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Hutto clay leaves some homes needing
repairs |
| |
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Some residents unhappy with builders' efforts to
remedy problems. |
(Oddly, this damning article is
no longer available online, like so many others that we've
found.)
(highlights added) The soil that made
the town of Hutto a destination for farmers in the 1800s
has caused headaches for some of the area's 15,000 or so
new suburbanites.
Homeowners in at least two subdivisions are facing problems so
extensive that the builder moved some residents out of their
homes for weeks while repairs were made.
City officials say the problems, which might affect all 787 homes in the
HuttoParke neighborhood and several homes in
Legends of Hutto, are not serious
structural issues. But they have spurred the City Council to
consider a more stringent building code.
Some residents say problems are structural, caused by
inadequate foundations for the type of soil in Hutto. They say
their homes have not been repaired, and they have taken their
grievances to the Internet, looking for others in similar
straits.
At issue is the black clay that gives the
Blackland Prairie region its name. The soil requires extra
precautions by builders or homes will shift more than usual.
The clay expands and contracts with moisture. If foundations
are not designed to handle that movement, the stress can cause
cracks, popped nails and separation between walls and ceiling
trusses.
Marion Wallace had problems with the house she bought in the
HuttoParke subdivision in 2004. Like most of her neighbors, she
agreed to let the builder, Lennar, remedy the problems, which
included prefabricated roof trusses attached too tightly to the
walls.
"It was the most stressful, harrowing ordeal that I've gone
through," Wallace said. "They take your whole house
apart and put it back together again."
Last year, the city first heard from homeowners about problems
in HuttoParke and the Lennar-built homes in Legends of Hutto,
according to the city's former chief building inspector, Dan
McDowell.
The problem stemmed from the nails attaching the roofs to the
drywall being too close together, so there was not enough give
for the foundation to move without cracking the drywall,
according to Kathy Kirtz, Lennar's regional director of
customer care.
Kirtz would not say how many homes are affected, but she said
the company sent letters to residents of two subdivisions in
Hutto explaining the situation.
Kirtz blamed the problems on subcontractors hired by Lennar,
but she did not name them.
To fix the homes, workers were reinstalling the drywall, Kirtz
said, but after the repairs started last year, the workers
discovered a less invasive process. They now make the repairs
through the attic, she said, so the residents don't have to
move out.
She acknowledged the soil is part of the problem but said the
ultimate cause was too little space between the nails attaching
the roof to the drywall. "Match that with foundations moving as
they should, and that was causing the cracking in the ceiling
lines," Kirtz said.
Some homeowners and housing advocates say the repairs aren't
enough. One resident, Mike Crump, started a Web site,
www.searchhutto.com, where homeowners
share horror stories.
Charles Fain, 44, operates a page on YouTube where he posts
videos of interviews with HuttoParke residents and homes still
under construction. A former schoolteacher who now works in
customer relations at Dell, Fain bought his home in 2004 after
seeing a sign for zero down payment on a new home. He has put
about $17,000 into his home, he said. The appraisal district
last valued the home at $103,000; Fain paid $119,000. He's not
sure if it has decreased in value because of what has happened
in the neighborhood.
Lennar's Web site prices new homes in HuttoParke from $137,490
to $161,490.
Fain decided to run for the Hutto City Council in May because
he said some members of the council weren't responsive to the
HuttoParke residents' problems. He's running against McDowell,
who retired from his staff job to seek a council seat.
City staff members hope the city's new codes, to be developed
with public input and council discussion in the next year, will
prevent problems. But critics say the city and home builders
are being dismissive of the more serious concerns.
Precautions for building on clay
Janet Ahmad, president of the San Antonio-based Homeowners for
Better Building, said her organization has heard complaints
statewide the past three or four years about nails popping out
of walls. She said the ones in HuttoParke are caused by
problems in the foundation and extra wall movement, based on
her experience working with homeowners.
She says home builders in Texas should be held to stricter
codes. In areas with expansive soil, builders should bring in
more stable soil on which to put foundations, grade the front
and back lawns, and take other measures to make sure
foundations are secure.
The dirt below Hutto expands more than that of the rocky land
west of Austin, said Mike Risinger, a soil scientist with the
state.
The Hutto soil shrinks when dry and swells when wet. If a
portion of land below one side of a home gets wet but the other
side is dry, Risinger said, the house will shift, and
foundation slabs can crack.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources
Conservation Service has determined that most of the land in
Hutto is made up of the most expansive type of clay.
According to the department, the soil is
"very limited" for building, with weaknesses that
"generally cannot be overcome without major soil
reclamation, special design, or expensive installation
procedures." The agency recommends several
precautions during construction to counteract the soil's
weaknesses.
Building plans submitted to the city for HuttoParke homes
stipulated that the foundations be constructed for clay soil
with a high movement rate and included instructions such as
replacing the clay with a more sturdy filler. Both Lennar and
the city said the homes were built according to those
plans.
The area around Manor has similar soil, according to soil
scientists. The city hasn't had problems with new homes, said
development director Tom Bolt. However, the foundations of many
homes built in the 1930s and 1940s have had to be replaced.
Complaints and more
In Hutto, Fain has been meeting with elected officials to get
more help. For most disgruntled homeowners, the process
involves filing a complaint or requesting an outside inspection
through the Texas Residential Construction Commission.
Twenty-one people in Hutto have complained to the commission in
the past three years. Of those, eight complaints were about
Lennar Homes, and all eight cases have been resolved or
closed.
About 40 Hutto homeowners have hired a law firm in Austin to
help them resolve their problems.
Attorneys Amy Welborn and Richard Alexander say no lawsuit has
been filed and wouldn't say whether one would be, but they said
some things were not revealed to their clients when they
purchased their homes.
Several homeowners used government-backed loans to purchase
their homes, and in the applications, Lennar indicated the
homes were not built on expansive soil, even though the city
says they were. Kirtz said marking the wrong box on the loan
application was a clerical error.
The federal government investigated five
claims in HuttoParke after prompting by U.S. Rep. John Carter,
R-Round Rock, said Patricia A. Campbell, a spokeswoman for the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Officials at the Denver Homeownership Center, a HUD agency,
concluded that under the home warranties, Lennar is obligated
to take care of any defects in two of the homes. In
those cases, the government won't be doing anything further,
Campbell said in an e-mail.
Two other cases are still under review. One case was
dropped.
Source: http://www.statesman.com/news/content/news/stories/local/04/22/0422hutto.html
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