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#1
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We want to build a pier on our weekend property...and a bulkhead as well.
Do you guys know a site that has helpful hints, etc? Maybe some pictures of construction? Thanks Mark please send to my email address |
#2
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"mrQ" wrote in :
We want to build a pier on our weekend property...and a bulkhead as well. Do you guys know a site that has helpful hints, etc? Maybe some pictures of construction? Thanks Mark please send to my email address You're out of luck. Piers, and particularly bulkheads are specific to a given site. The anchoring is particularly critical and can vary greatly from as little as a hundred feet or so up and down the shoreline. Your best bet is to talk to the owners of the nearest bulkheads and piers, find out as much as they know, and get the names of the outfits who did the work. Then contact them for estimates. In a proper proposal it will be apparent what is needed, and that leads to the how. In which case you can make a decision as to how much of the work you can do, and how much will have to be contracted out. g'Luk Didereaux -- MonteP "Let bygones be bygones...send a concilliatory PRETZEL to the Whitehouse!" "Against stupidity, the very gods themselves contend in vain." - Friedrich von Schiller "Ignorant voracity -- a wingless vulture -- can soar only into the depths of ignominy." Patrick O'Brian |
#3
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![]() Your best bet is to talk to the owners of the nearest bulkheads and piers, find out as much as they know, and get the names of the outfits who did the work. Then contact them for estimates. In a proper proposal it will be apparent what is needed, and that leads to the how. In which case you can make a decision as to how much of the work you can do, and how much will have to be contracted out. g'Luk Didereaux Agree, however, I suggest you also inquire about the permits.. Depending on what body of water your property is on, you may have difficulty in getting permits for any work on the shore line (even if you own it). If it is a US coastal water front or regional water front, the Dept of Natural Resources seems to have the final say about work or construction on the water front. Some times the UA Army Corp of Engineers gets involved with construction details and plans. Recently there have been restriction placed on using creosote treated pilings in any water front construction. Now there talking about restriction on the 'green' treated stuff (has arsenic). As I travel around the Pac. Northwest waterfront, both commercial and private, I am discouraged by the vast number of docks and bulkhead that have gone into disrepair, primarily because of the cost and gov. red tape, just to replace pilings. Good luck. Steve s/v Good Intentions |
#4
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I don't know anything about the cost involved but there has been a
tendency towards concrete dock/breakwaters in the pacific north west. you may have less problems with polution and the permance of the structure. Check friday harbour for a large dock/breakwater of this design. Tom Steve wrote: Your best bet is to talk to the owners of the nearest bulkheads and piers, find out as much as they know, and get the names of the outfits who did the work. Then contact them for estimates. In a proper proposal it will be apparent what is needed, and that leads to the how. In which case you can make a decision as to how much of the work you can do, and how much will have to be contracted out. g'Luk Didereaux Agree, however, I suggest you also inquire about the permits.. Depending on what body of water your property is on, you may have difficulty in getting permits for any work on the shore line (even if you own it). If it is a US coastal water front or regional water front, the Dept of Natural Resources seems to have the final say about work or construction on the water front. Some times the UA Army Corp of Engineers gets involved with construction details and plans. Recently there have been restriction placed on using creosote treated pilings in any water front construction. Now there talking about restriction on the 'green' treated stuff (has arsenic). As I travel around the Pac. Northwest waterfront, both commercial and private, I am discouraged by the vast number of docks and bulkhead that have gone into disrepair, primarily because of the cost and gov. red tape, just to replace pilings. Good luck. Steve s/v Good Intentions |
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