Mennonite Built Home versus cement
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Larry
Early this year I bought a Mennonite built home in Placencia Village. The home was built in 2000, and was one of the few survivors in this area of the 2001 hurricane. Everything was in good shape, except the 9ft hardwood support post had cracked and weathered, and the original concrete support pads had shifted a bit causing level problems in parts of the house.
The first thing I did was have a crew put temporary supports between the original post so we could put a full concrete foundation, with lots of rebar and 10"x10' concrete rebar reinforced post replacing the original post. Re-leveling the house on the new posts. Work was completed about two weeks before Earl hit.
I would strongly suggest you go with a full concrete base and post avoiding cold joints from the start and avoid in the future needing to do what I had to do. Get a local contractor to do the concrete work.
A full concrete base under your Mennonite house will also get you cheaper hurricane insurance rates.
My true cost is hard to pin down because of factors unique to this houses now land locked location. Over the last decade new buildings cut off direct road access to the main road used to bring the house in originally. All new materials had to be brought in by wheelbarrow from several hundred feet away. Plus I acted as my own general contractor, using trusted workers recommended by people I know and trust. Most materials and supplies were bought from the largest lumber/concrete supplier in the area.
Effectively my house was built backwards.
It was built on wooden post supported by small concrete pads in 2000, served the previous owners well and in 2016 I put the current concrete foundation/posts under it. I am not familiar with the names any of the Mennonite builders.
Now, if we have to build a regular concrete /cement type home - what will be the cost? who to approach? how the costs compare? I want even roof to be concrete slab, to avoid problems with leaks and winds; hurricanes etc. Anybody has done this already?
Thanks in advance
Terrymaya wrote:Just wondering if the wood upper was well insulated. I have the same setup but haven't been here in the hot months yet. I have heavy insulation and metal roof.
I am the 2nd owner of an old school Mennonite home built in 2000. We are located in Placencia Village, about a minutes walk to the beach. In 2001 it survived a direct hit from Hurricane Iris with only a small puncture of the metal roof from a wind blown tree branch. Iris had 145 mph winds when it came ashore. The house at the time was on 10 foot tall hardwood posts. In 2016 shortly after i bought it, I replace the 18"x18"x16" concrete supports and hardwood posts with a real concrete foundation and concrete post. I was back in Texas two weeks later when Earl came ashore north of us. Happily again no damage, although with max winds of 85 mph when it came ashore, Earl was not a real test like Iris was. locals told me and pictures from the internet show Iris left vast destruction all over the village, including destroyed structures a short distance away.
My question is, what type of insulation is in your house, and how do you control insects that love to reside in insulation in wooden homes here in the tropics?
I am asking because I am considering replacing the original mahogany slat windows with modern three panel sliding glass windows and putting A/C in the bedrooms.
The wooden walls were lined with tar paper (roofing felt) before the dry wall put in place that is all the insulation I have.
Terrymaya wrote:Hey Will, the problem with sliding pane windows is that only about half the window surface can let the breeze through when open and some days there is so little breeze that every little bit helps. That is when you might wish you had your louvers back. They utilize the whole window opening. That being said, I have some year around neighbors that put a window shaker in their bedroom and even with louvers it makes all the difference in the world on a hot, still night. Also you can replace the wood louvers for either clear or tinted glass and let the light in when they are closed. I went with dark tinted glass and when every window is open even a little breeze moves easily through the house. I also faced my house in the direction of the prevailing wind and it enters the front and goes right through the whole house. I know your house is already built but I only mention it for those getting ready to build. My house is not square on my lot but so what?
Yes I am aware of the window opening/airflow sizes, that is why I mentioned three panel windows. All three of the window manufacturers in spanish lookout now make horizontal sliding windows with three panels, that allow a 2/3 opening of the total window area. I plan to use tinted glass in all windows, and safety glass in windows not facing the water or sidewalk. Windows facing the water and sidewalk will have according style storm shutters I can pull closed from inside the house.
LOL,what is a window shaker? Fortunately the original owners had the house face into the prevailing winds when they put the house on the lot back in 2000. The offset makes it easy to spot on google maps. 
The toads are bigger and much uglier than the frogs and if the dogs even lick them they are so toxic it causes vomiting and frothing at the mouth, should an animal eat one it is usually fatal. Had to take one dog to the vet for licking toads but we thought he had rabies. I so would love to know of something I could do to deter the toads from returning in the dry season.
The frogs usually turn up about late February and the Toads about May, then all usually vanish all at once virtually overnight around November or the end of the year. They seem to like coming onto the concrete covered verandah on the ground floor which gives them a good echo chamber.
My son has lived in/on our property for 4 years with only short breaks of a few days to 2 weeks. I am still having to come and go as My Husband isn't wanting to retire yet. I do get out several times a year at different times I Managed 15 weeks over 7 trips last year, some with husband and some with other family members and some just me.
@Terrymaya how much did that cost you if you don’t mind me asking?
@rmloose1978 Hello and welcome !
Sorry but it's been 5 years since that member last logged in.
I would suggest that you open a new thread on the Belize forum to enquire from active members.
All the best
Bhavna
I had a shell built on 9' concrete posts with a block garage and enclosed stairwell for $33,000. The same Mennonite contractor is now doing a bit smaller version without the garage for $45,000. I can send you more info if you need it.
@Terrymaya Thank you for that information. Would you share that information with me as well. We are beginning to build and not sure if we should bring our RV to live in while our home is being built... not sure if we should go with concrete home or wood Mennonite home.... would appreciate any input please. Thank you
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