This pool and extended patio project was a disaster from the beginning, and continued to make our lives miserable even after the Company's carelessness caused a major flood in our new house where we had only lived for six weeks, which required all the walls and part of the ceilings in our Master Bedroom, Living Room and Dining Room (one entire side of the house) to be compleripped to the studs. We had to have new insulation, new sheetrock, have that mudded and taped, retextured, repainted, all the windows and doors had to have new sills and framing and the crown moulding had to be replaced and all the new carpeting and padding in the master bedroom had to be replaced. We have had to have our new Graber roman shades replaced when they were water soaked, have our security system disconnected for several weeks and then reconnected after the wall and windows were replaced. In addition, the ceiling of the existing covered patio had to be completely replaced as it was not designed to get wet and it was soaked, stained and sagging after the rain. All of that damage was the result of a failure to tarp or cover the roof of the house which was left exposed after they tore off existing shingles and tarpaper to place a new patio cover on it. They did not finish the work that day, left at 5:00 PM, and that night (or actually at 4:15 AM the next morning) we received nearly 3 inches of rain from a thunderstorm that poured through the unsheltered roof of the house and completely soaked the walls, ceiling, fireplace, windows, window frames and sills of the 3 large rooms mentioned. We had so much rain pouring in through ceiling AC vents and ceiling speakers that we ran out of pots and containers and towels to try to contain even some of it.
We were unable to use any of those primary living, sleeping and eating rooms during the repair time (nearly 3 weeks) and the dirt, dust, smell and activity every day of the many strangers working in our fully furnished home, at all hours of the day without any sort of schedule being adhered to, was a constant indignity and major stressor to our entire family and our inside pet. We were unable to leave the house due to hundreds of thousands of dollars of antiques, art, furniture etc., that would have been left unsupervised and unsecured in our absence. We also both have businesses that we run from our home office. During the repair, a Tiffany-style lamp, a crystal candleholder, a wineglass, a crystal cut vase and a wine bottle were all dropped to the floor and either destroyed or damaged irreparably, when a tarp, which had been attached to the lamp instead of the wall or a cabinet by Puryear's employee, was pulled off of a table, dragging all the objects to the groung. We also had subsequent damage (chips and cracks) to a lovely Travertine tile floor when heavy furniture was piled on it to remove and replace soaked carpeting and pad.
Failure to communicate between the different factions of the main contracting pool company (uryear) with all its subcontractors was a huge factor, with one contractor damaging or destroying what the first one had just completed, requiring it to be repaired or redone (see below). Lack of supervision on the job site led to constant and repeated mistakes by the mostly non-English speaking work teams, who often arrived with out any instructions or plans, and who then came to us to see if we had any drawings of "what it was supposed to look like", since there was no supervisor on site. When a supervisor did rarely show up, it was for only a few minutes, and he spent most of that time away from the pool area talking on the phone and smoking. He would then leave without ever speaking to us. Corporate management of the employees from the top down appeared to be non-existant, with the self-professed "owner" (who is a "Vice President") taking no active part in determining whether work is done or not, and whether it is satisfactorily performed, relying instead on the claims and reports of the very employees who are negligent and/or failed to do what was promised in the first place and/or actually caused the damage.
They made mistakes on the size of the spa; the size of the patio; the size and number of steps down to the pool area; the forms for the concrete; the type of extended patio and deck (the subcontractors were sent with the plans and materials to construct a 4 post pergula instead of the correct plans for an extended Arbor to be attached to and over the existing deck and roof); cut all the way through to the inside of the dining room wall with an electric saw when working on the extended patio (and didn't mention it to us); laid the gas line outside our property line and it had to be moved; put in the wrong size of the tequila table in the pool, as well as having to be reminded repeatedly to affix the new one permanently to its stand; the type of plaster (they couldn't find the original order for that and the tile and coping - some sort of "filing problem"); they ran a tractor into the side of the house damaging bricks and foundation concrete, and another tractor was driven into the back of the retaining wall of the pool 3 times, rquiring more rock work to be redone; they dragged a heavy saw over new flagstone rock work on the spa causing substantial repair work; after heavy rains had to be repeatedly aske and either drain the deep end of the pool or put shock treatment in the several feet of dirty water which collected and remained there for several weeks, which was attracting mosquitoes during a "West Nile Virus" outbreak; failed or forgot to put acid in the pool during its initial "acid bath" period (this is supposed to occur immediately after the plaster is added and water is put in the pool, according to them) which wasn't discovered for 9 days, until the startup was scheduled, and then the chemicals had to be finally added and another acid bath period had to be completed before the pool could finally be started (another wait of 5 days); Then when we could finally get in the pool (after eleven weeks from first dig), we found our feet and hands (and any other body part that touched the sides or bottom of the pool or spa were turning blue, and every place in the pool that was touched by either our bodies or by the vacuun was "smudged" and showed our prints and the tracks of the vacuum and the plasterer's had to be recontacted and we have reason to suspect they put way too much acid in when they finally added it to try to make up for the 9 days that were lost. We were told we would hav to continue to vigorously sweep thol 2 - 3 times a day for at least another month to try to get rid of the blue stain and marks on the pool. No good news for folks in their mid to late 60's with multiple back surgeries (which was why we wanted the pool in the first place - for doctor recommended therapy).
to continiue, they also cut a speaker wire underneath a rock retaining wall in spite of a large, visible pole and flag identifying it and being told each time they worked in that area to be careful of it, requiring a new trench to be dug from the house to the far end of the pool and a wire to be worked underneath the stone retaining wall. The wrought iron fence (separate company they contract with) was nice, but the contractors on that were not given proper dimensions for the gates (which had to allow for a riding mower to pass through) and some of the fence posts had to be changed, necessitating additional tiome to pull up some posts that were set in concrete and reconstruct new ones. In addition, when the rain guttering and french drains were reconnected, or at some time shortly thereafter, they tore a large hole in the french drain pipe, causing water to bubble up forcefully in the flower bed instead of where it was supposed to run off, and a long drain pipe had to be replaced before we could complete the landscape (another 3 - 4 hour unnecessary job). They