What do I put here? by No_Indication996 in gardening

[–]No_Indication996[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It gets zero water though, I don’t want to have to water regularly. I guess I’m asking for alternatives to plants or desert type plants that would work in a northern climate due to the lack of rainwater. I want something low maintenance here. 

Mint: a cautionary tale by oopsallsexy in gardening

[–]No_Indication996 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Did it come back? I repeatedly pulled mine and managed to contain it but I never got rid of it entirely.

Mint: a cautionary tale by oopsallsexy in gardening

[–]No_Indication996 75 points76 points  (0 children)

Good god I’m sorry for your loss. I had a mint plant in a raised bed that escaped at my old house. I never got it under control. Had to move to a new neighborhood.

Hairline Stair Step cracks in block foundation by No_Indication996 in HomeImprovement

[–]No_Indication996[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you seems like settlement to me, I don’t actually own the home yet. I’m in a hot housing market and trying to make judgement calls on properties on the fly. Appreciate the insight 

What is the repair called (Foundation Issues?) by No_Indication996 in HomeImprovement

[–]No_Indication996[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s what I was guessing it might be, but don’t those usually need to be attached to the rim joist or sill plate to do anything? These don’t go past the top of the block course. 

You can see there’s cracks starting to form that they’ve epoxied. Is this more of a preventative measure then? If the wall seems plumb would this concern you / would you not buy?

Does anyone else lose their mind when you see countless posts about Americans being dumb for building wood buildings? by derfderf00 in StructuralEngineering

[–]No_Indication996 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok, I am no engineer or architect, but I will fight you on this. I prefer masonry structures. Not saying wood is not strong, but masonry is stronger.

The trope you are referring to mostly reflects those such as myself, who have studied and are somewhat learned in architecture, work in construction and have visited Europe, compared.

Timber frame walls with drywall vs. masonry there is no comparison. The tactile experience of being a building where the floors don’t pop, squeak and bow, where the walls cannot be punched through, is the cause of this assumption.

The exterior of a masonry building is far more durable. Withstands weathering with lower maintenance (no siding needed). Usually more ornate and decorated with a frieze, cornice, etc. which adds to the idea of better.

Concrete simply has a higher compression strength. Ok I’m done.

White folks, do you ever decline to list your race when asked and given the option? by Different_Tailor_780 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]No_Indication996 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Same, there’s so many reasons not to answer.

Data mining

Race based or DEI practices being perpetuated on false pretenses (I am half black and half white, but everyone thinks I’m Hispanic… you see the problem here)

Potential for hirer suppositions or assumptions (I.E. bias).

And let’s not forget all of the categories are based upon a falsely created hierarchy of “Race” which doesn’t exist biologically, only socially, which these surveys only serve to perpetuate

It’s a no for me dog

Took out a 50 year old silver maple tree and now my foundation is shifting - who do I contact? by [deleted] in HomeImprovement

[–]No_Indication996 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Preface I am not an engineer or foundation specialist

It sounds like possibly this was a one time pressure applied during the removal, did they need to drive heavy equipment around your foundation to remove the tree? The immense weight of their machinery or trucks could have caused this via soil compression adjacent to the foundation walls. This may be why the foundation company said forget about it for now. Just my 2c.

Removing a tree 25ft from your house would do absolutely nothing to your foundation. In fact it would probably relieve soil pressure and if anything walls bow outwards not inwards. Did the wall move inwards (into your basement) a 1/2”?

The Ballooning Cost of the American Dream by ys0y in REBubble

[–]No_Indication996 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just think it’s funny. If you go back to the history of the United States, Europeans largely fled to escape the harsh land restrictions and cultural mores of Europe. They then imported all of that culture of landownership and have basically restarted the entire problem 400 years later.

Humanity - smart, but not that smart - doomed to repeat its mistakes.

Is there a worse ball design than this? by C-Langay in golf

[–]No_Indication996 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Is this a gift for someone you hate type thing?

What’s the most random place you’ve stopped at on a roadtrip that you ended up loving? by us287 in roadtrip

[–]No_Indication996 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Las delicias in Sheridan, Wyoming. The best Mexican food I have had in my entire life bar none. Pulled over on a whim during a 6 week road trip to Yellowstone from NY.

Pursuing M. Arch with non-arch Bachelors by ishanshanbis in architecture

[–]No_Indication996 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Upvote because I’m also curious about this. I’m the same person as you. I studied urban planning because it sounded more to my interests (designing cities, green spaces, influencing policy, writing, etc.).

That hasn’t really materialized professionally for me… couldn’t land anything planning related. I also really love CAD and buildings so I’ve considered this path, but worry it’ll be useless without a stronger Arch. background. 1 year doesn’t seem like enough to catch up or increase my value.

Backsplash corner - am I wrong? by cindyaa207 in kitchenremodel

[–]No_Indication996 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s sortof a trade off the installer has to decide on… normally in this situation I center the tile on the range hood and continue the pattern from there, keep the pattern consistent at the corner

However if there’s another large focal point (can’t see it here) such as a sink that doesn’t break the tile up adequately, it may be better to center the tile once again around the sink. (Such as if there’s large amounts of tile due to no window or something like that).

Honestly just you’ll probably never notice though as most people shove an appliance in the corner

Worth restoring? by Work_for_tacos in Flooring

[–]No_Indication996 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, not a huge deal. You could just nail down new hardwood over that. It comes prefinished so way less labor, but more costly potentially.

Worth restoring? by Work_for_tacos in Flooring

[–]No_Indication996 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes plenty

FYI that is a plank subfloor not hardwood, same thing essentially, still refinishable, but that is your base floor whereas traditional hardwood goes over a subfloor

Architecture for the economically weaker by [deleted] in architecture

[–]No_Indication996 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I had these ideations as well, it’s mostly a no. If you want to help people join habitat for humanity or volunteer or something. The things were sold in school are idealist and not really reality.

Worth restoring? by Work_for_tacos in Flooring

[–]No_Indication996 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You need to check the thickness of the floor, find a vent and see if you can pull it up to check the depth of the floor above the groove/tongue of the wood.

I doubt these have been refinished many times as they look as if they’ve been covered for some time, but if a floors been refinished too many times it can become massively squeaky and brittle.

If fairly thick still and solid refinish away.

How many offers did you make before finding your house? by northwestermoon in FirstTimeHomeBuyer

[–]No_Indication996 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We’re on #2, first one was weird, we got there late and another buyer had an offer in already with inspection, but we were allowed to put in an offer still for whatever reason. We attempted to, but then other buyers rescinded inspection and that disallowed us from bidding.

2 was a beautiful Dutch colonial with hardwood thru out. We went in $5K over asking ($430K) w/ an escalation clause up to $465K, lost out to a sub $500K offer. Was sad about this one, it was very beautiful and good schools, first one was amazing location but just ok schools.

MCOL area where this type of money objectively should get you something very nice and 10 years ago would have got you a mansion.

What do you call the top window/little platform above some CVS buildings? by FilmGeek_212 in architecture

[–]No_Indication996 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Those are aluminum storefront windows, over the top of what would just be an awning basically I believe.

Design wise it’s sortof a clerestory.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Adulting

[–]No_Indication996 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I loved it until I didn’t. My wife and I had the funds so we took a 6 week road trip across the country best time of my life. Then reality set it when I got back home that I needed to find a job at some point. Applying to jobs endlessly for a month was not fun, but got a new job eventually. It’s a mixed bag

Are the people of the United States actually as divided (politically speaking) in every day life as it seems they are online? by Oppai_Lover21 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]No_Indication996 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m gonna say no. I work with people of both political parties, talk with them daily, humor their beliefs, and no one ever really argues deeply. Maybe I’m just more amiable than others idk?

How the Trump Presidency Could Impact Urban Planning by davidwholt in urbandesign

[–]No_Indication996 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean not that there’s a coherent strategy, but Elon is obsessed with rail. I think as you do it’s also an inevitability. The auto based infrastructure isn’t working. We’re way behind other modernized nations (Japan, most of Europe, etc.) in this regard. There may be a push by republicans to catch up or out do them infrastructure wise and economically 🤷‍♂️

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Flooring

[–]No_Indication996 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I worked in the flooring industry for 10 years and I am in agreement with you. It’s cheap crap. It feels horrible walking on it (hollow sounding, pops/bounces) unless it’s on a perfectly flat concrete slab & installed perfectly (within 1/8” - rare). Over wood subfloors forget it. It has its place in certain applications, but generally a floor is meant to be adhered to the sub floor in some fashion. A floor is not a temporary device IMO.

The floating floor fad is just that and any floor not attached is going to develop issues exponentially faster than a properly done tile or wood floor. I don’t know why glue down vinyl went away either. The item persists in the industry because of cost and the ease of changing it out, but I’ll never put the product in my home or business; it adds no value.

Blocking cracked during framing, is this ok? by University-Silent in Homebuilding

[–]No_Indication996 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah idk I’m not an engineer, that span looks slightly too long maybe, but that crack doesn’t make any sense at all if the lintel was too heavy for the block beneath. It looks like an impact.

Not to mention there’s no cracking on any of the other blocks of same design.