garage doors oakland county mi

garage doors oakland county mi

garage doors norfolk and suffolk

Garage Doors Oakland County Mi

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There’s a lot that goes into building a new home. With more than 50 years of homebuilding experience, we’ve developed a collaborative construction process that homebuyers can easily follow. From your initial meeting with your sales representative and construction coordinator to the day you receive the keys to your new home, our team of homebuilding specialists will guide you through the construction process and ensure your homebuilding experience is seamless and successful. At the preconstruction meeting, you will have the opportunity to sit down with your construction coordinator and sales manager to ask specific questions regarding the construction of your new home. Your construction coordinator will review every aspect of your home from the placement on the home site to a review of your interior selections. Your construction coordinator will also be able to set expectations regarding the construction process and building timeline specific to your new Lombardo Home. At this time, your new Lombardo Home will transform from a vacant piece of land to a busy construction site.




During this process, your basement will be excavated, your foundation footings and walls will be poured, a waterproofing membrane will be sprayed on the outside of your basement walls, drain tile and peastone will be laid around the perimeter of your foundation, your home will be backfilled and the trenching and block work for your garage will be installed. During this process, your construction coordinator will conduct the first of several quality inspections. At the rough framing stage, your dream home will begin to take shape. The structural steel, lumber, floor system and engineered roof trusses will be delivered to your home and one of Lombardo Homes’ highly skilled sub-contractor carpentry crews will begin to craft your new home. Upon completion of rough framing, your construction coordinator will complete the Frame In-Line Inspection to confirm that your home is being constructed to your unique specifications. Over the next several days, you will see your home transform from an empty shell into a functional home.




This is when plumbing, heating and cooling and electrical components will be installed. After the rough mechanicals have been completed, an energy seal package will be installed on your home. This ensures there is not any air infiltration into your home that could cause unnecessary costs in your heating and cooling bills. Once all of your rough mechanicals are installed, the local building department will conduct several inspections to ensure the mechanical components of your home comply with municipal building codes. Upon the approval of all necessary inspections, your construction coordinator will complete a Rough Mechanical In-Line Inspection to verify that all of components of the mechanical system are installed to Lombardo Homes specifications. You will be contacted near this point of construction to meet your construction coordinator at your new home for your pre-drywall orientation meeting. During this meeting you will walk your new home to inspect the inner workings, view the quality of the products installed, verify the optional features selected and review the timeline for the remaining construction schedule.




Now that you have had an opportunity to review the status of your home and all required inspections have been conducted, you will see your new home come to life. First, insulation will be installed and then several stages of drywall installation will take place. Around the time that drywall work has begun, you will also see the exterior components of your new home begin to take shape. This is when exterior features, such as brick and siding, will be installed. During this phase of construction, your construction coordinator will confirm the quality of drywall installation, as well as the exterior features of your new Lombardo Home. Interior & Exterior Finishes When the drywall is complete, things will begin moving very quickly. Almost every day there will be something new going on in your home. First, the interior trim consisting of your interior doors, base moldings and cabinets will be installed. Next, your construction coordinator will conduct the Trim/Spot In-Line Inspection to confirm the quality of the interior trim and drywall prior to painting the interior of your home.




During this phase of construction, you will also see the remaining items on the exterior of your home take shape, including the driveway, sidewalks, porch posts, garage doors and exterior painting. Because your home is being built in an ever-changing climate, these items may be completed at different stages of construction depending on the weather and time of year. Once we have ensured that the trim and drywall are ready for paint, the interior of your home will be painted, flooring will be installed and countertops will be put in place. Once this is done, your final mechanicals will be installed. This will consist of your plumbing fixtures, light fixtures, plugs and switches and floor registers. As soon as your interior finishes are in, your house will be cleaned, carpet will be installed and your construction coordinator will conduct the Completed Home In-Line Inspection to ensure your new home is move-in ready. New Home Orientation Walk Once your new home has passed all of the required municipal inspections, received a Certificate of Occupancy, and the construction coordinator has completed the final quality in-line inspection, you and a representative from our third party warranty company will complete a very detailed walk through of your new home.




During this meeting, you will not only inspect the entire home but you will also be educated on all the inner-workings of your new home. In an effort to reduce the number of deaths to children who become entrapped under garage doors with automatic openers, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) today issued final rules for automatic residential garage door openers. The rules, which will be published in the Federal Register, include revised entrapment protection requirements for all automatic residential garage door openers manufactured on or after January 1, 1993 for sale in the United States. The rules also include certification requirements and recordkeeping requirements for garage door opener manufacturers. The entrapment protection requirements are part of a Congressional mandate in the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 1990. The legislation requires that automatic residential garage door openers manufactured on or after January 1, 1991 conform to the entrapment protection requirements of the Underwriters Laboratories (UL) Standard for Safety, UL 325.




The legislation also requires that residential garage door openers manufactured on or after January 1, 1993 comply with additional entrapment protection requirements developed by UL. The rules issued today specify these additional entrapment protection requirements. The revised standard requires that residential garage door openers contain one of the following:-External entrapment protection device, such as an "electric eye" which "sees" an object obstructing the door without having actual contact with the object. Another similar device would be a door edge sensor. The door edge sensor acts much like the door edge sensors on elevator doors.-Constant contact control button which is a wall-mounted button requiring a person to hold in the control button continuously for the door to close completely. If the button is released before the door closes, the door would reverse and open to the highest position. The remote control transmitter will not close the door with this option.Additionally, all newly-manufactured garage door openers must include a sticker warning consumers of the potential entrapment hazard.




The sticker is to be placed near the wall mounted control button. The entrapment protection requirements are aimed at reducing the potential for entrapment between the edge of the garage door and the floor. Since 1982, the Commission received reports of 54 children between the ages of two and 14 who died after becoming entrapped under doors with automatic garage door openers. CPSC urges consumers with automatic garage door openers to test the openers according to the manufacturer's recommendations, to make sure they have a reversing feature. The reversing feature should then be tested monthly. If the door fails to reverse, adjust the door according to the owner's manual or have it inspected by a professional repairman. Additionally, owners of automatic garage door openers should teach their children about garage door safety and keep transmitters and remote controls out of children's reach. The certification and recordkeeping requirements issued today finalize rules proposed by the Commission on March 18, 1992.




The certification rule takes effect 30 days after publication in the Federal Register. The rule requires a label on automatic residential garage door openers indicating that the opener conforms with the entrapment protection requirements of the rule. The label allows consumers to distinguish between complying and non-complying garage door openers. The label is standardized for non-UL listed garage door openers; UL listed openers can continue to use the UL logo as a certificate of compliance. The recordkeeping rule, which also takes effect 30 days after publication in the Federal Register, requires manufacturers to maintain written records of tests that demonstrate the basis for certification. CPSC is issuing these rules as part of its mission to protect the public from unreasonable risks of injury and death associated with consumer products. The Commission's objective is to reduce the estimated 28.5 million injuries and 21,600 deaths associated each year with the 15,000 different types of consumer products under CPSC's jurisdiction.




The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is charged with protecting the public from unreasonable risks of injury or death associated with the use of thousands of types of consumer products under the agency’s jurisdiction. Deaths, injuries, and property damage from consumer product incidents cost the nation more than $1 trillion annually. CPSC is committed to protecting consumers and families from products that pose a fire, electrical, chemical orCPSC's work to help ensure the safety of consumer products - such as toys, cribs, power tools, cigarette lighters and household chemicals -– contributed to a decline in the rate of deaths and injuries associated with consumer products over the past 40 years. Federal law bars any person from selling products subject to a publicly-announced voluntary recall by a manufacturer or a mandatory recall ordered by the To report a dangerous product or a product-related injury go online to www.SaferProducts.gov or call CPSC's Hotline at 800-638-2772 or teletypewriter at

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