Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
FTFY.I'd honestly be more worried about the shit in the air and walls. That place was filthy before, now it's got to be a Resident Evil house.
Nature is stronger than you think. Fortunately Fallout 3 is not realistic with the Earth being barren 200 years after a nuclear war - in real life, it would be overgrown by that time. Just look at Chernobyl. Nature can take over Chrisnobyl just as fine.
That one drunken night at the bar screwed you over didn't it Bob?Bob tried. RIP.
How much of Chris' crap was actually in his room?
Fire, then doused with water, then left to rot for 6 fucking months...there is no way that the upstairs floor in that house is structurally sound enough to support an adult's body weight.
Fine, so imagine a ween trying to record in Chris' old room, carefully setting his camera in the same angle Chris had, getting ready to make his rant, breathing in...only to have the floor cave under him, all caught in video. Smutley did say it'd be hysterical.
IThe stuff piled up under Chris' badly closed bedroom window, on the other hand, is most definitely Chandler barbage which, for some reason never made it as far as the dumpster. And that's odd considering they have a perfectly good wheelbarrow right there.
Demolition crews don't remove junk before demolishing, they just move up on it and claw everything down
Then front-end loaders come in, dump into dumptrucks, and it gets hauled off.
That one drunken night at the bar screwed you over didn't it Bob?
Hanky panky was not worth.
So many conjectures. I have one, too!
In the original shots of 14BLC, the big pile of rubble is apparently on the right, exiting the front door.
That is gone. So, does that mean someone wheelbarrowed the old right-side pile away? Scavengers? The a/c in the side kitchen window is gone, the discarded burned door and that old yellow frig formerly in the utility room makes it seem like Something is being done.
Demolition crews don't remove junk before demolishing, they just move up on it and claw everything down
Then front-end loaders come in, dump into dumptrucks, and it gets hauled off.
My thought is, the plan is to reconstruct the house, UNLESS Barb delays the proceedings too long bc of her untreated mental illness issues.
Hoarding was officially added to the DSM V last year, as a treatable mental illness. But that's another thread.
Sad to see it now.
Bob tried. RIP.
Which would mean Chris got that wrong too. Any fool knows you stash bodies in chest freezers so they don't keep falling out on you every time you open the door.Man, those two fridges really do look like they could have corpses stashed inside them.
Yeah, we've been over that. Aluminum is not necessarily a fire risk, but only if the electrician and homeowner know how to work with its limitations. What are the odds of Chris or Barb knowing that? Also aluminum wiring does have an attraction for thieves, it's just not as profitable to them as copper.That might also highlight a contributing factor to the fire in the first place. (which i'm sure has probably been supposed already, now that I think about it.)
Nah. Most of the framing itself is probably still pretty sound. The fittings and fixtures are toast, as is the wallboard, but those would need to be stripped before repair anyways. From the outside shots I've seen, a large part of the roof is fucked (obviously), and there's probably significant (though repairable) damage to some core framing, but for the most part the framing will just need a hell of a lot of mold remediation. 14BLC is probably still recoverable, even after all this, except for two things: Chris and Barb.Fire, then doused with water, then left to rot for 6 fucking months...there is no way that the upstairs floor in that house is structurally sound enough to support an adult's body weight.
The pile at the front door, which probably came out the front door, has been cleared. As barbage was removed through the front door, access to Chris' bedroom was opened. The boards over his window have been pulled, letting barbage be removed from the building through that instead of carrying it through the building to the front door. That's why it's piling up under that window in these pictures.In the original shots of 14BLC, the big pile of rubble is apparently on the right, exiting the front door. That is gone. So, does that mean someone wheelbarrowed the old right-side pile away?
Of a sort, yes. Three guesses what their names are.Scavengers?
Well it is the beginning of the warm season, and scavengers like to keep cool in their rental houses as well.The a/c in the side kitchen window is gone,
Actually, they do. There are all sorts of rules and laws about that, most of which stem from landfills wanting to know what's being dumped in them beforehand. They just don't ever take this fucking long to do it. All it takes is a day or two at most, usually, for a clean out crew to have a house completely stripped inside. At the very least the copper would be stripped first.Demolition crews don't remove junk before demolishing, they just move up on it and claw everything down Then front-end loaders come in, dump into dumptrucks, and it gets hauled off.
Nah. This is odd because some of it is obviously the work of Chris and Barb, but other things point to a hired clean out crew also being on site at some point. There's a lot here that is just plain stupid, but also a lot that makes no sense, even for Chris. Can you see Chris or Barb wantonly chucking their precious treasures out a second story window when they've been so careful to recover so much of it (like melted lego witches)? Why would Chris or Barb go to the effort of putting things in the dumpster only to pull them back out again after? But if it was a paid clean up crew doing that, why is it being done so slowly and badly?It's not odd. It's Chris, and using elbow-greased strength on a wheelbarrow is HARD WORK
They usually schedule the utility crews right before the 'dozers show up though. With only monthly updates we may well miss that. We're more likely to catch something like signs of the copper being professionally stripped out etc. That's something I've been looking for in these updates.You'll know what's going to happen before it happens, but if you see utility trucks out there cutting the mains you'll know it's about to come down.
Except we should have seen drywall etc. in the dumpster for that by now as well were they planning on leveling it. To be honest, I don't know what the fuck they think they are doing there.It looks more like right now they're just tossing stuff out in order to reach the drywalls and strip it of it's plumbing and other metals before bringing in the bulldozer and raze the whole place.
are you fucking seriousYeah, diapers are for babies, so he deals with his pants-shitting by using panty liners instead. That totally makes sense.
I hope someone gets the destruction of 14 BLC on camera.It's not odd. It's Chris, and using elbow-greased strength on a wheelbarrow is HARD WORK
No they don't. There's usually a lot of recyclable material in a house that can be removed and resold, even a house as neglected as 14 BLC. And a house that old would need a thorough inspection for lead paint and asbestos before it could be torn down (the presence of lead paint might explain a lot...). A lot of the hoard would have to be removed before the inspection could be done, though. They'd also need to disconnect all the utilities--disconnect, not just turn off.
You'll know what's going to happen before it happens, but if you see utility trucks out there cutting the mains you'll know it's about to come down.
They'd need a much longer time-lapse video for that.I hope someone gets the destruction of 14 BLC on camera.
I had a dream featuring that once. He even tried to flush it down the church toilet and fucked up the plumbing.Yeah, diapers are for babies, so he deals with his pants-shitting by using panty liners instead. That totally makes sense.
I was just talking about the state of Chris's house with a friend of mine, and I suddenly realized something that may be kind of critical. I'd almost forgotten that 14BLC is one of those houses where the downstairs is actually partly underground (I think someone in the thread called it "split-level"?) to keep the lower rooms cooler. With that being the case, would that then mean that when the house was doused by firehoses, the water had nowhere to leak out and was just left to pool in the bottom?