|








|
| Glossary of
Construction Terms |
A B
C D
E F
G H
I J
K L
M N
O P
Q R
S T
U V
W
X Y Z
A
|
A/C |
An abbreviation for air
conditioner or air conditioning.
|
|
A/C Condenser |
The outside fan unit of
the Air Conditioning system. It removes
the heat from the freon gas and "turns"
the gas back into a liquid and pumps the
liquid back to the coil in the furnace.
|
|
A/C Disconnect |
The main electrical
ON-OFF switch near the A/C Condenser. |
|
Aerator |
The round screened screw
-on tip of a sink spout. It mixes water
and air for a smooth flow.
|
|
Aggregate |
A mixture of sand and
stone and a major component of concrete.
|
|
Air space
|
The area between
insulation facing and interior of
exterior wall coverings. Normally a 1"
air gap. |
|
Allowance(s)
|
A sum of money set aside
in the construction contract for items
which have not been selected and
specified in the construction contract.
For example, selection of tile as a
flooring may require an allowance for an
underlayment material, or an electrical
allowance which sets aside an amount of
money to be spent on electrical
fixtures. |
|
Amortization
|
A payment plan by
which a loan is reduced through monthly
payments of principal and interest.
|
|
Anchor bolts |
Bolts to secure a
wooden sill plate to concrete , or
masonry floor or wall.
|
|
Annual Percentage Rate
(APR) |
Annual cost of
credit over the life of a loan,
including interest, service charges,
points, loan fees, mortgage insurance,
and other items. |
|
Appraisal |
An expert valuation of
property. |
|
Apron |
A trim board that
is installed beneath a window sill
|
|
Architect
|
One who has
completed a course of study in building
and design, and is licensed by the state
as an architect. One who draws up plans.
|
|
Area wells |
Corrugated metal or
concrete barrier walls installed around
a basement window to hold back the earth
|
|
Assessment
|
A tax levied on a
property, or a value placed on the worth
of a property. |
|
Assumption
|
Allows a buyer to
assume responsibility for an existing
loan instead of getting a new loan.
|
|
Astragal |
A molding, attached
to one of a pair of swinging double
doors, against which the other door
strikes. |
|
Attic access |
An opening that is
placed in the drywalled ceiling of a
home providing access to the attic.
|
|
Attic Ventilators |
In houses, screened
openings provided to ventilate an attic
space. |
Back to top
B
|
Back Charge |
Billings for work
performed or costs incurred by one party
that, in accordance with the agreement,
should have been performed or incurred
by the party to whom billed. Owners bill
back charges to general contractors, and
general contractors bill back charges to
subcontractors. Examples of back charges
include charges for cleanup work or to
repair something damaged by another
subcontractor, such as a tub chip or
broken window. |
|
Backfill |
The replacement of
excavated earth into a trench around or
against a basement /crawl space
foundation wall. |
|
Backing |
Frame lumber
installed between the wall studs to give
additional support for drywall or an
interior trim related item, such as
handrail brackets, cabinets, and towel
bars. In this way, items are screwed and
mounted into solid wood rather than weak
drywall that may allow the item to break
loose from the wall. Carpet backing
holds the pile fabric in place.
|
|
Backout |
Work the framing
contractor does after the mechanical
subcontractors (Heating-Plumbing
Electrical) finish their phase of work
at the Rough (before insulation) stage
to get the home ready for a municipal
frame inspection. Generally, the framing
contractor repairs anything disturbed by
others and completes all framing
necessary to pass a Rough Frame
Inspection. |
|
Ballast |
A transformer that
steps up the voltage in a florescent
lamp. |
|
Balloon
|
A loan that has a
series of monthly payments with the
remaining balance due in a large lump
sum payment at the end.
|
|
Balloon framed wall |
Framed walls
(generally over 10' tall) that run the
entire vertical length from the floor
sill plate to the roof. This is done to
eliminate the need for a gable end
truss. |
|
Balusters |
Vertical members in
a railing used between a top rail and
bottom rail or the stair treads.
Sometimes referred to as 'pickets' or
'spindles'. |
|
Balustrade |
The rail, posts and
vertical balusters along the edge of a
stairway or elevated walkway.
|
|
Barge |
Horizontal beam
rafter that supports shorter rafters.
|
|
Barge board |
A decorative board
covering the projecting rafter (fly
rafter) of the gable end. At the
cornice, this member is a fascia board.
|
|
Base or baseboard |
A trim board placed
against the wall around the room next to
the floor. |
|
Basement window inserts |
The window frame
and glass unit that is installed in the
window buck. |
|
Base shoe |
Molding used next
to the floor on interior base board.
Sometimes called a carpet strip.
|
|
Bat
|
A half-brick.
|
|
Batt
|
A section of fiber
glass or rock wool insulation measuring
15 or 23 inches wide by four to eight
feet long and various thickness'.
Sometimes "faced" (meaning to have a
paper covering on one side) or "unfaced"
(without paper). |
|
Batten |
Narrow strips of
wood used to cover joints or as
decorative vertical members over plywood
or wide boards. |
|
Bay window |
Any window space
projecting outward from the walls of a
building, either square or polygonal in
plan. |
|
Beam |
A structural member
transversely supporting a load. A
structural member carrying building
loads (weight) from one support to
another. Sometimes called a "girder".
|
|
Bearing partition |
A partition that
supports any vertical load in addition
to its own weight. |
|
Bearing point |
A point where a
bearing or structural weight is
concentrated and transferred to the
foundation |
|
Bearing wall |
A wall that
supports any vertical load in addition
to its own weight. |
|
Bearing header |
(a) A beam placed
perpendicular to joists and to which
joists are nailed in framing for a
chimney, stairway, or other opening. (b)
A wood lintel. (c) The horizontal
structural member over an opening (for
example over a door or window).
|
|
Bedrock |
A subsurface layer
of earth that is suitable to support a
structure. |
|
Bid |
A formal offer by a
contractor, in accordance with
specifications for a project, to do all
or a phase of the work at a certain
price in accordance with the terms and
conditions stated in the offer.
|
|
Bid bond |
A bond issued by a
surety on behalf of a contractor that
provides assurance to the recipient of
the contractor's bid that, if the bid is
accepted, the contractor will execute a
contract and provide a performance bond.
Under the bond, the surety is obligated
to pay the recipient of the bid the
difference between the contractor's bid
and the bid of the next lowest
responsible bidder if the bid is
accepted and the contractor fails to
execute a contract or to provide a
performance bond. |
|
Bid security
|
Funds or a bid bond
submitted with a bid as a guarantee to
the recipient of the bid that the
contractor, if awarded the contract,
will execute the contract in accordance
with the bidding requirements of the
contract documents. |
|
Bid shopping |
A practice by which
contractors, both before and after their
bids are submitted, attempt to obtain
prices from potential subcontractors and
material suppliers that are lower than
the contractors' original estimates on
which their bids are based, or after a
contract is awarded, seek to induce
subcontractors to reduce the subcontract
price included in the bid.
|
|
Bidding requirements |
The procedures and
conditions for the submission of bids.
The requirements are included ion
documents, such as the notice to
bidders, advertisements for bids,
instructions to bidders, invitations to
bid, and sample bid forms.
|
|
Bi-fold door |
Doors that are
hinged in the middle for opening in a
smaller area than standard swing doors.
Often used for closet doors.
|
|
Binder |
A receipt for a
deposit to secure the right to purchase
a home at an agreed terms by a buyer and
seller. |
|
Bypass doors |
Doors that slide by
each other and commonly used as closet
doors. |
|
Blankets |
Fiber-glass or
rock-wool insulation that comes in long
rolls 15 or 23 inches wide.
|
Blocked
(door blocking) |
Wood shims used
between the door frame and the vertical
structural wall framing members.
|
|
Blocked (rafters) |
Short "2 by 4's"
used to keep rafters from twisting, and
installed at the ends and at mid-span.
|
|
Blocking |
Small wood pieces
to brace framing members or to provide a
nailing base for gypsum board or
paneling. |
|
Block out |
To install a box or
barrier within a foundation wall to
prevent the concrete from entering an
area. For example, foundation walls are
sometimes "blocked" in order for
mechanical pipes to pass through the
wall, to install a crawl space door, and
to depress the concrete at a garage door
location. |
|
Blow insulation |
Fiber insulation in
loose form and used to insulate attics
and existing walls where framing members
are not exposed. |
|
Blue print(s)
|
A type of copying
method often used for architectural
drawings. Usually used to describe the
drawing of a structure which is prepared
by an architect or designer for the
purpose of design and planning,
estimating, securing permits and actual
construction. |
|
Blue stake |
Another phrase for
Utility Notification. This is when a
utility company (telephone, gas,
electric, cable TV, sewer and water,
etc) comes to the job site and locates
and spray paints the ground and/or
installs little flags to show where
their service is located underground.
|
|
Board foot |
A unit of measure
for lumber equal to 1 inch thick by 12
inches wide by 12 inches long. Examples:
1" x 12" x 16' = 16 board feet, 2" x 12"
x 16' = 32 board feet
|
|
Bond or bonding
|
An amount of money
(usually $5,000-$10,000) which must be
on deposit with a governmental agency in
order to secure a contractor's license.
The bond may be used to pay for the
unpaid bills or disputed work of the
contractor. Not to be confused with a 'performance
bond'. Such bonds are rarely used in
residential construction, they are an
insurance policy which guarantees proper
completion of a project.
|
|
Boom |
A truck used to
hoist heavy material up and into place.
To put trusses on a home or to set a
heavy beam into place.
|
|
Bottom chord
|
The lower or bottom
horizontal member of a truss.
|
|
Bottom plate |
The "2 by 4's or
6's" that lay on the subfloor upon which
the vertical studs are installed. Also
called the 'sole plate'.
|
|
Brace |
An inclined piece
of framing lumber applied to wall or
floor to strengthen the structure. Often
used on walls as temporary bracing until
framing has been completed.
|
|
Breaker panel |
The electrical box
that distributes electric power entering
the home to each branch circuit (each
plug and switch) and composed of circuit
breakers. |
|
Brick ledge |
Part of the
foundation wall where brick (veneer)
will rest. |
|
Brick lintel |
The metal angle
iron that brick rests on, especially
above a window, door, or other opening.
|
|
Brick mold |
Trim used around an
exterior door jamb that siding butts to.
|
|
Brick tie |
A small, corrugated
metal strip @ 1" X 6"- 8" long nailed to
wall sheeting or studs. They are
inserted into the grout mortar joint of
the veneer brick, and holds the veneer
wall to the sheeted wall behind it.
|
|
Brick veneer |
A vertical facing
of brick laid against and fastened to
sheathing of a framed wall or tile wall
construction. |
|
Bridging |
Small wood or metal
members that are inserted in a diagonal
position between the floor joists or
rafters at mid-span for the purpose of
bracing the joists/rafters & spreading
the load. |
|
Buck |
Often used in
reference to rough frame opening
members. Door bucks used in reference to
metal door frame. See Window Bucks
|
|
Builder's Risk Insurance |
Insurance coverage
on a construction project during
construction, including extended
coverage that may be added for the
contract for the customer's protections.
|
|
Building codes |
Community
ordinances governing the manner in which
a home may be constructed or modified.
|
|
Building insurance |
Insurance covering
the structure of the building.
|
|
Building paper |
A general term for
papers, felts, and similar sheet
materials used in buildings without
reference to their properties or uses.
Generally comes in long rolls.
|
|
Built-up roof |
A roofing composed
of three to five layers of asphalt felt
laminated with coal tar, pitch, or
asphalt. The top is finished with
crushed slag or gravel. Generally used
on flat or low
pitched roofs.
|
|
Bull nose (drywall) |
Rounded drywall
corners. |
|
Bundle
|
A package of
shingles. Normally, there are 3 bundles
per square and 27 shingles per bundle.
|
|
Butt edge |
The lower edge of
the shingle tabs. |
|
Butt hinge |
The most common
type. One leaf attaches to the door's
edge, the other to its jamb.
|
|
Butt joint |
The junction where
the ends of two timbers meet, and also
where sheets of drywall meet on the 4
foot edge. To place materials end-to-end
or end-to-edge without overlapping. |
|
Buy down |
A subsidy (usually
paid by a builder or developer) to
reduce monthly payments on a mortgage.
|
|
By fold door |
Doors that are
hinged in the middle for opening in a
smaller area than standard swing doors.
Often used for closet doors.
|
|
By pass doors |
Doors that slide by
each other and commonly used as closet
doors. |
Back to top
C
|
CO |
An abbreviation for
"Certificate of Occupancy". This
certificate is issued by the local
municipality and is required before
anyone can occupy and live within the
home. It is issued only after the local
municipality has made all inspections
and all monies and fees have been paid.
|
|
Caisson |
A 10" or 12"
diameter hole drilled into the earth and
embedded into bedrock 3 * 4 feet. The
structural support for a type of
foundation wall, porch, patio, monopost,
or other structure. Two or more "sticks"
of reinforcing bars (rebar) are inserted
into and run the full length of the hole
and concrete is poured into the caisson
hole |
|
Cantilever |
An overhang. Where
one floor extends beyond and over a
foundation wall. For example at a
fireplace location or bay window
cantilever. Normally, not extending over
2 feet. |
|
Cantilevered void |
Foundation void
material used in unusually expansive
soils conditions. This void is
"trapezoid" shaped and has vertical
sides of 6" and 4" respectively.
|
|
Cap |
The upper member of
a column, pilaster, door cornice,
molding, or fireplace.
|
|
Cap flashing |
The portion of the
flashing attached to a vertical surface
to prevent water from migrating behind
the base flashing. |
|
Capital |
The principal part
of a loan, i.e. the original amount
borrowed. |
|
Capital and interest |
A repayment loan
and the most conventional form of home
loan. The borrower pays an amount each
month to cover the amount borrowed (or
capital or principal) plus the
interest charged on capital.
|
|
Capped rate |
The mortgage
interest rate will not exceed a
specified value during a certain period
of time, but it will fluctuate up and
down below that level.
|
|
Casement |
Frames of wood or
metal enclosing part (or all) of a
window sash. May be opened by means of
hinges affixed to the vertical edges.
|
|
Casement Window |
A window with
hinges on one of the vertical sides and
swings open like a normal door
|
|
Casing |
Wood trim molding
installed around a door or window
opening. |
|
Caulking |
(1) A flexible
material used to seal a gap between two
surfaces e.g. between pieces of siding
or the corners in tub walls. (2) To fill
a joint with mastic or asphalt plastic
cement to prevent leaks.
|
CCA (Chromated
Copper Arsenate) |
A pesticide that is
forced into wood under high pressure to
protect it from termites, other wood
boring insects, and decay caused by
fungus |
|
Celotex ™ |
Black fibrous board
that is used as exterior sheathing.
|
|
Ceiling joist |
One of a series of
parallel framing members used to support
ceiling loads and supported in turn by
larger beams, girders or bearing walls.
Also called roof joists.
|
|
Cement |
The gray powder
that is the "glue" in concrete. Portland
cement. Also, any adhesive.
|
|
Ceramic tile |
A
man-made
or machine*made clay tile used to finish
a floor or wall. Generally used in
bathtub and shower enclosures and on
counter tops. |
|
CFM (cubic feet per
minute) |
A rating that
expresses the amount of air a blower or
fan can move. The volume of air
(measured in cubic feet) that can pass
through an opening in one minute.
|
|
Chair rail |
Interior trim
material installed about 3*4 feet up the
wall, horizontally. |
|
Chalk line |
A line made by
snapping a taut string or cord dusted
with chalk. Used for alignment purposes.
|
|
Change order |
A written document
which modifies the plans and
specifications and/or the price of the
construction Contract.
|
|
Chase |
A framed enclosed
space around a flue pipe or a channel in
a wall, or through a ceiling for
something to lie in or pass through.
|
|
Chink |
To install
fiberglass insulation around all
exterior door and window frames, wall
corners, and small gaps in the exterior
wall. |
|
Chip Board |
A manufactured wood
panel made out of 1"* 2" wood chips and
glue. Often used as a substitute for
plywood in the exterior wall and roof
sheathing. Also called OSB (Oriented
Strand Board) or wafer board.
|
|
Circuit |
The path of
electrical flow from a power source
through an outlet and back to ground.
|
|
Circuit Breaker |
A device which
looks like a switch and is usually
located inside the electrical breaker
panel or circuit breaker box. It is
designed to (1) shut of the power to
portions or all of the house and (2) to
limit the amount of power flowing
through a circuit (measured in amperes).
110 volt household circuits require a
fuse or circuit breaker with a rating of
15 or a maximum of 20 amps. 220 volt
circuits may be designed for higher
amperage loads e.g. a hot water heater
may be designed for a 30 amp load and
would therefore need a 30 amp fuse or
breaker. |
|
Class "A" |
Optimum fire rating
issued by Underwriter's Laboratories on
roofing. The building codes in some
areas require this type of roofing for
fire safety. |
|
Class "C" |
Minimum fire rating
issued by the Underwriters' Laboratories
for roofing materials.
|
|
Clean out |
An opening
providing access to a drain line. Closed
with a threaded plug.
|
|
Clip ties |
Sharp, cut metal
wires that protrude out of a concrete
foundation wall (that at one time held
the foundation form panels in place).
|
|
Cold air return |
The ductwork (and
related grills) that carries room air
back to the furnace for reheating.
|
|
Collar |
Preformed flange
placed over a vent pipe to seal the
roofing above the vent pipe opening.
Also called a vent sleeve.
|
|
Collar beam |
Nominal 1-or 2
inch-thick members connecting opposite
roof rafters. They serve to stiffen the
roof structure. |
|
Column |
A vertical
structural compression member which
supports loads. |
|
Combustion air |
The duct work
installed to bring fresh, outside air to
the furnace and/or hot water heater.
Normally 2 separate supplies of air are
brought in: One high and One low.
|
|
Combustion chamber |
The part of a
boiler, furnace or woodstove where the
burn occurs; normally lined with
firebrick or molded or sprayed
insulation. |
|
Compression web |
A member of a truss
system which connects the bottom and top
chords and which provides downward
support. |
|
Compressor |
A mechanical device
that pressurizes a gas in order to turn
it into a liquid, thereby allowing heat
to be removed or added. A compressor is
the main component of conventional heat
pumps and air conditioners. In an air
conditioning system, the compressor
normally sits outside and has a large
fan (to remove heat).
|
|
Concrete |
The mixture of
Portland cement, sand, gravel, and
water. Used to make garage and basement
floors, sidewalks, patios, foundation
walls, etc. It is commonly reinforced
with steel rods (rebar) or wire
screening (mesh). |
|
Concrete block
|
A hollow concrete
'brick' often 8" x 8" x 16" in size.
|
|
Concrete board
|
A panel made out of
concrete and fiberglass usually used as
a tile backing material.
|
|
Condensation |
Beads or drops of
water (and frequently frost in extremely
cold weather) that accumulate on the
inside of the exterior covering of a
building. Use of louvers or attic
ventilators will reduce moisture
condensation in attics. A vapor barrier
under the gypsum lath or dry wall on
exposed walls will reduce condensation.
|
|
Condensing unit
|
The outdoor
component of a cooling system. It
includes a compressor and condensing
coil designed to give off heat.
|
Conditions,
Convenants, and Restrictions
CC and Rs) |
The standards that
define how a property may be used and
the protections the developer makes for
the benefit of all owners in a
subdivision. |
|
Conduction |
The direct transfer
of heat energy through a material.
|
|
Conductivity |
The rate at which
heat is transmitted through a material.
|
|
Conduit, electrical |
A pipe, usually
metal, in which wire is installed.
|
|
Construction Contract
|
A legal document
which specifies the what, when, where,
how, how much and by whom in a
construction project. A good
construction contract will include:
|
| |
1. The contractors
registration number.
2. A statement of work
quality such as 'Standard Practices of
the Trades' or 'according to
Manufacturers Specifications'.
3. A set of Blue Prints
or Plans
4. A construction
timetable including starting and
completion dates.
5. A set of
Specifications
6. A Fixed Price for the
work, or a Time and Materials formula.
7. A Payment Schedule.
8. Any Allowances.
9. A clause which
outlines how any disputes will be
resolved.
10. A written Warrantee.
|
|
Construction drywall |
A type of
construction in which the interior wall
finish is applied in a dry condition,
generally in the form of sheet materials
or wood paneling as contrasted to
plaster. |
|
Construction, frame |
A type of
construction in which the structural
components are wood or depend upon a
wood frame for support.
|
|
Continuity tester |
A device that tells
whether a circuit is capable of carrying
electricity. |
|
Contractor |
A company licensed
to perform certain types of construction
activities. In most states, the generals
contractor's license and some specialty
contractor's licenses don't require of
compliance with bonding, workmen's
compensation and similar regulations.
Some of the specialty contractor
licenses involve extensive training,
testing and/or insurance requirements.
There are various types of contractors:
|
|
· General contractor
|
responsible for the
execution, supervision and overall
coordination of a project and may also
perform some of the individual
construction tasks. Most general
contractors are not licensed to perform
all specialty trades and must hire
specialty contractors for such tasks,
e.g. electrical, plumbing. |
|
· Remodeling contractor
|
a general
contractor who specializes in remodeling
work. |
|
· Specialty contractor
|
licensed to perform
a specialty task e.g. electrical, side
sewer, asbestos abatement. |
|
· Sub contractor
|
a general or
specialty contractor who works for
another general contractor. |
|
Control joint |
Tooled, straight
grooves made on concrete floors to
"control" where the concrete should
crack |
|
Convection |
Currents created by
heating air, which then rises and pulls
cooler air behind it. Also see
radiation. |
|
Conventional loan
|
A mortgage loan not
insured by a government agency (such as
FHA or VA) |
|
Convertibility
|
The ability to change a
loan from an adjustable rate schedule to
a fixed rate schedule.
|
|
Cooling load |
The amount of
cooling required to keep a building at a
specified temperature during the summer,
usually 78° F, regardless of outside
temperature. |
|
Coped |
Removing the top
and bottom flange of the end(s) of a
metal I-beam. This is done to permit it
to fit within, and bolted to, the web of
another I*beam in a "T" arrangement
|
|
Coped joint |
Cutting and fitting
woodwork to an irregular surface.
|
|
Corbel |
The triangular,
decorative and supporting member that
holds a mantel or horizontal shelf.
|
|
Corner bead |
A strip of formed
sheet metal placed on outside corners of
drywall before applying drywall 'mud'.
|
|
Corner boards |
Used as trim for
the external corners of a house or other
frame structure against which the ends
of the siding are finished.
|
|
Corner braces |
Diagonal braces at
the corners of the framed structure
designed to stiffen and strengthen the
wall. |
|
Cornice |
Overhang of a
pitched roof , usually consisting of a
fascia board, a soffit and appropriate
trim moldings. |
|
Counter flashing |
A metal flashing
usually used on chimneys at the roofline
to cover shingle flashing and used to
prevent moisture entry.
|
|
Counterfort |
A foundation wall
section that strengthens (and generally
perpendicular to) a long section of
foundation wall |
|
Course |
A row of shingles
or roll roofing running the length of
the roof. Parallel layers of building
materials such as bricks, or siding laid
up horizontally. |
|
Cove molding |
A molding with a
concave face used as trim or to finish
interior corners. |
|
Crawl space |
A shallow space
below the living quarters of a house,
normally enclosed by the foundation wall
and having a dirt floor.
|
|
Credit rating |
A report ordered by
a lender from a credit agency to
determine a borrower's credit habits.
|
|
Cricket |
A second roof built
on top of the primary roof to increase
the slope of the roof or valley. A
saddle*shaped, peaked construction
connecting a sloping roof with a
chimney. Designed to encourage water
drainage away from the chimney joint.
|
|
Cripple |
Short vertical "2
by 4's or 6's" frame lumber installed
above a window or door.
|
|
Cross bridging |
Diagonal bracing
between adjacent floor joists, placed
near the center of the joist span to
prevent joists from twisting.
|
|
Cross Tee |
Short metal "T"
beam used in suspended ceiling systems
to bridge the spaces between the main
beams. |
|
Crown molding |
A molding used on
cornice or wherever an interior angle is
to be covered, especially at the roof
and wall corner. |
|
Culvert |
Round, corrugated
drain pipe (normally 15" or 18" in
diameter) that is installed beneath a
driveway and parallel to and near the
street. |
|
Cupping |
A type of warping
that causes boards to curl up at their
edges. |
|
Curb |
The short elevation
of an exterior wall above the deck of a
roof. Normally a 2 by 6 box (on the
roof) on which a skylight is attached.
|
|
Curb stop |
Normally a cast
iron pipe with a lid (@ 5" in diameter)
that is placed vertically into the
ground, situated near the water tap in
the yard, and where a water cut*off
valve to the home is located
(underground). A long pole with a
special end is inserted into the curb
stop to turn off/on the water.
|
|
Cut*in brace |
Nominal
2*inch*thick members, usually 2 by 4's,
cut in between each stud diagonally.
|
Back to top
D
|
Dado |
A groove cut into a
board or panel intended to receive the
edge of a connecting board or panel.
|
|
Damper |
A metal "door"
placed within the fireplace chimney.
Normally closed when the fireplace is
not in use. |
|
Dampproofing |
The black, tar like
waterproofing material applied to the
exterior of a foundation wall.
|
|
Daylight |
The end of a pipe
(the terminal end) that is not attached
to anything. |
|
Dead bolt |
An exterior
security lock installed on exterior
entry doors that can be activated only
with a key or thumb-turn. Unlike a
latch, which has a beveled tongue, dead
bolts have square ends.
|
|
Dead light |
The fixed, non-operable
window section of a window unit.
|
|
Deck, decked |
To install the
plywood or wafer board sheeting on the
floor joists, rafters, or trusses.
|
|
Dedicated circuit |
An electrical
circuit that serves only one appliance (ie,
dishwasher) or a series of electric
heaters or smoke detectors.
|
|
Default |
Breach of a
mortgage contract (not making the
required payments). |
|
De-humidistat |
A control mechanism used
to operate a mechanical ventilation
system based upon the relative humidity
in the home. |
|
Delamination |
Separation of the
plies in a panel due to failure of the
adhesive. Usually caused by excessive
moisture. |
|
Disconnect |
A large (generally
20 Amp) electrical ON-OFF switch.
|
|
Discount rate |
A mortgage interest
rate that is lower than the current rate
for a certain period of time, e.g. 2.00%
below variable rate for 2 years.
|
|
Doorjamb, interior |
The surrounding
case into which and out of which a door
closes and opens. It consists of two
upright pieces, called side jambs, and a
horizontal head jamb. These 3 jambs have
the "door stop" installed on them.
|
|
Door operator |
An automatic garage
door opener. |
|
Door stop |
The wooden style
that the door slab will rest upon when
it's in a closed position.
|
|
Dormer |
An opening in a
sloping roof, the framing of which
projects out to form a vertical wall
suitable for windows or other openings.
|
|
Double glass |
Window or door in
which two panes of glass are used with a
sealed air space between. Also known as
Insulating Glass. |
|
Double hung window |
A window with two
vertically sliding sashes, both of which
can move up and down.
|
|
Down payment |
The difference
between the sales price and the mortgage
amount. A downpayment is usually paid at
closing. |
|
Downspout |
A pipe, usually of
metal, for carrying rainwater down from
the roof's horizontal gutters.
|
|
Drain tile |
A perforated,
corrugated plastic pipe laid at the
bottom of the foundation wall and used
to drain excess water away from the
foundation. It prevents ground water
from seeping through the foundation
wall. Sometimes called perimeter drain.
|
|
Draw |
The amount of
progress billings on a contract that is
currently available to a contractor
under a contract with a fixed payment
schedule. |
|
Drip |
(a) A member of a
cornice or other horizontal exterior
finish course that has a projection
beyond the other parts for throwing off
water.(b) A groove in the underside of a
sill or drip cap to cause water to drop
off on the outer edge instead of drawing
back and running down the face of the
building. |
|
Drip cap |
A molding or metal
flashing placed on the exterior topside
of a door or window frame to cause water
to drip beyond the outside of the frame.
|
|
Dry in |
To install the
black roofing felt (tar paper) on the
roof. |
Drywall
(or Gypsum Wallboard (GWB), Sheet rock
or Plasterboard) |
Wall board or
gypsum-A manufactured panel made out of
gypsum plaster and encased in a thin
cardboard. Usually 1/2" thick and 4' x
8' or 4' x 12' in size. The panels are
nailed or screwed onto the framing and
the joints are taped and covered with a
'joint compound'. 'Green board' type
drywall has a greater resistance to
moisture than regular (white)
plasterboard and is used in bathrooms
and other "wet areas".
|
|
Ducts |
The heating system.
Usually round or rectangular metal pipes
installed for distributing warm (or
cold) air from the furnace to rooms in
the home. Also a tunnel made of
galvanized metal or rigid fiberglass,
which carries air from the heater or
ventilation opening to the rooms in a
building. |
|
Due-on-sale |
A clause in a
mortgage contract requiring the borrower
to pay the entire outstanding balance
upon sale or transfer of the property.
|
|
Dura board, dura rock |
A panel made out of
concrete and fiberglass usually used as
a ceramic tile backing material.
Commonly used on bathtub decks.
Sometimes called Wonder board
|
DWV
(drain-waste-vent) |
The section of a plumbing
system that carries water and sewer
gases out of a home. |
Back to top
E
|
Earnest Money |
A sum paid to the
seller to show that a potential
purchaser is serious about buying.
|
|
Earthquake Strap |
A metal strap used
to secure gas hot water heaters to the
framing or foundation of a house.
Intended to reduce the chances of having
the water heater fall over in an
earthquake and causing a gas leak.
|
|
Easement |
A formal contract
which allows a party to use another
party's property for a specific purpose.
e.g. A sewer easement might allow one
party to run a sewer line through a
neighbors property. |
|
Eaves |
The horizontal exterior roof overhang.
|
|
Egress |
A means of exiting
the home. An egress window is required
in every bedroom and basement. Normally
a 4' X 4' window is the minimum size
required |
|
Elbow (ell) |
A plumbing or
electrical fitting that lets you change
directions in runs of pipe or conduit.
|
|
Electric lateral |
The trench or area
in the yard where the electric service
line (from a transformer or pedestal) is
located, or the work of installing the
electric service to a home.
|
|
Electric resistance coils |
Metal wires that
heat up when electric current passes
through them and are used in baseboard
heaters and electric water heaters.
|
|
Electrical entrance
package |
The entry point of
the electrical power including: (1) the
'strike' or location where the overhead
or underground electrical lines connect
to the house, (2) The meter which
measures how much power is used and (3)
The 'panel' or 'circuit breaker box '
(or 'fuse box') where the power can be
shut off and where overload devices such
a fuses or circuit breakers and located.
|
|
Electrical Rough |
Work performed by
the Electrical Contractor after the
plumber and heating contractor are
complete with their phase of work.
Normally all electrical wires, and
outlet, switch, and fixture boxes are
installed (before insulation).
|
|
Electrical Trim |
Work performed by
the electrical contractor when the house
is nearing completion. The electrician
installs all plugs, switches, light
fixtures, smoke detectors, appliance
"pig tails", bath ventilation fans,
wires the furnace, and "makes up" the
electric house panel. The electrician
does all work necessary to get the home
ready for and to pass the municipal
electrical final inspection
|
|
Elevation sheet |
The page on the
blue prints that depicts the house or
room as if a vertical plane were passed
through the structure.
|
|
Equity |
The "valuation"
that you own in your home, i.e. the
property value less the mortgage loan
outstanding. |
|
Escrow |
The handling of
funds or documents by a third party on
behalf of the buyer and/or seller.
|
|
Estimate |
The amount of
labor, materials, and other costs that a
contractor anticipates for a project as
summarized in the contractor's bid
proposal for the project.
|
|
Escutcheon |
An ornamental plate
that fits around a pipe extending
through a wall or floor to hide the cut
out hole |
|
Estimating |
The process of
calculating the cost of a project. This
can be a formal and exact process or a
quick and imprecise process.
|
|
Evaporator coil |
The part of a
cooling system that absorbs heat from
air in your home. Also see condensing
unit. |
|
Expansion joint |
Fibrous material
(@1/2" thick) installed in and around a
concrete slab to permit it to move up
and down (seasonally) along the
non-moving foundation wall.
|
|
Expansive soils |
Earth that swells
and contracts depending on the amount of
water that is present. ("Betonite" is an
expansive soil). |
|
Exposed aggregate finish |
A method of
finishing concrete which washes the
cement/sand mixture off the top layer of
the aggregate usually gravel. Often used
in driveways, patios and other exterior
surfaces. |
|
Extras |
Additional work
requested of a contractor, not included
in the original plan, which will be
billed separately and will not alter the
original contract amount, but increase
the cost of building the home.
|
Back to top
F
|
FHA strap |
Metal straps that are
used to repair a bearing wall "cut out",
and to "tie together" wall corners,
splices, and bearing headers. Also, they
are used to hang stairs and landings to
bearing headers. |
|
Face nail |
To install nails
into the vertical face of a bearing
header or beam. |
|
Faced concrete |
To finish the front
and all vertical sides of a concrete
porch, step(s), or patio. Normally the
"face" is broom finished.
|
|
Facing brick |
The brick used and
exposed on the outside of a wall.
Usually these have a finished texture.
|
|
Fascia |
Horizontal boards
attached to rafter/truss ends at the
eaves and along gables. Roof drain
gutters are attached to the fascia.
|
|
Felt |
Tar paper.
Installed under the roof shingles.
Normally 15 lb. or 30 lb.
|
|
Female |
Any part, such as a
nut or fitting, into which another
(male) part can be inserted. Internal
threads are female. |
|
Ferrule |
Metal tubes used to
keep roof gutters "open". Long nails
(ferrule spikes) are driven through
these tubes and hold the gutters in
place along the fascia of the home.
|
|
Field measure |
To take
measurements (cabinets, countertops,
stairs, shower doors, etc.) in the home
itself instead of using the blueprints.
|
|
Finger joint |
A manufacturing
process of interlocking two shorter
pieces of wood end to end to create a
longer piece of dimensional lumber or
molding. Often used in jambs and casings
and are normally painted (instead of
stained). |
|
Fire block |
Short horizontal
members sometimes nailed between studs,
usually about halfway up a wall. See
also 'Fire stop'. |
|
Fire brick |
Brick made of
refractory ceramic material which will
resist high temperatures. Used in a
fireplace and boiler.
|
|
Fireplace chase flashing
pan |
A large sheet of
metal that is installed around and
perpendicular to the fireplace flue
pipe. It's purpose is to confine and
limit the spread of fire and smoke to a
small area. |
Fire
resistive or Fire rated |
Applies to
materials that are not combustible in
the temperatures of ordinary fires and
will withstand such fires for at least 1
hour. Drywall used in the garage and
party walls are to be fire rated, 5/8",
Type X.
|
|
Fire retardant chemical |
A chemical or
preparation of chemicals used to reduce
the flammability of a material or to
retard the spread of flame.
|
|
Fire stop |
A solid, tight
closure of a concealed space, placed to
prevent the spread of fire and smoke
through such a space. In a frame wall,
this will usually consist of 2 by 4
cross blocking between studs. Work
performed to slow the spread of fire and
smoke in the walls and ceiling (behind
the drywall). Includes stuffing wire
holes in the top and bottom plates with
insulation, and installing blocks of
wood between the wall studs at the drop
soffit line. This is integral to passing
a Rough Frame inspection. See also
'Fire block'. |
|
Fishplate (gusset) |
A wood or plywood
piece used to fasten the ends of two
members together at a butt joint with
nails or bolts. Sometimes used at the
junction of opposite rafters near the
ridge line. Sometimes called a gang nail
plate. |
|
Fish tape |
A long strip of
spring steel used for fishing cables and
for pulling wires through conduit.
|
|
Fixed price contract |
A contract with a
set price for the work. See Time and
Materials Contract. |
|
Fixed rate |
A loan where the
initial payments are based on a certain
interest rate for a stated period . The
rate payable will not change during this
period regardless of changes in the
lender's standard variable rate.
|
|
Fixed Rate Mortgage |
A mortgage with an
interest rate that remains the same over
the years. |
|
Flagstone (flagging or
flags) |
Flat stones (1 to 4
inches thick) used for walks, steps,
floors, and vertical veneer (in lieu of
brick). |
|
Flakeboard |
A manufactured wood
panel made out of 1" to 2" wood chips
and glue. Often used as a substitute for
plywood in the exterior wall and roof
sheathing. Also called OSB or wafer
board. |
|
Flame retention burner |
An oil burner,
designed to hold the flame near the
nozzle surface. Generally the most
efficient type for residential use.
|
|
Flashing |
Sheet metal or
other material used in roof and wall
construction to protect a building from
water seepage. |
|
Flat mold |
Thin wood strips
installed over the butt seam of cabinet
skins. |
|
Flat paint |
An interior paint
that contains a high proportion of
pigment and dries to a flat or
lusterless finish. |
|
Flatwork |
Common word for
concrete floors, driveways, basements,
and sidewalks. |
|
Floating |
The next to last
stage in concrete work, when you smooth
off the job and bring water to the
surface by using a hand float or bull
float. |
|
Floating wall |
A non bearing wall
built on a concrete floor. It is
constructed so that the bottom two
horizontal plates can compress or pull
apart if the concrete floor moves up or
down. Normally built on basements and
garage slabs. |
|
Fluorescent lighting |
A fluorescent lamp
is a gas filled glass tube with a
phosphor coating on the inside. Gas
inside the tube is ionized by
electricity which causes the phosphor
coating to glow. Normally with two pins
that extend from each end.
|
|
Flue |
Large pipe through
which fumes escape from a gas water
heater, furnace, or fireplace. Normally
these flue pipes are double walled,
galvanized sheet metal pipe and
sometimes referred to as a "B Vent".
Fireplace flue pipes are normally triple
walled. In addition, nothing combustible
shall be within one inch from the flue
pipe. |
|
Flue collar |
Round metal ring
which fits around the heat flue pipe
after the pipe passes out of the roof.
|
|
Flue damper |
An automatic door
located in the flue that closes it off
when the burner turns off; purpose is to
reduce heat loss up the flue from the
still warm furnace or boiler.
|
|
Flue lining |
2 foot lengths,
fire clay or terra cotta pipe (round or
square) and usually made in all ordinary
flue sizes. Used for the inner lining of
chimneys with the brick or masonry work
done around the outside. Flue linings in
chimneys runs from one foot below the
flue connection to the top of the
chimney. |
|
Fly rafters |
End rafters of the
gable overhang supported by roof
sheathing and lookouts.
|
|
Footer, footing |
Continuous 8" or
10" thick concrete pad installed before
and supports the foundation wall or mono
post. |
|
Forced air heating
|
A common form of
heating with natural gas, propane, oil
or electricity as a fuel. Air is heated
in the furnace and distributed through a
set of metal ducts to various areas of
the house. |
|
Form |
Temporary structure
erected to contain concrete during
placing and initial hardening.
|
|
Foundation |
The supporting
portion of a structure below the first
floor construction, or below grade,
including the footings.
|
|
Foundation ties |
Metal wires that
hold the foundation wall panels and
rebar in place during the concrete pour.
|
|
Foundation waterproofing |
High quality below
grade moisture protection. Used for
below grade exterior concrete and
masonry wall damp proofing to seal out
moisture and prevent corrosion. Normally
looks like black tar.
|
|
Frame Inspection |
The act of
inspecting the home's structural
integrity and it's compliance to local
municipal codes. |
|
Framer |
The carpenter contractor
that installs the lumber and erects the
frame, flooring system, interior walls,
backing, trusses, rafters, decking,
installs all beams, stairs, soffits and
all work related to the wood structure
of the home. The framer builds the home
according to the blueprints and must
comply with local building codes and
regulations. |
|
Framing |
Lumber used for the
structural members of a building, such
as studs, joists, and rafters.
|
|
Frieze |
In house
construction a horizontal member
connecting the top of the siding with
the soffit of the cornice.
|
|
Frost lid |
Round metal lid
that is installed on a water meter pit.
|
|
Frost line |
The depth of frost
penetration in soil and/or the depth at
which the earth will freeze and swell.
This depth varies in different parts of
the country. |
|
Furring strips |
Strips of wood,
often 1 X 2 and used to shim out and
provide a level fastening surface for a
wall or ceiling. |
|
Fuse |
A device often
found in older homes designed to prevent
overloads in electrical lines. This
protects against fire. See also 'circuit
breakers'. |
Back to top
G
|
GF C I, or G F I |
Ground Fault
Circuit Interrupter
an ultra sensitive
plug designed to shut off all electric
current. Used in bathrooms, kitchens,
exterior waterproof outlets, garage
outlets, and "wet areas". Has a small
reset button on the plug.
|
|
Gable |
The end, upper,
triangular area of a home, beneath the
roof. |
|
Gang nail plate |
A steel plate
attached to both sides at each joint of
a truss. Sometimes called a fishplate or
gussett. |
|
Gate valve |
A valve that lets
you completely stop—but not modulate—the
flow within a pipe. |
|
General Contractor |
A contractor who
enters into a contract with the owner of
a project for the construction of the
project and who takes full
responsibility for its completion,
although the contractor may enter into
subcontracts with others for the
performance of specific parts or phases
of the project.
|
|
Gas lateral |
The trench or area
in the yard where the gas line service
is located, or the work of installing
the gas service to a home.
|
|
Girder |
A large or
principal beam of wood or steel used to
support concentrated loads at isolated
points along its length.
|
|
Glazing |
The process of
installing glass, which commonly is
secured with glazier's points and
glazing compound. |
|
Globe valve |
A valve that lets
you adjust the flow of water to any rate
between fully on and fully off. Also see
gate valve. |
|
Gloss enamel |
A finishing paint
material. Forms a hard coating with
maximum smoothness of surface and dries
to a sheen or luster (gloss)
|
|
Glued Laminated Beam (Glulam) |
A structural beam
composed of wood laminations or lams.
The lams are pressure bonded with
adhesives to attain a typical thickness
of 1 ½" . (It looks like 5 or more 2 X
4's are glued together).
|
|
Grade |
Ground level, or
the elevation at any given point. Also
the work of leveling dirt. Also the
designated quality of a manufactured
piece of wood. |
|
Grade beam |
A foundation wall
that is poured @ level with or just
below the grade of the earth. An example
is the area where the 8' or 16' overhead
garage door "block out" is located, or a
lower (walk out basement) foundation
wall is poured |
|
Graduated Payment
Mortgage (GPM)
|
A fixedrate, f ixed
schedule loan. It starts with lower
payments than a level payment loan;
payments rise annually, with the entire
increase being used to reduce the
outstanding balance. The increase in
payments may enable the borrower to pay
off a 30 year loan in 15 to 20 years, or
less. |
|
Grain |
The direction,
size, arrangement, appearance, or
quality of the fibers in wood.
|
|
Grid |
The completed
assembly of main and cross tees in a
suspended ceiling system before the
ceiling panels are installed. Also the
decorative slats (munton) installed
between glass panels.
|
|
Ground |
Refers
to electricity's habit of seeking the
shortest route to earth. Neutral wires
carry it there in all circuits. An
additional grounding wire or the
sheathing of the metal
clad cable or
conduit—protects against shock if the
neutral leg is interrupted.
|
|
Ground fault |
Ground Fault
Circuit Interrupter (GFCI, GFI)
an ultra sensitive
plug designed to shut off all electric
current. Used in bathrooms, kitchens,
exterior waterproof outlets, garage
outlets, and "wet areas". Has a small
reset button on the plug.
|
|
Ground iron |
The plumbing drain
and waste lines that are installed
beneath the basement floor. Cast iron
was once used, but black plastic pipe
(ABS) is now widely used.
|
|
Groundwater |
Water from an
aquifer or subsurface water source.
|
|
Grout |
A wet mixture of
cement, sand and water that flows into
masonry or ceramic crevices to seal the
cracks between the different pieces.
Mortar made of such consistency (by
adding water) that it will flow into the
joints and cavities of the masonry work
and fill them solid. |
|
Gusset |
A flat wood,
plywood, or similar type member used to
provide a connection at the intersection
of wood members. Most commonly used at
joints of wood trusses. They are
fastened by nails, screws, bolts, or
adhesives. |
|
Gutter |
A shallow channel
or conduit of metal or wood set below
and along the (fascia) eaves of a house
to catch and carry off rainwater from
the roof. |
|
Gyp board |
Drywall. Wall board
or gypsum.
A panel (normally
4' X 8', 10', 12', or 16')made with a
core of Gypsum (chalk like) rock, which
covers interior walls and ceilings.
|
|
Gypsum plaster |
Gypsum formulated
to be used with the addition of sand and
water for base
coat plaster |
Back to top
H
|
H Clip |
Small metal clips
formed like an "H" that fits at the
joints of two plywood (or wafer board)
sheets to stiffen the joint. Normally
used on the roof sheeting.
|
|
Hardware |
All of the "metal"
fittings that go into the home when it
is near completion. For example, door
knobs, towel bars, handrail brackets,
closet rods, house numbers, door
closers, etc. The Interior Trim
Carpenter installs the "hardware".
|
|
Haunch |
An extension, knee
like protrusion of the foundation wall
that a concrete porch or patio will rest
upon for support. |
|
Hazard insurance
|
Protection against
damage caused by fire, windstorms, or
other common hazards. Many lenders
require borrowers to carry it in an
amount at least equal to the mortgage.
|
|
Header |
(a) A beam placed
perpendicular to joists and to which
joists are nailed into framing for
a chimney, stairway, or other opening.
(b) A wood lintel. (c) The horizontal
structural member over an opening (for
example over a door or window).
|
|
Hearth |
The fireproof area
directly in front of a fireplace. The
inner or outer floor of a fireplace,
usually made of brick, tile, or stone.
|
|
Heating load |
The amount of
heating required to keep a building at a
specified temperature during the winter,
usually 65° F, regardless of outside
temperature. |
|
Heat meter |
An electrical
municipal inspection of the electric
meter breaker panel box.
|
|
Heat pump |
A mechanical device
which uses compression and decompression
of gas to heat and/or cool a house.
|
|
Heat Rough |
Work performed by
the Heating Contractor after the stairs
and interior walls are built. This
includes installing all duct work and
flue pipes. Sometimes, the furnace and
fireplaces are installed at this stage
of construction. |
|
Heat Trim |
Work done by the
Heating Contractor to get the home ready
for the municipal Final Heat Inspection.
This includes venting the hot water
heater, installing all vent grills,
registers, air conditioning services,
turning on the furnace, installing
thermostats, venting ranges and hoods,
and all other heat related work.
|
|
Heel cut |
A notch cut in the
end of a rafter to permit it to fit flat
on a wall and on the top, doubled,
exterior wall plate. |
|
Highlights |
A light spot, area,
or streak on a painted surface.
|
|
Hip |
A roof with four
sloping sides. The external angle formed
by the meeting of two sloping sides of a
roof. |
|
Hip roof |
A roof that rises
by inclined planes from all four sides
of a building. |
|
Home run (electrical) |
The electrical
cable that carries power from the main
circuit breaker panel to the first
electrical box, plug, or switch in the
circuit. |
|
Honey combs |
The appearance
concrete makes when rocks in the
concrete are visible and where there are
void areas in the foundation wall,
especially around concrete foundation
windows. |
|
Hose bib |
An exterior water
faucet (sill cock). |
|
Hot wire |
The wire that
carries electrical energy to a
receptacle or other device in contrast
to a neutral, which carries electricity
away again. Normally the black wire.
Also see ground. |
|
Humidifier |
An appliance
normally attached to the furnace, or
portable unit device designed to
increase the humidity within a room or a
house by means of the discharge of water
vapor. |
|
Hurricane clip |
Metal straps that
are nailed and secure the roof rafters
and trusses to the top horizontal wall
plate. Sometimes called a Teco clip.
|
|
H V A C |
An abbreviation for
Heat, Ventilation, and
Air Conditioning |
Back to top
I
|
I-beam |
A steel beam with a
cross section resembling the letter I.
It is used for long spans as basement
beams or over wide wall openings, such
as a double garage door, when wall and
roof loads bear down on the opening.
|
|
I-joist |
Manufactured
structural building component resembling
the letter "I". Used as floor joists and
rafters. I joists include two key parts:
flanges and webs. The
flange of the I joist may be made of
laminated veneer lumber or dimensional
lumber, usually formed into a 1 ½"
width. The web or center of the
I-joist is commonly made of plywood or
oriented strand board (OSB). Large holes
can be cut in the web to accommodate
duct work and plumbing waste lines. I-
joists are available in
lengths up to 60 feet long
|
|
Incandescent lamp |
A lamp employing an
electrically charged metal filament that
glows at white heat. A typical light
bulb. |
|
Index |
The interest rate
or adjustment standard that determines
the changes in monthly payments for an
adjustable rate loan.
|
|
Infiltration |
The passage of air
from indoors to outdoors and vice versa;
term is usually associated with drafts
from cracks, seams or holes in
buildings. |
|
Inside corner |
The point at which
two walls form an internal angle, as in
the corner of a room.
|
|
Insulating glass |
Window or door in
which two panes of glass are used with a
sealed air space between. Also known as
Double glass. |
|
Insulation board, rigid |
A structural
building board made of coarse wood or
cane fiber in ½" and 25/32 inch
thickness. It can be obtained in various
size sheets and densities.
|
|
Insulation |
Any material high
in resistance to heat transmission that,
when placed in the walls, ceiling, or
floors of a structure, and will reduce
the rate of heat flow.
|
|
Interest
|
The cost paid to a
lender for borrowed money.
|
|
Interior finish |
Material used to
cover the interior framed areas of walls
and ceilings |
|
Irrigation |
Lawn sprinkler
system |
Back to top
J
|
J Channel |
Metal edging used
on drywall to give the edge a better
finished appearance when a wall is not
"wrapped" Generally, basement stairway
walls have drywall only on the stair
side. J Channel is used on the vertical
edge of the last drywall sheet
|
|
Jack post |
A type of
structural support made of metal, which
can be raised or lowered through a
series of pins and a screw to meet the
height required. Basically used as a
replacement for an old supporting member
in a building. See Monopost.
|
|
Jack rafter |
A rafter that spans
the distance from the wall plate to a
hip, or from a valley to a ridge.
|
|
Jamb |
The side and head
lining of a doorway, window, or other
opening. Includes studs as well as the
frame and trim. |
|
Joint |
The location
between the touching surfaces of two
members or components joined and held
together by nails, glue, cement, mortar,
or other means. |
|
Joint cement or Joint
compound |
A powder that is
usually mixed with water and used for
joint treatment in gypsum-wallboard
finish. Often called "spackle" or
drywall mud. |
|
Joint tenancy |
A form of ownership
in which the tenants own a property
equally. If one dies, the other
automatically inherits the entire
property. |
|
Joint trench |
When the electric
company and telephone company dig one
trench and "drop" both of their service
lines in. |
|
Joist |
Wooden 2 X 8's,
10's, or 12's that run parallel to one
another and support a floor or ceiling,
and supported in turn by larger beams,
girders, or bearing walls.
|
|
Joist hanger |
A metal "U" shaped
item used to support the end of a floor
joist and attached with hardened nails
to another bearing joist or beam.
|
|
Jumpers |
Water pipe
installed in a water meter pit (before
the water meter is installed), or
electric wire that is installed in the
electric house panel meter socket before
the meter is installed. This is
sometimes illegal |
Back to top
K
|
Keeper |
The metal latch
plate in a door frame into which a
doorknob plunger latches.
|
|
Keyless |
A plastic or
porcelain light fixture that operates by
a pull string. Generally found in the
basement, crawl space , and attic areas.
|
|
Keyway |
A slot formed and
poured on a footer or in a foundation
wall when another wall will be installed
at the slot location. This gives
additional strength to the joint/meeting
point. |
|
Kilowatt (kw) |
One thousand watts.
A kilowatt hour is the base unit used in
measuring electrical consumption. Also
see watt. |
|
King stud |
The vertical "2
X's" frame lumber (left and right) of a
window or door opening, and runs
continuously from the bottom sole plate
to the top plate. |
|
Knot |
In lumber, the
portion of a branch or limb of a tree
that appears on the edge or face of the
piece. |
Back to top
L
|
Laminated shingles
|
Shingles that have
added dimensionality because of extra
layers or tabs, giving a shake-like
appearance. May also be called
"architectural shingles" or "three
dimensional shingles."
|
|
Laminating |
Bonding together
two or more layers of materials.
|
|
Landing |
A platform between
flights of stairs or at the termination
of a flight of stairs. Often used when
stairs change direction. Normally no
less than 3 ft. X 3 ft. square.
|
|
Lap |
To cover the
surface of one shingle or roll with
another. |
|
Latch |
A beveled metal
tongue operated by a spring-loaded knob
or lever. The tongue's bevel lets you
close the door and engage the locking
mechanism, if any, without using a key.
Contrasts with dead bolt.
|
|
Lateral (electric, gas,
telephone, sewer and water) |
The underground
trench and related services (i.e.,
electric, gas, telephone, sewer and
water lines) that will be buried within
the trench. |
|
Lath |
A building material
of narrow wood, metal, gypsum, or
insulating board that is fastened to the
frame of a building to act as a base for
plaster, shingles, or tiles.
|
|
Lattice |
An open framework
of criss-crossed wood or metal strips
that form regular, patterned spaces.
|
|
Ledger (for a Structural
Floor) |
The wooden
perimeter frame lumber member that bolts
onto the face of a foundation wall and
supports the wood structural floor.
|
|
Ledger strip |
A strip of lumber
nailed along the bottom of the side of a
girder on which joists rest.
|
|
Leech field |
A method used to
treat/dispose of sewage in rural areas
not accessible to a municipal sewer
system. Sewage is permitted to be
filtered and eventually discharged into
a section of the lot called a leech
field. |
|
Let-in brace |
Nominal 1 inch-
thick boards applied into
notched studs diagonally. Also, an "L"
shaped, long (@ 10') metal strap that
are installed by the framer at the rough
stage to give support to an exterior
wall or wall corner.
|
|
Level |
True horizontal. Also a tool used to determine level.
|
|
Level Payment Mortgage |
A mortgage with
identical monthly payments over the life
of the loan. |
|
Lien |
An encumbrance that
usually makes real or personal property
the security for payment of a debt or
discharge of an obligation.
|
|
Light |
Space in a window
sash for a single pane of glass. Also, a
pane of glass. |
|
Limit switch |
A safety control
that automatically shuts off a furnace
if it gets too hot. Most also control
blower cycles. |
|
Lineal foot |
A unit of measure
for lumber equal to 1 inch thick by 12
inches wide by 12 inches long. Examples:
1" x 12" x 16' = 16 board feet, 2" x 12"
x 16' = 32 board feet.
|
|
Lintel |
A horizontal
structural member that supports the load
over an opening such as a door or
window. |
|
Load bearing wall |
Includes all
exterior walls and any interior wall
that is aligned above a support beam or
girder. Normally, any wall that has a
double horizontal top plate.
|
|
Loan |
The amount to be
borrowed. |
|
Loan to value ratio |
The ratio of the
loan amount to the property valuation
and expressed as a percentage. E.g. if a
borrower is seeking a loan of $200,000
on a property worth $400,000 it has a
50% loan to value rate. If the loan were
$300,000, the LTV would be 75%. The
higher the loan to value, the greater
the lender's perceived risk. Loans above
normal lending LTV ratios may require
additional security. |
|
Lookout |
A short wood
bracket or cantilever that supports an
overhang portion of a roof.
|
|
Louver |
A vented opening
into the home that has a series of
horizontal slats and arranged to permit
ventilation but to exclude rain, snow,
light, insects, or other living
creatures. |
|
Lumens |
Unit of measure for
total light output. The amount of light
falling on a surface of one square foot.
|
Back to top
M
|
Male |
Any part, such as a
bolt, designed to fit into another
(female) part. External threads are
male. |
|
Mantel |
The shelf above a
fireplace opening. Also used in
referring to the decorative trim around
a fireplace opening. |
|
Manufactured wood |
A wood product such
as a truss, beam, gluelam, microlam or
joist which is manufactured out of
smaller wood pieces and glued or
mechanically fastened to form a larger
piece. Often used to create a stronger
member which may use less wood. See also
Oriented Strand Board.
|
|
Manufacturer's
specifications |
The written
installation and/or maintenance
instructions which are developed by the
manufacturer of a product and which may
have to be followed in order to maintain
the product warrantee.
|
|
Masonry |
Stone, brick,
concrete, hollowtile, concrete block, or
other similar building units or
materials. Normally bonded together with
mortar to form a wall.
|
|
Mastic |
A pasty material
used as a cement (as for setting tile)
or a protective coating (as for thermal
insulation or waterproofing)
|
|
Mechanics lien |
A lien on real
property, created by statue in many
years, in favor of persons supplying
labor or materials for a building or
structure, for the value of labor or
materials supplied by them. In some
jurisdictions, a mechanics lien also
exists for the value of professional
services. Clear title to the property
cannot be obtained until the claim for
the labor, materials, or professional
services is settled. Timely filing is
essential to support the encumbrance,
and prescribed filing dates vary by
jurisdiction. |
|
Metal lath |
Sheets of metal
that are slit to form openings within
the lath. Used as a plaster base for
walls and ceilings and as reinforcing
over other forms of plaster base.
|
|
Microlam |
A manufactured
structural wood beam. It is constructed
of pressure and adhesive bonded wood
strands of wood. They have a higher
strength rating than solid sawn lumber.
Normally comes in l ½" thickness' and 9
½", 11 ½" and 14" widths
|
|
Milar (mylar) |
Plastic,
transparent copies of a blueprint.
|
|
Millwork |
Generally all
building materials made of finished wood
and manufactured in millwork plants.
Includes all doors, window and door
frames, blinds, mantels, panelwork,
stairway components (ballusters, rail,
etc.), moldings, and interior trim. Does
not include flooring, ceiling, or
siding. |
|
Miter joint |
The joint of two
pieces at an angle that bisects the
joining angle. For example, the miter
joint at the side and head casing at a
door opening is made at a 45° angle.
|
|
Molding |
A wood strip having
an engraved, decorative surface.
|
|
Monopost |
Adjustable metal
column used to support a beam or bearing
point. Normally 11 gauge or Schedule 40
metal, and determined by the structural
engineer |
|
Mortar |
A mixture of cement
(or lime) with sand and water used in
masonry work. |
|
Mortgage |
Loan secured by
land. |
|
Mortgage broker
|
A broker who
represents numerous lenders and helps
consumers find affordable mortgages; the
broker charges a fee only if the
consumer finds a loan.
|
|
Mortgage company
|
A company that
borrows money from a bank, lends it to
consumers to buy homes, then sells the
loans to investors. |
|
Mortgage deed |
Legal document
establishing a loan on property.
|
|
Mortgagee |
The lender who
makes the mortgage loan.
|
|
Mortgage loan |
A
contract in which the borrower's
property is pledged as collateral. It is
repaid in installments. The mortgagor
(buyer) promises to repay principal and
interest, keep the home insured, pay all
taxes and keep the property in good
condition. |
|
Mortgage Origination Fee |
A charge for work
involved in preparing and servicing a
mortgage application (usually one
percent of the loan amount).
|
|
Mortise |
A slot cut into a
board, plank, or timber, usually
edgewise, to receive the tenon (or
tongue) of another board, plank, or
timber to form a joint.
|
|
Mudsill |
Bottom horizontal
member of an exterior wall frame which
rests on top a foundation, sometimes
called sill plate. Also sole plate,
bottom member of interior wall frame.
|
|
Mullion |
A vertical divider
in the frame between windows, doors, or
other openings. |
|
Muntin |
A small member
which divides the glass or openings of
sash or doors. |
|
Muriatic acid |
Commonly used as a
brick cleaner after masonry work is
completed. |
|
Mushroom |
The unacceptable
occurrence when the top of a caisson
concrete pier spreads out and hardens to
become wider than the foundation wall
thickness |
Back to top
N
|
Nail inspection |
An inspection made
by a municipal building inspector after
the drywall material is hung with nails
and screws (and before taping).
|
|
Natural finish |
A transparent
finish which does not seriously alter
the original color or grain of the
natural wood. Natural finishes are
usually provided by sealers, oils,
varnishes, water repellent
preservatives, and other similar
materials. |
|
NEC (National Electrical
Code) |
A set of rules
governing safe wiring methods. Local
codes which are backed by law may differ
from the NEC in some ways.
|
|
Neutral wire |
Usually color coded
white, this carries electricity from an
outlet back to the service panel. Also
see hot wire and ground.
|
|
Newel post |
The large starting
post to which the end of a stair guard
railing or balustrade is fastened.
|
|
Nonbearing wall |
A wall supporting
no load other than its own weight.
|
|
Nosing |
The projecting edge
of a molding or drip or the front edge
of a stair tread. |
|
Notch |
A crosswise groove
at the end of a board.
|
|
Note |
A formal document
showing the existence of a debt and
stating the terms of repayment.
|
|
Nozzle |
The part of a
heating system that sprays the fuel of
fuel air mixture into the combustion
chamber. |
Back to top
O
|
O C-On Center |
The measurement of
spacing for studs, rafters, and joists
in a building from the center of one
member to the center of the next.
|
|
Oakum |
Loose hemp or jute
fiber that's impregnated with tar or
pitch and used to caulk large seams or
for packing plumbing pipe joints
|
|
Open hole inspection |
When an engineer
(or municipal inspector) inspects the
open excavation and examines the earth
to determine the type of foundation
(caisson, footer, wall on ground, etc.)
that should be installed in the hole.
|
|
Oriented Strand Board or
OSB |
A manufactured 4' X
8' wood panel made out of 1" - 2" wood
chips and glue. Often used as a
substitute for plywood.
|
|
Outrigger |
An extension of a
rafter beyond the wall line. Usually a
smaller member nailed to a larger rafter
to form a cornice or roof overhang.
|
|
Outside corner |
The point at which
two walls form an external angle, one
you usually can walk around.
|
|
Overhang |
Outward projecting
soffit area of a roof; the part of the
roof that hangs out or over the outside
wall. See also Cornice.
|
Back to top
P
|
Padding |
A material
installed under carpet to add foot
comfort, isolate sound, and to prolong
carpet life. |
|
Pad out, pack out |
To shim out or add
strips of wood to a wall or ceiling in
order that the finished ceiling/wall
will appear correct. |
|
Paint |
A combination of
pigments with suitable thinners or oils
to provide decorative and protective
coatings. Can be oil based or latex
water based. |
|
Pallets |
Wooden platforms
used for storing and shipping material.
Forklifts and hand trucks are used to
move these wooden platforms around.
|
|
Panel |
A thin flat piece
of wood, plywood, or similar material,
framed by stiles and rails as in a door
(or cabinet door), or fitted into
grooves of thicker material with molded
edges for decorative wall treatment.
|
|
Paper, building |
A general term for
papers, felts, and similar sheet
materials used in buildings without
reference to their properties or uses.
Generally comes in long rolls.
|
|
Parapet |
A wall placed at
the edge of a roof to prevent people
from falling off. |
|
Parting stop or strip |
A small wood piece
used in the side and head jambs of
double hung windows to separate the
upper sash from the lower sash.
|
|
Particle board |
Plywood substitute
made of course sawdust that is mixed
with resin and pressed into sheets. Used
for closet shelving, floor underlayment,
stair treads, etc. |
|
Partition |
A wall that
subdivides spaces within any story of a
building or room. |
|
Paver, paving |
Materials—commonly
masonry—laid down to make a firm, even
surface. |
|
Payment schedule |
A pre-
agreed upon schedule of
payments to a contractor usually based
upon the amount of work completed. Such
a schedule may include a deposit prior
to the start of work. There may also be
a temporary 'retainer' (5-
10% of the total cost of
the job) at the end of the contract for
correcting any small items which have
not been completed or repaired.
|
|
Pedestal |
A metal box
installed at various locations along
utility easements that contain
electrical, telephone, or cable
television switches and connections.
|
|
Penalty clause
|
A provision in a
contract that provides for a reduction
in the amount otherwise payable under a
contract to a contractor as a penalty
for failure to meet deadlines or for
failure of the project to meet contract
specifications. |
|
Penny |
As applied to
nails, it originally indicated the price
per hundred. The term now series as a
measure of nail length and is
abbreviated by the letter "d".
Normally, 16d (16 "penny") nails are
used for framing |
|
Percolation test or perc.
test |
Tests that a soil
engineer performs on earth to determine
the feasibility of installing a leech
field type sewer system on a lot. A test
to determine if the soil on a proposed
building lot is capable of absorbing the
liquid affluent from a septic system.
|
|
Performance bond |
An amount of money
(usually 10% of the total price of a
job) that a contractor must put on
deposit with a governmental agency as an
insurance policy that guarantees the
contractors' proper and timely
completion of a project or job.
|
|
Perimeter drain |
3" or 4" perforated
plastic pipe that goes around the
perimeter (either inside or outside) of
a foundation wall (before backfill) and
collects and diverts ground water away
from the foundation. Generally, it is "daylighted"
into a sump pit inside the home, and a
sump pump is sometimes inserted into the
pit to discharge any accumulation of
water. |
|
Permeability |
A measure of the
ease with which water penetrates a
material. |
|
Permit |
A governmental
municipal authorization to perform a
building process as in: · Zoning\Use
permit
-
Authorization to use a
property for a specific use e.g. a
garage, a single family residence etc.
· Demolition permit
Authorization to tear down and remove an
existing structure.
· Grading permit
Authorization to change the contour of
the land.
· Septic permit
A health department authorization to
build or modify a septic system.
· Building permit
Authorization to build or modify a
structure.
· Electrical permit
A separate permit required for most electrical work.
· Plumbing permit
A separate permit required for new plumbing and larger modifications of
existing plumbing systems.
|
|
Pigtails, electrical |
The electric cord
that the electrician provides and
installs on an appliance such as a
garbage disposal, dishwasher, or range
hood. |
|
Pier |
A column of
masonry, usually rectangular in
horizontal cross section, used to
support other structural members. Also
see Caisson. |
|
Pigment |
A powdered solid
used in paint or enamel to give it a
color. |
|
Pilot hole |
A small diameter,
pre-drilled hole that guides a nail or
screw. |
|
Pilot light |
A small, continuous
flame (in a hot water heater, boiler, or
furnace) that ignites gas or oil burners
when needed. |
|
Pitch |
The incline slope
of a roof or the ratio of the total rise
to the total width of a house, i.e., a
6-foot rise and 24 - foot width is a one
fourth pitch roof. Roof
slope is expressed in the inches of
rise, per foot of horizontal run.
|
|
PITI
|
Principal,
interest, taxes and insurance (the four
major components of monthly housing
payments). |
|
Plan view |
Drawing of a
structure with the view from overhead,
looking down. |
|
Plate |
Normally a 2 X 4
or 2 X 6 that lays horizontally within a
framed structure, such as:
|
|
Sill plate |
A horizontal member
anchored to a concrete or masonry wall.
|
|
Sole plate |
Bottom horizontal
member of a frame wall.
|
|
Top plate |
Top horizontal
member of a frame wall supporting
ceiling joists, rafters, or other
members. |
|
Plenum |
The main hot air
supply duct leading from a furnace.
|
|
Plot plan |
An overhead view
plan that shows the location of the home
on the lot. Includes all easements,
property lines, set backs, and legal
descriptions of the home. Provided by
the surveyor. |
|
Plough, plow |
To cut a lengthwise
groove in a board or plank. An exterior
handrail normally has a ploughed groove
for hand gripping purposes
|
|
Plumb |
Exactly vertical
and perpendicular. |
|
Plumb bob |
A lead weight
attached to a string. It is the tool
used in determining plumb.
|
|
Plumbing boots |
Metal saddles used
to strengthen a bearing wall/vertical
stud(s) where a plumbing drain line has
been cut through and installed.
|
|
Plumbing ground |
The plumbing drain
and waste lines that are installed
beneath a basement floor.
|
|
Plumbing jacks |
Sleeves that fit
around drain and waste vent pipes at,
and are nailed to, the roof sheeting.
|
|
Plumbing rough |
Work performed by
the plumbing contractor after the Rough
Heat is installed. This work includes
installing all plastic ABS drain and
waste lines, copper water lines, bath
tubs, shower pans, and gas piping to
furnaces and fireplaces. Lead solder
should not be used on copper piping.
|
|
Plumbing stack |
A plumbing vent
pipe that penetrates the roof.
|
|
Plumbing trim |
Work performed by
the plumbing contractor to get the home
ready for a final plumbing inspection.
Includes installing all toilets (water
closets), hot water heaters, sinks,
connecting all gas pipe to appliances,
disposal, dishwasher, and all plumbing
items. |
|
Plumbing waste line |
Plastic pipe used
to collect and drain sewage waste.
|
|
Ply |
A term to denote
the number of layers of roofing felt,
veneer in plywood, or layers in built
up materials, in any finished piece of
such material. |
|
Plywood |
A panel (normally
4' X 8') of wood made of three or more
layers of veneer, compressed and joined
with glue, and usually laid with the
grain of adjoining plies at right angles
to give the sheet strength.
|
|
Point load |
A point where a
bearing/structural weight is
concentrated and transferred to the
foundation. |
|
Portland cement |
Cement made by
heating clay and crushed limestone into
a brick and then grinding to a
pulverized powder state.
|
|
Post |
A vertical framing
member usually designed to carry a beam.
Often a 4" x 4", a 6" x 6", or a metal
pipe with a flat plate on top and
bottom. |
|
Post and Beam |
A basic building
method that uses just a few hefty posts
and beams to support an entire
structure. Contrasts with stud framing.
|
|
Power vent |
A vent that
includes a fan to speed up air flow.
Often installed on roofs.
|
|
Premium |
Amount payable on a
loan. |
|
Preservative |
. Any pesticide substance
that, for a reasonable length of time,
will prevent the action of wood -
destroying fungi, insect borers, and
similar destructive agents when the wood
has been properly coated or impregnated
with it. Normally an arsenic derivative.
Chromated Copper Arsenate (CCA) is an
example. |
|
Pressure Relief Valve (PRV) |
A device mounted on
a hot water heater or boiler which is
designed to release any high steam
pressure in the tank to prevent tank
explosions. |
|
Pressure Treated Wood |
Lumber that has
been saturated with a preservative.
|
|
Primer |
The first, base
coat of paint when a paint job consists
of two or more coats. A first coating
formulated to seal raw surfaces and
holding succeeding finish coats.
|
|
Principal |
The original amount
of the loan, the capital.
|
|
Property survey |
A survey to
determine the boundaries of your
property. The cost depends on the
complexity of the survey.
|
|
P trap |
Curved, "U"
section of drain pipe that holds a water
seal to prevent sewer gasses from
entering the home through a fixtures
water drain. |
|
Pump mix |
Special concrete
that will be used in a concrete pump.
Generally, the mix has smaller rock
aggregate than regular mix.
|
|
Punch list |
A list of
discrepancies that need to be corrected
by the contractor. |
|
Punch out |
To inspect and make
a discrepancy list. |
|
Putty |
A type of dough
used in sealing glass in the sash,
filling small holes and crevices in
wood, and for similar purposes.
|
|
PVC or CPVC
|
Poly Vinyl Chloride
-A type of white or light gray plastic
pipe sometimes used for water supply
lines and waste pipe. |
Back to top
Q
|
Quarry tile |
A man made or
machine made clay tile used to finish a
floor or wall. Generally 6" X 6" X
1/4" thick . |
|
Quarter round |
A small trim
molding that has the cross section of a
quarter circle. |
Back to top
R
|
Rabbet |
A rectangular longitudinal groove cut in the corner
edge of a board or plank.
|
|
Radiant heating |
A method of
heating, usually consisting of a forced
hot water system with pipes placed in
the floor, wall, or ceiling. Also
electrically heated panels.
|
|
Radiation |
Energy transmitted
from a heat source to the air around it.
Radiators actually depend more on
convection than radiation.
|
|
Radon |
A naturally
occurring, heavier than
air, radioactive gas common in many
parts of the country. Radon gas
exposure is associated with lung cancer.
Mitigation measures may involve crawl
space and basement venting and various
forms of vapor barriers.
|
|
Radon system |
A ventilation
system beneath the floor of a basement
and/or structural wood floor and
designed to fan exhaust radon gas to the
outside of the home |
|
Rafter |
Lumber used to
support the roof sheeting and roof
loads. Generally, 2 X 10's and 2 X 12's
are used. The rafters of a flat roof are
sometimes called roof joists.
|
|
Rafter, hip |
A rafter that forms
the intersection of an external roof
angle. |
|
Rafter, valley |
A rafter that forms
the intersection of an internal roof
angle. The valley rafter is normally
made of double 2 inch
thick members.
|
|
Rail |
Cross members of
panel doors or of a sash. Also, a wall
or open balustrade placed at the edge of
a staircase, walkway bridge, or elevated
surface to prevent people from falling
off. Any relatively lightweight
horizontal element, especially those
found in fences (split rail).
|
|
Railroad tie |
Black, tar and
preservative impregnated, 6" X 8" and 6'
-
8' long wooden timber
that was used to hold railroad track in
place. Normally used as a member of a
retaining wall. |
|
Rake |
Slope or slanted.
|
|
Rake fascia |
The vertical face
of the sloping end of a roof eave.
|
|
Rake siding |
The practice of
installing lap siding diagonally
|
|
Ranch |
A single story, one
level home. |
|
Ready mixed concrete |
Concrete mixed at a
plant or in trucks en route to a job and
delivered ready for placement.
|
|
Rebar, reinforcing bar |
Ribbed steel bars
installed in foundation concrete walls,
footers, and poured in place concrete
structures designed to strengthen
concrete. Comes in various thickness'
and strength grade. |
|
Receptacle |
An electrical
outlet. A typical household will have
many 120 volt receptacles for plugging
in lams and appliances and 240 volt
receptacles for the range, clothes
dryer, air conditioners, etc.
|
|
Recording fee
|
A charge for
recording the transfer of a property,
paid to a city, county, or other
appropriate branch of government.
|
|
Redline, red lined prints |
Blueprints that
reflect changes and that are marked with
red pencil. |
|
Reducer |
A fitting with
different size openings at either end
and used to go from a larger to a
smaller pipe. |
|
Reflective insulation |
Sheet material with
one or both faces covered with aluminum
foil. |
|
Refrigerant |
A substance that
remains a gas at low temperatures and
pressure and can be used to transfer
heat. Freon is an example and is used in
air conditioning systems.
|
|
Register |
A grill placed over
a heating duct or cold air return.
|
|
Reglaze |
To replace a broken
window. |
|
Relief valve |
A device designed
to open if it detects excess temperature
or pressure. |
|
Remote |
Remote electrical, gas, or water meter digital
readouts that are installed near the
front of the home in order for utility
companies to easily read the home owners
usage of the service.
|
|
Retaining wall |
A structure that
holds back a slope and prevents erosion.
|
|
Retentions |
Amounts withheld
from progress billings until final and
satisfactory project completion.
|
|
R factor or value |
A measure of a
materials resistance to the passage of
heat. New homewalls are usually
insulated with 4" of batt insulation
with an R value of R-13, and a ceiling
insulation of R-30. |
|
Ribbon (girt) |
Normally a 1 X 4
board let into the studs horizontally to
support the ceiling or second floor
joists. |
|
Ridge |
The horizontal line
at the junction of the top edges of two
sloping roof surfaces.
|
|
Ridge board |
The board placed on
the ridge of the roof onto which the
upper ends of other rafters are
fastened. |
|
Ridge shingles |
Shingles used to
cover the ridge board.
|
|
Rim joist |
A joist that runs
around the perimeter of the floor joists
and home. |
|
Rise |
The vertical
distance from the eaves line to the
ridge. Also the vertical distance from
stair tread to stair tread (and not to
exceed 7 ½"). |
|
Riser |
Each of the
vertical boards closing the spaces
between the treads of stairways.
|
|
Riser and panel |
The exterior
vertical pipe (riser) and metal electric
box (panel) the electrician provides and
installs at the "Rough Electric" stage.
|
|
Road base |
A aggregate mixture
of sand and stone. |
|
Rock 1, 2, 3 |
When referring to
drywall, this means to install drywall
to the walls and ceilings (with nails
and screws), and before taping is
performed. |
|
Roll, rolling |
To install the
floor joists or trusses in their correct
place. (To "roll the floor" means to
install the floor joists).
|
|
Romex |
A name brand of
nonmetallic sheathed electrical cable
that is used for indoor wiring.
|
|
Roll roofing |
Asphalt roofing
products manufactured in roll form. 36
inch wide rolls with and
108 square feet of material. Weights are
generally 45 to 90 pounds per roll.
|
|
Romex |
A name brand of
nonmetallic sheathed electrical cable
that is used for indoor wiring.
|
|
Roof jack |
Sleeves that fit
around the black plumbing waste vent
pipes at, and are nailed to, the roof
sheeting. |
|
Roof joist |
The rafters of a
flat roof. Lumber used to support the
roof sheeting and roof loads. Generally,
2 X 10's and 2 X 12's are used.
|
|
Roof sheathing or
sheeting |
The wood panels or
sheet material fastened to the roof
rafters or trusses on which the shingle
or other roof covering is laid.
|
|
Roof valley |
The "V"
created where two sloping roofs meet.
|
|
Rough opening |
The horizontal and
vertical measurement of a window or door
opening before drywall or siding is
installed. |
|
Rough sill |
The framing member
at the bottom of a rough opening for a
window. It is attached to the cripple
studs below the rough opening.
|
|
Roughing-in |
The initial stage
of a plumbing, electrical, heating,
carpentry, and/or other project, when
all components that won't be seen after
the second finishing phase are
assembled. See also Heat Rough, Plumbing
Rough, and Electrical Rough.
|
|
Run, roof
|
The horizontal
distance from the eaves to a point
directly under the ridge. One half the
span. |
|
Run, stair |
the horizontal
distance of a stair tread from the nose
to the riser. |
|
R Value |
A measure of
insulation. A measure of a materials
resistance to the passage of heat. The
higher the R value, the more insulating
"power" it has. For example, typical new
home's walls are usually insulated with
4" of batt insulation with an R value of
R -13, and a ceiling insulation of R -
30 |
Back to top
S
|
Saddle |
A small second roof
built behind the back side of a
fireplace chimney to divert water around
the chimney. Also, the plate at the
bottom of some—usually exterior—door
openings. Sometimes called a threshold.
|
|
Sack mix |
The amount of
Portland cement in a cubic yard of
concrete mix. Generally, 5 or 6 sack is
required in a foundation wall.
|
|
Sales contract
|
A contract between
a buyer and seller which should explain:
(1) What the purchase includes, (2) What
guarantees there are, (3) When the buyer
can move in, (4) What the closing costs
are, and (5) What recourse the parties
have if the contract is not fulfilled or
if the buyer cannot get a mortgage
commitment at the agreed upon time.
|
|
Sand float finish |
Lime that is mixed
with sand, resulting in a textured
finish on a wall. |
|
Sanitary sewer |
A sewer system
designed for the collection of waste
water from the bathroom, kitchen and
laundry drains, and is usually not
designed to handle storm water.
|
|
Sash |
A single light
frame containing one or more lights of
glass. The frame that holds the glass in
a window, often the movable part of the
window. |
|
Sash balance |
A device, usually
operated by a spring and designed to
hold a single hung window vent up and in
place |
|
Saturated felt |
A felt which is
impregnated with tar or asphalt.
|
|
Schedule (window, door,
mirror) |
A table on the
blueprints that list the sizes,
quantities and locations of the windows,
doors and mirrors. |
|
Scrap out |
The removal of all
drywall material and debris after the
home is "hung out" (installed) with
drywall. |
|
Scratch coat |
The first coat of
plaster, which is scratched to form a
bond for a second coat.
|
|
Screed, concrete |
To level off
concrete to the correct elevation during
a concrete pour. |
|
Screed, plaster |
A small strip of
wood, usually the thickness of the
plaster coat, used as a guide for
plastering. |
|
Scribing |
Cutting and fitting
woodwork to an irregular surface.
|
|
Scupper |
(1) An opening for
drainage in a wall, curb or parapet. (2)
The drain in a downspout or flat roof,
usually connected to the downspout.
|
|
Sealer |
A finishing
material, either clear or pigmented,
that is usually applied directly over
raw wood for the purpose of sealing the
wood surface. |
|
Seasoning |
Drying and removing
moisture from green wood in order to
improve its usability.
|
|
Self-Sealing Shingles |
Shingles containing
factory applied strips or spots of self-
sealing adhesive.
|
|
Semigloss paint or enamel |
A paint or enamel
made so that its coating, when dry, has
some luster but is not very glossy.
Bathrooms and kitchens are normally
painted semi-gloss |
|
Septic system |
An on site waste
water treatment system. It usually has a
septic tank which promotes the
biological digestion of the waste, and a
drain field which is designed to let the
left over liquid soak into the ground.
Septic systems and permits are usually
sized by the number of bedrooms in a
house. |
|
Service entrance panel |
Main power cabinet
where electricity enters a home wiring
system. |
|
Service equipment |
Main control gear
at the service entrance, such as circuit
breakers, switches, and fuses.
|
|
Service lateral |
Underground power
supply line. |
|
Setback Thermostat |
A thermostat with a
clock which can be programmed to come on
or go off at various temperatures and at
different times of the day/week. Usually
used as the heating or cooling system
thermostat. |
|
Settlement |
Shifts in a
structure, usually caused by freeze-thaw
cycles underground. |
|
Sewage ejector |
A pump used to
'lift' waste water to a gravity sanitary
sewer line. Usually used in basements
and other locations which are situated
bellow the level of the side sewer.
|
|
Sewer lateral |
The portion of the
sanitary sewer which connects the
interior waste water lines to the main
sewer lines. The side sewer is usually
buried in several feet of soil and runs
from the house to the sewer line. It is
usually 'owned' by the sewer utility,
must be maintained by the owner and may
only be serviced by utility approved
contractors. Sometimes called side
sewer. |
|
Sewer stub |
The junction at the
municipal sewer system where the home's
sewer line is connected.
|
|
Sewer tap |
The physical
connection point where the home's sewer
line connects to the main municipal
sewer line. |
|
Shake |
A wood roofing
material, normally cedar or redwood.
Produced by splitting a block of the
wood along the grain line. Modern shakes
are sometimes machine sawn on one side.
See shingle. |
|
Shear block |
Plywood that is
face nailed to short (2 X 4's or 2 X
6's) wall studs (above a door or window,
for example). This is done to prevent
the wall from sliding and collapsing.
|
|
Sheathing, sheeting |
The structural wood
panel covering, usually OSB or plywood,
used over studs, floor joists or
rafters/trusses of a structure.
|
|
Shed roof |
A roof containing
only one sloping plane.
|
|
Sheet metal work |
All components of a
house employing sheet metal, such as
flashing, gutters, and downspouts.
|
|
Sheet metal duct work |
The heating system.
Usually round or rectangular metal pipes
and sheet metal (for Return Air) and
installed for distributing warm (or
cold) air from the furnace to rooms in
the home. |
|
Sheet Rock
Drywall
Wall board or gypsum |
A manufactured
panel made out of gypsum plaster and
encased in a thin cardboard. Usually
1/2" thick and 4' x 8' or 4' x 12' in
size. The 'joint compound'. 'Green
board' type drywall has a greater
resistance to moisture than regular
(white) plasterboard and is used in
bathrooms and other "wet areas".
|
|
Shim |
A small piece of
scrap lumber or shingle, usually wedge
shaped, which when forced behind a
furring strip or framing member forces
it into position. Also used when
installing doors and placed between the
door jamb legs and 2 X 4 door trimmers.
Metal shims are wafer 1 1/2" X 2" sheet
metal of various thickness' used to fill
gaps in wood framing members, especially
at bearing point locations.
|
|
Shingles |
Roof covering of
asphalt. asbestos, wood, tile, slate, or
other material cut to stock lengths,
widths, and thickness'.
|
|
Shingles, siding |
Various kinds of
shingles, used over sheathing for
exterior wall covering of a structure.
|
|
Short circuit |
A situation that
occurs when hot and neutral wires come
in contact with each other. Fuses and
circuit breakers protect against fire
that could result from a short.
|
|
Shutter |
Usually lightweight
louvered decorative frames in the form
of doors located on the sides of a
window. Some shutters are made to close
over the window for protection.
|
|
Side sewer |
The portion of the
sanitary sewer which connects the
interior waste water lines to the main
sewer lines. The side sewer is usually
buried in several feet of soil and runs
from the house to the sewer line. It is
usually 'owned' by the sewer utility,
must be maintained by the owner and may
only be serviced by utility approved
contractors. Sometimes called sewer
lateral. |
|
Siding |
The finished
exterior covering of the outside walls
of a frame building. |
|
Siding, (lap siding) |
Slightly wedge
shaped boards used as
horizontal siding in a lapped pattern
over the exterior sheathing. Varies in
butt thickness from ½ to ¾ inch and in
widths up to 12". |
|
Sill |
(1) The 2 X 4 or 2
X 6 wood plate framing member that lays
flat against and bolted to the
foundation wall (with anchor bolts) and
upon which the floor joists are
installed. Normally the sill plate is
treated lumber. (2) The member forming
the lower side of an opening, as a door
sill or window sill. |
|
Sill cock |
An exterior water
faucet (hose bib). |
|
Sill plate (mudsill) |
Bottom horizontal
member of an exterior wall frame which
rests on top a foundation, sometimes
called mudsill. Also sole plate, bottom
member of an interior wall frame.
|
|
Sill seal |
Fiberglass or foam
insulation installed between the
foundation wall and sill (wood) plate.
Designed to seal any cracks or gaps.
|
|
Single hung window |
A window with one
vertically sliding sash or window vent.
|
|
Skylight |
A more or less
horizontal window located on the roof of
a building. |
|
Slab, concrete |
Concrete pavement,
i.e. driveways, garages, and basement
floors. |
|
Slab, door |
A rectangular door
without hinges or frame.
|
|
Slab on grade |
A type of
foundation with a concrete floor which
is placed directly on the soil. The edge
of the slab is usually thicker and acts
as the footing for the walls.
|
|
Slag |
Concrete cement
that sometimes covers the vertical face
of the foundation void material.
|
|
Sleeper |
Usually, a wood
member embedded in concrete, as in a
floor, that serves to support and to
fasten the subfloor or flooring.
|
|
Sleeve(s) |
Pipe installed
under the concrete driveway or sidewalk,
and that will be used later to run
sprinkler pipe or low voltage wire.
|
|
Slope |
The incline angle
of a roof surface, given as a ratio of
the rise (in inches) to the run (in
feet). See also pitch.
|
|
Slump |
The "wetness" of
concrete. A 3 inch slump is dryer and
stiffer than a 5 inch slump.
|
|
Soffit |
The area below the
eaves and overhangs. The underside where
the roof overhangs the walls. Usually
the underside of an overhanging cornice.
|
|
Soil pipe |
A large pipe that
carries liquid and solid wastes to a
sewer or septic tank.
|
|
Soil stack |
A plumbing vent
pipe that penetrates the roof.
|
|
Sole plate |
The bottom,
horizontal framing member of a wall
that's attached to the floor sheeting
and vertical wall studs.
|
|
Solid bridging |
A solid member
placed between adjacent floor joists
near the center of the span to prevent
joists or rafters from twisting.
|
|
Sonotube |
Round, large
cardboard tubes designed to hold wet
concrete in place until it hardens.
|
|
Sound attenuation |
Sound proofing a
wall or subfloor, generally with
fiberglass insulation.
|
|
Space heat |
Heat supplied to
the living space, for example, to a room
or the living area of a building.
|
|
Spacing |
The distance
between individual members or shingles
in building construction.
|
|
Span |
The clear distance that a framing member carries a load
without support between structural
supports. The horizontal distance from
eaves to eaves. |
|
Spec home |
A house built
before it is sold. The builder
speculates that he can sell it at a
profit. |
|
Specifications or Specs |
A narrative list of
materials, methods, model numbers,
colors, allowances, and other details
which supplement the information
contained in the blue prints. Written
elaboration in specific detail about
construction materials and methods.
Written to supplement working drawings.
|
|
Splash block |
Portable concrete
(or vinyl) channel generally placed
beneath an exterior sill cock (water
faucet) or downspout in order to receive
roof drainage from downspouts and to
divert it away from the building.
|
|
Square |
A unit of measure
100 square feet usually applied to
roofing and siding material. Also, a
situation that exists when two elements
are at right angles to each other. Also
a tool for checking this.
|
|
Square-tab shingles |
Shingles on which
tabs are all the same size and exposure.
|
|
Squeegie |
Fine pea gravel
used to grade a floor (normally before
concrete is placed). |
|
Stack (trusses) |
To position trusses
on the walls in their correct location.
|
|
Standard practices of the
trade(s) |
One of the more
common basic and minimum construction
standards. This is another way of saying
that the work should be done in the way
it is normally done by the average
professional in the field.
|
|
Starter strip |
Asphalt roofing
applied at the eaves that provides
protection by filling in the spaces
under the cutouts and joints of the
first course of shingles.
|
|
Stair carriage or
stringer |
Supporting member
for stair treads. Usually a 2 X 12 inch
plank notched to receive the treads;
sometimes called a "rough horse."
|
|
Stair landing |
A platform between
flights of stairs or at the termination
of a flight of stairs. Often used when
stairs change direction. Normally no
less than 3 ft. X 3 ft. square.
|
|
Stair rise |
The vertical
distance from stair tread to stair tread
(and not to exceed 7 ½").
|
|
Static vent |
A vent that does
not include a fan. |
|
STC (Sound Transmission
Class) |
The measure of
sound stopping of ordinary noise.
|
|
Steel inspection |
A municipal and/or
engineers inspection of the concrete
foundation wall, conducted before
concrete is poured into the foundation
panels. Done to insure that the rebar
(reinforcing bar), rebar nets, void
material, beam pocket plates, and
basement window bucks are installed and
wrapped with rebar and complies with the
foundation plan. |
|
Step flashing |
Flashing
application method used where a vertical
surface meets a sloping roof plane. 6" X
6" galvanized metal bent at a 90 degree
angle, and installed beneath siding and
over the top of shingles. Each piece
overlaps the one beneath it the entire
length of the sloping roof (step by
step). |
|
Stick built |
A house built
without prefabricated parts. Also called
conventional building.
|
|
Stile |
An upright framing
member in a panel door.
|
|
Stool |
The flat molding
fitted over the window sill between
jambs and contacting the bottom rail of
the lower sash. Also another name for
toilet. |
|
Stop box |
Normally a cast
iron pipe with a lid (@ 5" in diameter)
that is placed vertically into the
ground, situated near the water tap in
the yard, and where a water cut
off valve to the home is
located (underground). A long pole with
a special end is inserted into the curb
stop to turn off/on the water.
|
|
Stop Order |
A formal, written
notification to a contractor to
discontinue some or all work on a
project for reasons such as safety
violations, defective materials or
workmanship, or cancellation of the
contract. |
|
Stops |
Moldings along the
inner edges of a door or window frame.
Also valves used to shut off water to a
fixture. |
|
Stop valve |
A device installed
in a water supply line, usually near a
fixture, that permits an individual to
shut off the water supply to one fixture
without interrupting service to the rest
of the system. |
|
Storm sash or storm
window |
. An extra window usually
placed outside of an existing one, as
additional protection against cold
weather. |
|
Storm sewer |
A sewer system
designed to collect storm water and is
separated from the waste water system.
|
|
Story |
That part of a
building between any floor or between
the floor and roof. |
|
Strike |
The plate on a door
frame that engages a latch or dead bolt.
|
|
String, stringer |
A timber or other
support for cross members in floors or
ceilings. In stairs, the supporting
member for stair treads. Usually a 2 X
12 inch plank notched to receive the
treads |
|
Strip flooring |
Wood flooring
consisting of narrow, matched strips.
|
|
Structural floor |
A framed lumber
floor that is installed as a basement
floor instead of concrete. This
is done on very expansive soils.
|
|
Stub, stubbed |
To push through.
|
|
Stucco |
Refers to an
outside plaster finish made with
Portland cement as its base.
|
|
Stud |
A vertical wood
framing member, also referred to as a
wall stud, attached to the horizontal
sole plate below and the top plate
above. Normally 2 X 4's or 2 X 6's, 8'
long (sometimes 92 5/8"). One of a
series of wood or metal vertical
structural members placed as supporting
elements in walls and partitions.
|
|
Stud framing |
A building method
that distributes structural loads to
each of a series of relatively
lightweight studs. Contrasts with post
and beam. |
|
Stud shoe |
A metal, structural
bracket that reinforces a vertical stud.
Used on an outside bearing wall where
holes are drilled to accommodate a
plumbing waste line. |
|
Subfloor |
The framing
components of a floor to include the
sill plate, floor joists, and deck
sheeting over which a finish floor is to
be laid. |
|
Sump |
Pit or large
plastic bucket/barrel inside the home
designed to collect ground water from a
perimeter drain system.
|
|
Sump pump |
A submersible pump
in a sump pit that pumps any excess
ground water to the outside of the home.
|
|
Suspended ceiling |
A ceiling system
supported by hanging it from the
overhead structural framing.
|
|
Sway brace |
Metal straps or
wood blocks installed diagonally on the
inside of a wall from bottom to top
plate, to prevent the wall from
twisting, racking, or falling over
"domino" fashion. |
|
Switch |
A device that
completes or disconnects an electrical
circuit. |
Back to top
T
|
T & G, tongue and groove |
A joint made by a
tongue (a rib on one edge of a board)
that fits into a corresponding groove in
the edge of another board to make a
tight flush joint. Typically, the
sub-floor plywood is T & G.
|
|
Tab |
The exposed portion
of strip shingles defined by cutouts.
|
|
Tail beam |
A relatively short
beam or joist supported in a wall on one
end and by a header at the other.
|
|
Take off |
The material
necessary to complete a job.
|
|
Taping |
The process of
covering drywall joints with paper tape
and joint compound. |
|
T bar |
Ribbed, "T"
shaped bars with a flat metal plate at
the bottom that are driven into the
earth. Normally used chain link fence
poles, and to mark locations of a water
meter pit. |
|
Teco |
Metal straps that
are nailed and secure the roof rafters
and trusses to the top horizontal wall
plate. Sometimes called a hurricane
clip. |
|
Tee |
A "T" shaped
plumbing fitting. |
|
Tempered |
Strengthened.
Tempered glass will not shatter nor
create shards, but will "pelletize" like
an automobile window. Required in tub
and shower enclosures and locations,
entry door glass and sidelight glass,
and in a windows when the window sill is
less than 16" to the floor.
|
|
Termites |
Wood eating insects
that superficially resemble ants in size
and general appearance, and live in
colonies. |
|
Termite shield |
A shield, usually
of galvanized metal, placed in or on a
foundation wall or around pipes to
prevent the passage of termites.
|
|
Terra cotta |
A ceramic material
molded into masonry units.
|
|
Thermoply ™ |
Exterior laminated
sheathing nailed to the exterior side of
the exterior walls. Normally ¼ " thick,
4 X 8 or 4 x 10 sheets with an
aluminumized surface.
|
|
Thermostat |
A device which
relegates the temperature of a room or
building by switching heating or cooling
equipment on or off. |
|
Thinner |
Another name for
the heating contractor.
|
|
Three-Dimensional
shingles |
Laminated shingles.
Shingles that have added dimensionality
because of extra layers or tabs, giving
a shake-
like appearance. May also
be called "architectural shingles".
|
|
Threshold |
The bottom metal or
wood plate of an exterior door frame.
Generally they are adjustable to keep a
tight fit with the door slab.
|
|
Time and materials
contract |
A construction
contract which specifies a price for
different elements of the work such as
cost per hour of labor, overhead,
profit, etc. A contract which may not
have a maximum price, or may state a
'price not to exceed'.
|
|
Tip up |
The downspout
extension that directs water (from the
home's gutter system) away from the
home. They typically swing up when
mowing the lawn, etc.
|
|
Title |
Evidence (usually
in the form of a certificate or deed) of
a person's legal right to ownership of a
property. |
|
TJI or TJ |
Manufactured
structural building component resembling
the letter "I". Used as floor
joists and rafters. I-
joists include two key
parts: flanges and webs.
The flange or from of the I joist
may be made of laminated veneer lumber
or dimensional lumber, usually formed
into a 1 ½" width. The web or
center of the I-joist is commonly made
of plywood or oriented strand board (OSB).
Large holes can be cut in the web to
accommodate duct work and plumbing waste
lines. I-joists are available in lengths
up to 60'' long. |
|
Toenailing |
To drive a nail in
at a slant. Method used to secure floor
joists to the plate. |
|
Top chord |
The upper or top
member of a truss. |
|
Top plate |
Top horizontal
member of a frame wall supporting
ceiling joists, rafters, or other
members. |
|
Transmitter (garage door) |
The small, push
button device that causes the garage
door to open or close.
|
|
Trap |
A plumbing fitting
that holds water to prevent air, gas,
and vermin from backing up into a
fixture. |
|
Tread |
The walking surface
board in a stairway on which the foot is
placed. |
|
Treated lumber |
A wood product
which has been impregnated with chemical
pesticides such as CCA (Chromated Copper
Arsenate) to reduce damage from wood rot
or insects. Often used for the portions
of a structure which are likely to be in
contact with soil and water. Wood may
also be treated with a fire retardant.
|
|
Trim (plumbing, heating,
electrical) |
The work that the
"mechanical" contractors perform to
finish their respective aspects of work,
and when the home is nearing completion
and occupancy. |
|
Trim-Interior |
The finish
materials in a building, such as
moldings applied around openings (window
trim, door trim) or at the floor and
ceiling of rooms (baseboard, cornice,
and other moldings). Also, the physical
work of installing interior doors and
interior woodwork, to include all
handrails, guardrails, stair way
balustrades, mantles, light boxes, base,
door casings, cabinets, countertops,
shelves, window sills and aprons, etc.
|
|
Trim-Exterior |
The finish materials on
the exterior of a building, such as
moldings applied around openings (window
trim, door trim), siding, windows,
exterior doors, attic vents, crawl space
vents, shutters, etc. Also, the physical
work of installing these materials . |
|
Trimmer |
The vertical stud
that supports a header at a door,
window, or other opening.
|
|
Truss |
An engineered and
manufactured roof support member with "zig-
zag" framing members.
Does the same job as a rafter but is
designed to have a longer span than a
rafter. |
|
Tub trap |
Curved, "U"
shaped section of a bath tub drain pipe
that holds a water seal to prevent sewer
gasses from entering the home through
tubs water drain. |
|
Turnkey |
A term used when
the subcontractor provides all materials
(and labor) for a job.
|
|
Turpentine |
A petroleum,
volatile oil used as a thinner in paints
and as a solvent in varnishes.
|
Back to top
U
|
UL (Underwriters'
Laboratories) |
An independent
testing agency that checks electrical
devices and other components for
possible safety hazards.
|
|
Undercoat |
A coating applied
prior to the finishing or top coats of a
paint job. It may be the first of two or
the second of three coats. Sometimes
called the Prime coat.
|
|
Underground plumbing |
The plumbing drain
and waste lines that are installed
beneath a basement floor.
|
|
Underlayment |
A ¼" material
placed over the subfloor plywood
sheeting and under finish coverings,
such as vinyl flooring, to provide a
smooth, even surface. Also a secondary
roofing layer that is waterproof or
water-resistant,
installed on the roof deck and beneath
shingles or other roof finishing layer.
|
|
Union |
A plumbing fitting
that joins pipes end-to-end so they can
be dismantled. |
|
Utility Easement |
The area of the
earth that has electric, gas, or
telephone lines. These areas may be
owned by the homeowner, but the utility
company has the legal right to enter the
area as necessary to repair or service
the lines |
Back to top
V
|
Valley |
The "V"
shaped area of a roof where two sloping
roofs meet. Water drains off the roof at
the valleys. |
|
Valley flashing |
Sheet metal that
lays in the "V" area of a roof valley.
|
|
Valuation |
An inspection
carried out for the benefit of the
mortgage lender to ascertain if a
property is a good security for a loan.
|
|
Valuation fee |
The fee paid by the
prospective borrower for the lender's
inspection of the property. Normally
paid upon loan application.
|
|
Vapor barrier |
A building product
installed on exterior walls and ceilings
under the drywall and on the warm side
of the insulation. It is used to retard
the movement of water vapor into walls
and prevent condensation within them.
Normally, polyethylene plastic sheeting
is used. |
|
Variable rate |
An interest rate
that will vary over the term of the
loan. |
|
Veneer |
Extremely thin
sheets of wood. Also a thin slice of
wood or brick or stone covering a framed
wall. |
|
Vent |
A pipe or duct
which allows the flow of air and gasses
to the outside. Also, another word for
the moving glass part of a window sash,
i.e. window vent. |
|
Vermiculite |
A mineral used as
bulk insulation and also as aggregate in
insulating and acoustical plaster and in
insulating concrete floors.
|
|
Veterans Administration
(VA) |
A federal agency
that insures mortgage loans with very
liberal down payment requirements for
honorably discharged veterans and their
surviving spouses. |
|
Visqueen |
A 4 mil or 6 mil
plastic sheeting. |
|
Void |
Cardboard
rectangular boxes that are installed
between the earth (between caissons) and
the concrete foundation wall. Used when
expansive soils are present.
|
|
Voltage |
A measure of
electrical potential. Most homes are
wired with 110 and 220 volt lines. The
110 volt power is used for lighting and
most of the other circuits. The 220 volt
power is usually used for the kitchen
range, hot water heater and dryer |
Back to top
W
|
Wafer board
|
A manufactured wood
panel made out of 1" to 2" wood chips
and glue. Often used as a substitute for
plywood in the exterior wall and roof
sheathing. |
|
Walk-Through |
A final inspection
of a home before "Closing" to look for
and document problems that need to be
corrected.
|
|
Wall out |
When a painter pray
paints the interior of a home.
|
|
Warping |
Any distortion in a
material. |
|
Warranty |
In construction
there are two general types of
warranties. One is provided by the
manufacturer of a product such as
roofing material or an appliance. The
second is a warranty for the labor. For
example, a roofing contract may include
a 20 year material warranty and a 5 year
labor warranty. Many new homebuilders
provide a one year warranty. Any major
issue found during the first year should
be communicated to the builder
immediately. Small items can be saved up
and presented to the builder for
correction periodically through the
first year after closing.
|
|
Waste pipe and vent |
Plumbing plastic
pipe that carries waste water to the
municipal sewage system.
|
|
Water board |
Water resistant
drywall to be used in tub and shower
locations. Normally green or blue
colored |
|
Water closet |
Another name for
toilet. |
Water meter pit
(or vault) |
The box /cast iron
bonnet and concrete rings that contains
the water meter. |
|
Water-Repellent
preservative |
A liquid applied to wood
to give the wood water repellant
properties |
|
Water table |
The location of the
underground water, and the vertical
distance from the surface of the earth
to this underground water.
|
|
Water tap |
The connection
point where the home water line connects
to the main municipal water system.
|
|
W C |
An abbreviation for
water closet (toilet).
|
|
Weatherization |
Work on a building
exterior in order to reduce energy
consumption for heating or cooling.
Work involving adding insulation,
installing storm windows and doors,
caulking cracks and putting on
weather-stripping. |
|
Weatherstrip |
Narrow sections of
thin metal or other material installed
to prevent the infiltration of air and
moisture around windows and doors.
|
|
Weep holes |
Small holes in
storm window frames that allow moisture
to escape. |
|
Whole house fan |
A fan designed to
move air through and out of a home and
normally installed in the ceiling.
|
|
Wind bracing |
Metal straps or
wood blocks installed diagonally on the
inside of a wall from bottom to top
plate, to prevent the wall from
twisting, racking, or falling over
"domino" fashion. |
|
Window buck |
Square or
rectangular box that is installed within
a concrete foundation or block wall. A
window will eventually be installed in
this "buck" during the siding stage of
construction |
|
Window frame |
The stationary part
of a window unit; window sash fits into
the window frame. |
|
Window sash |
The operating or
movable part of a window; the sash is
made of window panes and their border.
|
|
Wire nut |
A plastic device
used to connect bare wires together.
|
|
Wonderboard ™ |
A panel made out of
concrete and fiberglass usually used as
a ceramic tile backing material.
Commonly used on bathtub decks.
|
|
Wrapped drywall |
Areas that get
complete drywall covering, as in the
doorway openings of bifold and bipass
closet doors. |
Back to top
Y
|
Y |
A "Y" shaped
plumbing fitting. |
|
Yard of concrete |
One cubic yard of
concrete is 3' X 3' X 3' in volume, or
27 cubic feet. One cubic yard of
concrete will pour 80 square feet of 3
½" sidewalk or basement/garage floor.
|
|
Yoke |
The location where
a home's water meter is sometimes
installed between two copper pipes, and
located in the water meter pit in the
yard |
Back to top
Z
|
Z-bar flashing |
Bent, galvanized metal
flashing that's installed above a
horizontal trim board of an exterior
window, door, or brick run. It prevents
water from getting behind the trim/brick
and into the home. |
|
|
Zone |
The section of a
building that is served by one heating
or cooling loop because it has
noticeably distinct heating or cooling
needs. Also, the section of property
that will be watered from a lawn
sprinkler system. |
|
Zone valve |
A device, usually
placed near the heater or cooler, which
controls the flow of water or steam to
parts of the building; it is controlled
by a zone thermostat.
|
|
Zoning |
A governmental
process and specification which limits
the use of a property e.g. single family
use, high rise residential use,
industrial use, etc. Zoning laws may
limit where you can locate a structure.
Also see building codes.
|
Back to top |







|
|

©
Copyright 2007-2012. Outer County Construction, Inc. All rights reserved.
Designed by Luminnet
|
|