TXEng-USA
Structural
- Sep 29, 2016
- 23
We are having an issue with a building inspector in a small beachfront city.
Backstory: We are the engineer-of-record for the two story wood framed house on top of a concrete column pedestal in a FEMA Coast V Zone. The pedestal is at 20' above grade in order to be above the base flood elevation. Needless to say, we had to design a heavy foundation which is composed of 16" square concrete columns on top of a continuous grade beam. Below the grade beam are wood piles driven to approximately 15' for uplift and lateral support.
The building inspector is not used to this type of construction. He is used to seeing 12" driven wood piles that support the podium. I have checked the numbers many times and unless they want the bottom story to be completely cluttered with piles, wood is not feasible. I have talked to him on the phone twice now and each time we end the conversation with him stating that he understands the design and that he just wanted to talk about it since he had never seen it before.
Fast forward to today, I get a call from the owner who states that the building inspector has told him that he can't issue the permit because there are "major issues with the foundation".
Is there any recourse to take against the building inspector for actions such as this? Sidenote, I have been told by the architect that the mayor of the small town who is also in charge of the building department, owns a construction company that builds beachhouses so he feels there may be some posturing going on to get the owner to select his company which can do it with a conventional design.
Backstory: We are the engineer-of-record for the two story wood framed house on top of a concrete column pedestal in a FEMA Coast V Zone. The pedestal is at 20' above grade in order to be above the base flood elevation. Needless to say, we had to design a heavy foundation which is composed of 16" square concrete columns on top of a continuous grade beam. Below the grade beam are wood piles driven to approximately 15' for uplift and lateral support.
The building inspector is not used to this type of construction. He is used to seeing 12" driven wood piles that support the podium. I have checked the numbers many times and unless they want the bottom story to be completely cluttered with piles, wood is not feasible. I have talked to him on the phone twice now and each time we end the conversation with him stating that he understands the design and that he just wanted to talk about it since he had never seen it before.
Fast forward to today, I get a call from the owner who states that the building inspector has told him that he can't issue the permit because there are "major issues with the foundation".
Is there any recourse to take against the building inspector for actions such as this? Sidenote, I have been told by the architect that the mayor of the small town who is also in charge of the building department, owns a construction company that builds beachhouses so he feels there may be some posturing going on to get the owner to select his company which can do it with a conventional design.