NWT-Bee
05-02-2021, 03:05 PM
I grew up in a tiny town, where titled land is rare due to indigenous land claims, and new homes are rarer. I moved away as a teen, but as I have just reached 30, I've been missing the town dearly, as well as the two story log home that I grew up in. It was a medium home, not huge - 3 bed 1 bath all upstairs, a kitchen and living room with a gigantic wood stove downstairs. It still sits where it did when I was a child, one of the most beautiful homes in the area, on some of the only titled land in the area. It is riverfront, looking out across the river to a gorgeous mountain that I used to watch the northern lights dance around out my bedroom window.
All this to say, as I look at possibly starting my family, I want so badly to try to buy this home from the government board that owns it. I've been considering reaching out and offering to buy it this year. BUT I also remember 3 or 5 times in the spring melt, the river would flood and we would need to canoe out of our home and stay at the combined general store/motel for a week. One time, the water made it into the living room during the spring flood, and I remember Mom losing her mind about all the mud coating the inside of the house.
This is where I need some expertise - is there anything I can do to save this home from future damage if I buy it? I don't think it can be totally moved with the infrastructure available in the town, but.... has anyone heard of an existing log home being raised up onto a platform or similar? The water is not very fast moving at all by the time it spreads out all the way to the house - the flood water never was fast enough near the house to carry trees, etc.
Would a space frame support a log home? Pillars? Can a log home be raised a significant distance (1.5 - 2 Meters) as a whole, or is that just wishful thinking?
I can upload some old 90s pictures of it if required!
All this to say, as I look at possibly starting my family, I want so badly to try to buy this home from the government board that owns it. I've been considering reaching out and offering to buy it this year. BUT I also remember 3 or 5 times in the spring melt, the river would flood and we would need to canoe out of our home and stay at the combined general store/motel for a week. One time, the water made it into the living room during the spring flood, and I remember Mom losing her mind about all the mud coating the inside of the house.
This is where I need some expertise - is there anything I can do to save this home from future damage if I buy it? I don't think it can be totally moved with the infrastructure available in the town, but.... has anyone heard of an existing log home being raised up onto a platform or similar? The water is not very fast moving at all by the time it spreads out all the way to the house - the flood water never was fast enough near the house to carry trees, etc.
Would a space frame support a log home? Pillars? Can a log home be raised a significant distance (1.5 - 2 Meters) as a whole, or is that just wishful thinking?
I can upload some old 90s pictures of it if required!