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tibbohcm

What is reasonable? Contractor advice needed.

tibbohcm
10 years ago

New to Garden Web and have some questions. In the middle of a remodel and have had several issues with the contractor. Here are the most recent ones.

#1: storage room was to be converted into laundry room. Walls and ceiling were taken down to the studs, and new drywall walls & ceiling was put in. After the crew installed the laundry room cabinets (which are supposed to be flush to the ceiling), we noticed that the ceiling was not level (by almost 2" and it is a tiny room) and they had cut the top of the cabinet trim in a very noticeable slant so that they could get the cabinets to be flush to the ceiling. We think it looks unacceptable and want the contractor to redo the ceiling & fix the cabinet trim (at his cost). He thinks we are being unreasonable. Are we being unreasonable to expect that a room with brand new walls and ceiling be level?. . .Or at least to expect that discrepancies in the ceiling or cabinets wouldn't be noticeable to the naked eye from 10 feet away?

#2: We live in a turn of the century craftsman house & made it very clear throughout the project (orally & in writing) that we wanted the remodel to maintain the period look of the house. In one room we specified recessed panel wainscot and in others we specified beadboard covering the walls (about 5' high). All the rooms also were to get new, period appropriate window and door casings. In the wainscot room, the crew made the window and door casings thick enough that they project beyond the wainscot (like one would see in a typical old house). In the rooms with the beadboard, for some reason they made the casings about half as deep as in the other room resulting in the beadboard and casings being almost exactly the same depth. It looks really bad. We are wanting the contractor to extend the casings (on his dime), and again he thinks we are being unreasonable. Is it reasonable to expect him to do this? Is it typically standard industry practice to make casings deeper to accomodate beadboard and/or to install the beadboard first and the casings over the top?

#3: The contractor asked us if his crew could store equipment and supplies in our detached garage. We moved our vehicles out to the street to accomodate him. Since then, his crew has not only been storing stuff in there, but has been cutting wood, and doing other work there (we didn't authorize this, and would have put a stop to it sooner, but we didn't realize how messy it was going to be) and we just realized that there is now sawdust coating everything we have stored in the garag. It is also coating all the stuff we moved from our house out to the garage (because it had to go somewhere during the remodeling). It'll take at least a day for a cleaning crew to go through everything and get it clean. Is it reasonable to for us to ask him to pay for a crew to clean our garage and our stuff?

Thanks in advance for any advice you can offer.

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