Well, sorry for the delay but this weekend didn't go as planned. The doors were supposed to be delivered on Wednesday, but they're delayed. The GC thinks they must have been damaged in shipping as they have to be rebuilt and now the ETA is May 15.
Since the doors weren't being installed, the GC bumped up the stucco top coat. The primer went on Thursday, top coat on Friday.
I was super busy Thursday and didn't get a chance to look at anything until I got home Friday...
When I came home Friday, the first thing I noticed was that my back gate was destroyed. I looked up the video on my cameras and saw the stucco guys catch the gate with their trailer as they were hauling off the scaffolding. Then I looked at the garage, the stucco looks fantastic, however they didn't mask anything when they did the primer on Thursday. All the dark brown trim that we painted is covered with overspray and a good portion of it is going to require repainting. I was under the impression that there would be some touch up after the stucco, but this is above and beyond what I should have expected. I'm working it out with the GC to see how I'm going to be compensated for the sloppy paint and gate, so no pictures of that for now.
I will show the gate though, Amber and I busted our butts this weekend to make sure we had a gate by Sunday afternoon so I didn't have to leave my yard wide open. Here's what I came home to on Friday.
My GC was unaware this happened, the sub supposedly knocked on my door, but I wasn't home obviously.
I had big plans to make that gate wider with a custom sliding gate that would go around the corner, but that was a big project that I wasn't going to be able to get to for a while, however if you look in the first picture you can see the gate wasn't in that great of shape to begin with. The previous owner of the house made the "threshold" about 10" higher than grade which makes it difficult to get in and out of, the panels were also standard 70" panels that had been narrowed to 66" so the gate wasn't very wide. Both of these things made it difficult to get trailers in and out of (as the sub realised). If you look at the fence the end column is just strapped to the column next to it. This is because Amber drove the trailer into the back yard once... I'll leave it at that.
Because of all of this I just decided to do the gate right. We rented a jackhammer and took out the 1 foot thick threshold and the damaged column. I bought new 70" panels and hardware and picked up some 11 gauge 3x3" square tubing. We lowered the threshold by about 6" and repoured an 8" thick curb and set the posts into it.
That was all done Saturday, it hit 100°F for the second day in a row Saturday... Sunday we assembled the gate. I did end up taking the shop truck out to return the redwood slats we bought (only about 1/2 of them would actually fit, the rest were too warped or too wide) and swapped them for composite slats. It's much nicer driving through the gate with the lower curb and the new gate looks fantastic.
I still need to finish up a few things on the gate, I ordered a locking latch for it and I need to weld the hinges to the posts (they're just Tek screwed on right now). It was an unexpected pain in the butt, but it looks good!
Once I get the paint touched up I'll post some pictures of the stucco, it just looks so bad right now it pisses me off and I don't want to post any pictures of it.
Since the doors are delayed though, I'm working on getting the garage floor epoxy coated and the GC is working on getting the final inspection done so I can start working on wiring.
Also an update on the lights, they're incredibly bright. Those two lights light up the whole garage pretty nicely, I'm not sure how many of the 20 I bought that I'm going to end up using, I think it would be way too bright if I used all of them.