor, and then break them up. Once the second floor walls are down I'll take out the floor, and then repeat for the first floor.
Any tips, warnings or other thoughts?
If you're wondering how it got built so close to the line, the house was built before the park was created. The Park Service bought the land and the owner sold right up to the house.
My plan is just to do it in the reverse order that it was built. Work on the inside first, strip out all of the fixtures, then drywall and tile and floor coverings. Then take the roof off and the rafters. From there brace all the exterior walls, and cut through the top and bottom plates to cut them into manageable sections and pull them onto the floor, and then break them up. Once the second floor walls are down I'll take out the floor, and then repeat for the first floor.
Any tips, warnings or other thoughts?
If you're wondering how it got built so close to the line, the house was built before the park was created. The Park Service bought the land and the owner sold right up to the house.