The experts on pedestrian traffic coatings brings you the information you need on one website! We have information on all pedestrian traffic coatings manufacturer's, including Pli-Dek, West Coast Specialty Coating Systems, Desert Brand, Life Deck, Tufflex, Mer-Kote and Dex-O-Tex systems. Browse our website for articles, videos, news stories and more. We'll be updating and adding more pages soon so bookmark this site and come back and visit!
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Tuesday, March 31, 2009
DeckExpert is Now On Twitter! Tweet's a coming soon and often!
Paste the link into your browser to se our twitter page...
We'll be tweeting from the field as we go, with all sorts of fun, witty and thought provoking comments.
Or not...
I'm hungry. Time to tweet!
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Stamped Deck by Masterseal's Dave DiBaggio is the "Job of The Week"
My friend Dave DiBaggio has a small family owned corporation down in San Clemente...he does deck coatings, floors, stamping, concrete repairs and overlays. Dave is like me, he knows that he needs to be on the job to assure that it goes right and that the personal responsibility is there.
He just sent me these pics of a cool stamp job he just finished on a deck. This is a Dex-O-Tex Barrier Guard job, reinforced and stamped/colored to spec.
Check them out and if your down OC/San Diego way and need a great job on your personal home or business, call Dave DiBaggio at Masterseal at 949-355-5031!
Friday, March 27, 2009
CONSENSUS DOCS Challenges AIA on "Who's in Charge"
A new challenger to AIA documents
Bullivant Houser Bailey
After an intensive three-year effort, a consortium of owners, contractors and trade groups joined together and have published what they consider to be contract documents based on best practices and proper risk allocation, for the benefit of the construction industry at large. The result is a new family of construction documents entitled ConsensusDOCS, where “DOCS” stands for designers, owners, contractors and sureties.
ConsensusDOCS is endorsed by 22 construction organizations — including the Associated General Contractors of America, Associated Builders and Contractors and National Electrical Contractors Association — that represent a wide selection of industry members, from developers to owners to general contractors to subcontractors.
Despite the wide consensus represented by these national trade organizations, proponents of the long-standing contract documents published by the American Institute of Architects argue that the oft-revised AIA documents are more than sufficient and there is no need for another family of construction documents. For the reasons below, we disagree with that conclusion.
The owner is in charge
READ THE REST BY CLICKING HERE!
Pulte Homes Gets Lemons Delivered by Construction Workers
Workers, HomeownersDeliver Lemons to Pulte Exec |
by James Parks, Mar 26, 2009
A Pulte Homes executive got a special delivery this morning, when 50 angry workers and supporters dropped lemons in front of him at a state board meeting. The workers and homeowners in three western states say buyers should beware before they purchase a home built by Pulte or its subsidiaries.
The protest at the Nevada Contractor Review Board meeting in Las Vegas came on the same day that Building Justice released a report that shows nearly two-thirds (63 percent) of respondents to a survey of owners of homes built by Pulte and its Del Webb subsidiary reported their homes had construction defects. Building Justice is a partnership comprised of the Painters and Allied Trades (IUPAT), Sheet Metal Workers (SMWIA), the AFL-CIO, community members, Pulte homeowners and elected officials to improve conditions at Pulte developments.
Ironically, the contractor review board investigates complaints of poor construction workmanship. Some homeowners expressed outrage that Pulte Homes is represented on a board entrusted with ensuring quality construction within Nevada’s building industry.
The workers also announced they had revamped their website, www.poorlybuiltbypulte.info, to allow homeowners to tell their stories about poor work by Pulte and Del Webb. The site enables homeowners to complete a survey and keep up with the latest news about Pulte, as well as links to services across the country where dissatisfied homeowners can seek relief.
The report, “Poorly Built by Pulte, No Different at Del Webb,’” is based on surveys of 872 Pulte and Del Webb homeowners from Nevada, Arizona and California. According to the report, another 43 percent of respondents reported they would not buy another Pulte or Del Webb home.
The homeowners claimed defects with nearly every aspect of home construction: foundation, roofing, electrical, stucco, air conditioning, windows, plumbing, drywall, painting among others. Click here to read the full report.
READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE BY CLICKING ON OUR HEADLINE!
CLICK HERE TO READ the "POORLY BUILT BY PULTE" WEBSITE, FROM "BUILDING JUSTICE".
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
ICC-ES' President John Nosse to Retire, Successor Named
ICC-ES' Mark Johnson will succeed Nosse as President on April 1st, and Nosse will become President Emeritus until his retiremnet in 2010.
Will new blood bring new changes to ICC? Some transparency and a new public face that is open to questions about it's cherished ICC-ES reports? Time will tell.
We wish Mr. Nosse well and hope he enjoys his new freedom.
Read the press release from ICC if you care too below...
| Johnson Succeeds Nosse as ICC-ES President | |
| The ICC Evaluation Service (ICC-ES) Board of Directors has selected Mark Johnson to serve as the ES President, following the announcement of John Nosse’s January 2010 retirement. Johnson will assume the ES President role April 1 when Nosse will move to President Emeritus status. ICC-ES is a subsidiary of the International Code Council. ### For more information about Mark Johnson, click here to review his biography. |
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Pacific Polymers Elastodeck 5000 FR Walking & Roof Deck System Has Class A Fire Rating in Newly Issued ICC ES Report
This product would not be able to be used on an area where a "One Hour Assembly" is required in public buildings and homes; but can be used anywhere just a Class A is required. Make sure to read your specs before spec'ing this product, a One Hour Assembly may be required on your job.
Click our headline to read the report at ICC-ES's site yourself...