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Chadmor Homes, Inc.

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Reviews Chadmor Homes, Inc.

Chadmor Homes, Inc. Reviews (2)

One-year warranty is not being honored because Chadmor Homes has not paid bills. Additionally,Chadmor Homes has not reimbursed owner for land deposit.Less than three months after moving into our newly constructed house, our guaranteed one-year home warranty is ineffective.Subcontractors [redacted] and [redacted] have filed notice that they have not been paid by Chadmor Homes ([redacted]) for contracted services during the build of our home, which we moved into on Nov. 14, 2014. [redacted] is reluctant to service our home's current electrical issues because, according to them, [redacted] has not paid them for their work. They say they have filed a lien on our house solely due to the fact that Chadmor Homes has not paid them for services rendered during construction of our house. This renders our guaranteed one-year warranty ineffective. Other warranty issues have arisen as well. Mr.[redacted] is also holding $500 of the home owner's money collected as a deposit on the land in March of 2014. An additional $250 that Mr.[redacted] agreed to repay is also outstanding.Calls, emails, and texts to [redacted] from the homeowner, the realtor, and members of The [redacted] have not been returned for weeks. Desired SettlementI would like Chadmor Homes to settle any outstanding bills/complaints with any and all sub-contractors that worked on our house so that I can schedule punch list repairs per the one-year warranty we were guaranteed.I also want Chadmor Homes to return the full monetary amount due us for the deposit on the land and the agreed upon reimbursement (a current total of $750.)

Construction defect caused water leak in house. Contractor won't respond to request for repairs.House is less than 3 years old and water damage on dining room ceiling discovered in Nov 2013. Should be noted damage area is no where near water pipes, etc, so water was somehow entering house from rain, and made its way to dining room ceiling. Contractor contacted immediately and made aware of issue. Contractor responded and applied caulk to one small area, but never took any actions beyond the caulk. Leak continued. Contractor contacted again. Contractor responded with a roofer, and according to Contractor, roofer inspected roof and said all looked good. Contractor advised they applied caulk below window sill, but nothing further. It should be noted, Contractor in text after on scene with roofer said, "will keep trying until we find it". Leak continued. Contractor was called and texted multiple times over two months, but never responded. As of the date of this writing, I have not had any response from the Contractor. Since the water leak continued and Contractor would not respond, I had to contact another Contractor. This other Contractor immediately responded and has been working on trying to discover the water entry point since May 2014. Other Contractor did diagnose the water appeared to be entering the house behind the stone veneer, and was traveling behind the tyvek, then finding a resting spot on the ceiling of the dining room. Other Contractor called in the Stone Company who installed the stone veneer when the house was built, and the two companies are now working together to repair house. During this time period, I filed a claim with my insurance company. The insurance company advised my issue did not appear to be a covered loss since it appears to be a construction defect that caused water to enter the house, but insurance company agreed to hire a structural engineer to inspect the house. Engineer inspected and although he could not find the exact spot where the water was entering the house, his conclusion was this water issue is the result of a construction/installation defect. I have engineer's report. A few weeks ago, I emailed my original Contractor and his wife (officer of company) requesting they provide the name of their insurance company so I could file a construction defect claim with the contractor's insurance company. I never received a response to my email. The Other Contractor and the Stone Company both agree the best course of action at this point is to remove a large portion of the stone veneer and all layers under the veneer so in essence, they can start over. The estimate for these repairs are in the $3000+ range, and this is if they do not run into other issues along the way. This is in addition to the money I have paid already for discovery of the issue by the other companies. Also, my dining room ceiling will have to be repaired which will be another expense. My Original Contractor decided to disappear, and leave my wife and I to deal with his responsibility. I plan to get my house repaired, and for now will have to pay out of my own pocket, but definitely do not plan to let this go, and plan to take additional steps as needed to get the resolution my wife and I deserve. I am just starting with the Revdex.com and hope you can resolve this for me.Desired SettlementGeneral Contractor should be responsible for any and all expense associated with repairing this water leak which is a result of a Construction/installation defect which my General Contractor was responsible for. Beyond the actual repair expenses, I am in the process of reviewing other damages my family suffered throughout this ongoing ordeal.

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Description: General Contractors, Home Builders

Address: PO Box 98685, Raleigh, North Carolina, United States, 27624-8685

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