Welcome to the, “Twilight Zone”……..
It is a great feeling when we as home inspectors call for repairs by qualified repair persons, that we can go to sleep that night
after we send out the report, knowing that the repairs will be in good hands----to sleep well knowing that our buyers will continue to be as well taken care of by the repair person as they have been by their agent and their inspector.
It is great to know that when we are called back for the re-inspection of the repaired items, that the best part will be sharing a cup of coffee with the agent and the buyer and being able to sign off on what was done.
Welcome to the real world……..
A world where all too often repairs are done like the one in the picture to the left.
Spray foam insulation is a poor patching and exterior wall covering material for these damaged concrete blocks around the overhead door. And while it may keep out drafts and vermin (temporarily) it is no substitute for epoxy and concrete----as would be called for in this repair.
One could argue that this "repair" was worse than doing nothing at all since all that spray foam will all have to be removed in order to make "proper" repairs.
I have a hard time understanding what the person making repairs like this can possibly be thinking when they read the report and it calls for, “professional repairs by a qualified repair person.” These repairs are not “professional” and the person doing them was clearly “not qualified.”
Why would anyone conclude that a knowledgeable buyer, being advised by someone committed to taking care of them, would think that this kind of repair would fly? Add to this that someone is going to have to pay for another re-inspection fee. Wouldn’t it have just been cheaper to have done it right in the first place? It is not a pleasant sight to see me foaming at the mouth.
I wish I lived in the Twilight Zone.
Charles Buell
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Click on the Rose to check out: AHA!---A Forum of Landmark Proportions---your Group
PS, for those of you that are new to my blog (or for some other "unexplained" reason have never noticed)
all pictures and smiley-face inserts (emoticons) (when I use them) have messages that show up when you point at them with your cursor.
My WORDLESS WEDNESDAY pictures and some selected POEMS & STORIES.


Charles, thanks for the post. It's pretty amazing what people are trying to get away with these days. Simply incredible.
Gabe, unfortunately I live in the real world and poor repairs is the norm:)
I'd like to say that I find it amazing that "professionals" do repairs like that, but I too live in the real world.
I have used spay foam mostly around sewer lines. Settling in a wall then pushes into the foam and not the pipe. But you picture was a bit extreme. Thanks for the post
Charles well I am sure that is not the first time you have seen such a repair nor will it be the last. Foam is the do-it-yourself fix-all.
Jared, I would say a couple of things about a "repair" like this. It isn't a "repair" and it isn't "professional":)
Charles, This professional must have been the one we bought our last investment from! He didn't bother to shave down the great stuff he sprayed on the exterior walls either. Ours was an easy fix, we had the home sided.
Charles... what do you have against a nice can of spray foam? ... it's the duct-tape of today's generation!!
a little foam here, a little foam there... (oops... a little too much... is the drywall bulging now??)
Charlie---there are lots of good uses for the stuff----but this ain't one of them.
Larry, I have seen it sprayed all along the edges of the roof/gutter connection to keep critters out of the attic:) I love the way it looks after it starts to deteriorate from UV.
Debbie, this stuff seems to be taking over some of the territory formerly reserved for duct tape:)
Alan, I responded to Debbie before I read your comment----it is the new duct tape.
Charles, No, you are not in good hands with Bubba and his band of misfits... H-m-m-m-m, might make a catch name for a new country band - LOL
I wish the Bubbas of the world would all retire----of course we can all be Bubba from time to time:)
Charles - your report was too demanding and required too much specificity. If one has no expectations, one is never disappointed. Such judgment requires moral authority - what right do you have to render that!!??
Charles - I am always intrigued by the quality of work I see about me. To wit, the foundation wall I posted about not long ago, done apparently by the same guy who did your repair above. Maybe a requirement that should be made for work to be accomplished is that if it is not done correctly, the repair persondoes not get paid until he pays for the re-inspection! And then the one after that...
How's that for yin and yang?
Jay what you propose sounds good to me---assuming the guy can be found:)
Wow Charles, I guess we are still behind in today's hi tech of foam in a can here. We are still using duct tape, but with a little twist, they match / paint it with its surrouding colors,
Don't worry Roy----we are already seeing the foam painted to match:)
Charlie,
Obviously this was done for the "look". It might not be functional but it sure is "purty"
I see that stuff a lot. Did it take the place of duct tape?
Steve, you know I hate it when things "look" at me this way.
Carol----duct tape might have been better:)
Unpleasant things happen when buyer requests repairs and the seller does them in a way that looks like your picture. I prefer, if possible, to let the seller give the buyer a payment for the buyer to fix it himself.
Barbara, I totally agree with you----way better for everyone all the way around. I think that sellers think they can fix it for nothing and then do it wrong or worse and it ends up costing them more money and everyone else involved time and money as well.
Charles, I think we see this much too often. I'm always amazed by what some consider a professional repair.
Michael, probably not a hard choice when it is between 15 minutes with a $15.00 can of spray foam and a $800.00 fix by a licensed masonry contractor:)
yeah...but it sure is fun spraying that stuff in and watching it expand!
Jim, too true, too true:)
I want to make a house out of foam. ;)
First it was duct tape, now it's foam. Wonder what will come next. Never mind, I probably don't really want to know.
Jeff, as I am sure you know----you can have one if you want one:)
Suesan----actually before duct tape there was chewing gum:)
Ahh, yes the old chewing gum, but when did the paperclip come in. Was that before or after the chewing gum.
I really like the two different pieces of wood in the frame and the "handle" which looks like a towel rack or should be on a boat. Looks like the job of Bubba.......Hey, they could hire raven to "peck" out the foam.
Sean Allen