Monday, September 12, 2011
 
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Building trades class hammering out the next house

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[September 12, 2011]  Twenty students in Justin Dietrich's building trades class are back to the blueprints with a new construction project on North Sherman Street. The Lincoln Community High School program cranked out a new animal shelter and office building last year for the Humane Society of Logan County. The brick structure sits on the north side of town, on old Route 66. With that project completed, the juniors and seniors in the current class are back into home building.

Thursday the first morning crew was finishing the floor beams. Instructor Justin Dietrich said there could be subfloor by the end of the week. (Rain squelched that plan.)

"We'll need to hit it hard now while the weather is good," Dietrich said. "Every day we avoid rain and it is warm moves us that much closer to getting a roof on." Even with rain delays, he expects to be adding trusses by mid-October.

The class uses the most energy-efficient products possible, so the house is a green structure.

Seniors Hayden Matson and Jade Leake were on the crew that built the Humane Society building. They both had some construction skills before entering building trades class --Matson because his family members are in construction; and Leake went along on installation jobs when his father owned Leake Antenna Service. 

"This is different than the Humane Society," Matson said. "First, that was a flat slab and this has a crawl space. The inside was different than a house, so we had different spaces to work with."

The first two weeks of school time are spent in the classroom learning safety guidelines and how to use tools and equipment, no matter how simple it may seem.

"We spend time in class learning safety stuff and how to use a tape measure," Matson said with a smile, "but if someone hasn't used these tools before, they need to know how to hold them, what to use them for and what not to do."

"You learn things the first two weeks that you will actually use," Leake explained. "Not everyone has been around building, and they need to understand it."

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The Sherman Street site will be a three-bedroom, two-bath home with 1,586 square feet of living space. There will be a two-car garage on the back, with entry on the side. The house will be handicapped-accessible. A rear patio will be situated in an "L" where the house and garage connect. The natural roofline will provide shelter. It will be a private space away from the street and afternoon sun.

"When we get the roof on and the house is enclosed," Dietrich explained, "we can bring out some heaters and start on the interior.

"There will be two guys per room, to give them ownership of their work," he continued, "so they can see their progress and watch it come together. 

"It will take us the entire year to finish everything, and then we have an open house for parents to see the students' spaces they built," Dietrich said. "It is sellable by May. We have it appraised and it goes on the market. Hopefully it will sell quickly, and we'll be looking at the next project." 

We will follow the building trades project as it moves forward and report its progress with updated information and pictures.

[By MARLA BLAIR]

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