Snowy36
2018-11-02 19:36:58
- #1
I didn’t check them for hours either. But we had daily construction meetings, which is usually what the architect does. With the journeymen. Not the boss. The boss sits in the Q5 with the phone at his ear, the journeyman sits on site and that’s what counts.
For example, I laid out the kitchen plan, the mason says, ok, you’ve left too little space for the light switches and door frame, I’ll move the door opening a bit over there, yeah? Yeah. Stairwell, should we do it this way or that? What’s paid for, I ask? He says, like this. But that’s no good, it would be better this way. What does it cost? Don’t know. I know you get 100,- and just do it the better way.
Drywall ceiling, guys, you can’t be serious. Why? Puppy dog eyes. Because those are waves like on the Belt. You’re carpenters, man, you didn’t learn it like that. Awkward silence. When I left, they tore it down and did it again. And so on.
I don’t know when you built, maybe 2-3 years ago? At the moment it’s like this: you stand on the site at 7 in the morning and there’s no one there to talk to... since you have to work, you leave again... at 10 someone does come, how are you supposed to talk to them beforehand...
The underfloor heating came Thursday at 5 p.m., I would have had time then but if I ask 10 times when they will come and no one tells me beforehand because it’s being inserted last minute... it’s enough to drive you crazy...
On Wednesday, the person who installs the electricity was supposed to come for the second time now... today another call... all fitters are sick... hmm...
I preferred to be there for the screed... who knows what would have happened to the edge insulation strips otherwise...
That’s just how it is right now (-: