Hi...
Im looking at a 1930 log home to purchase. I looked at it today, and it is known as a fixer upper. It has no basement and a very tiny crawl space and looks as i it is standing on blocks. The bottom row of logs on the house, particularly in the back of the house is completely dry rotted or has termite damage. The walls, however are straight, not bowed, though there has been some settling over the years, particularly in the chimney and one window in the back of the house. I am wondering if the entire foundation needs to be replaced. There are also some logs that will need to be replaced due to termite damage. You can see daylight from inside the house in one section.
I wonder if any of you can tell me if replacing the logs is a difficult task and if it is very very expensive... and is the bottom row of logs actually structural in nature? Like I said, it is a fixer upper, and the price of the house is very low for the area, but If I can figure out what this would entail, I may do it anyway. Thanks
Kathleen








Joined: 2008-01-05