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I find safety hazards in many homes that I inspect, new and old. Here are some of them:


Plumbing: Hot and cold water lines reversed are more common than you think. So are water faucet temperatures exceeding 130 degrees, which is an extreme scalding hazard especially for children. Lower the heat setting on your water heater if needed. A few days ago I took a reading of 148 F at a half bath faucet.


Shower Door: If the door is made of glass that is non-tempered material, you have an extremely serious safety issue that you need to correct immediately.


Electric: GFCI outlets in bathrooms, kitchens, exterior outlets and garages. These grounded outlets help protect against electric shock should someone come into contact with water when operating an electrical appliance. Do you know if your outlets are grounded? Is your service equipment capacity adequate? If you don't know, forget about adding any more electric appliances until you find out.


Furnace: Nice looking two year old furnace in your new home? Good for you. However the furnace filter may also be two years old, which is a potential carbon monoxide issue. Don't assume that the current homeowner changed the filters as required.


Exterior: Uneven patio slabs. I often find that portions of concrete patio slabs have settled while other portions stay intact. This a serious trip hazard that often goes unnoticed until someone gets hurt. Window well covers provide additional security for your home. But if you have a well that is not covered, it is a serious safety issue you need to correct immediately. If someone fell in because you failed to cover it, injuries are likely to occur. When a well cover is in place it locks from the inside near the basement window with a pin type mechanism. If you needed to escape your home from the basement window, would the window and well cover mechanisms release as intended? How do you know? Did you ever test them?


Roof: Feel like cleaning tree branches off the roof of your new home? Before you placed the metal ladder against the side of the home, would you have checked to make sure that overhead electrical wiring is not in contact with any portion of the gutters?


Attics: If for some reason you must venture into this area of your home, one bad step may send you crashing to the ground. The attic floor (which is your living space ceiling) is usually nothing more than a thin sheet of drywall.


Clothes Dryer: Did you know that in many homes the dryer exhaust vent is made of vinyl that can melt and cause a fire? The vent material should be flexible metal.


Exterior Doors: Do you have a nice secure deadbolt installed that you lock from the inside before going to sleep? How are you going to get out of the home should there be a fire and you can't find your door keys? Even if it's during the day, don't leave your keys in the lock. That's what burglars look for if you have a small window next to the door.


Garage Door: Your door may open and close just fine. But would it reverse if it came into contact with someone who might be underneath when closing it? Reverse features sometimes fail and cause severe, even fatal injuries. Test regularly. If you don't have optical motion sensors they would be a very worthwhile investment.


Deck/Balcony Balusters: Are you aware that a very young child can squeeze between balusters that are more than four inches a part?


Stairs: Any stairway with four or more steps without a handrail is considered a trip hazard and depending on the municipality, may also be a code violation.

Stair Railings: They always look safe and secure from a distance. Once I barely touched a railing and it fell off. Are yours firm and securely fastened?


Crawl Space: Besides the long list of maintenance issues that are common especially in unconditioned crawl spaces, many have wires strewn across the ground or dangling overhead. Add a wet ground and you have a recipe for a disaster. Possibly live wires in direct contact with water. Would you have known to stay out of the crawl space? Same goes for the basement. Don't eve go into a basement that's flooded. A fatal charge may await you. Call an electrician and your utility company immediately.

Erol Kartal

Home Inspection Chicago

 
Post is included in group: Windy City Real Estate
Post is included in group: Chicago-Northern Illinois Real Estate

3 Comments on Home Safety Issues

Window well covers also help keep garbage and other debris out of the window wells. Here's a few examples

www.abbygrates.com

www.andersoncovers.com 

04/28/2008 04:54 PM by Russ


There are some beautiful and unbreakable window well covers at www.windowwellexperts.com

04/29/2008 02:40 PM by slk


Erol, this is a great post with a lot of great information, especially for homeowners.  There are so many little things that can be done to upgrade the safety of their homes. 

Also just wanted to welcome you to active rain, a great week and a great weekend.

05/01/2008 07:44 AM by Atlanta's Home Inspector David Lelak - IHI Home Inspections (IHI Home Inspections)


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Inspector: Erol Kartal (Pro Inspect Inc.)
Erol Kartal
Schaumburg, IL
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Pro Inspect Inc.

Office Phone: (847) 533-6246
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Photos of defects, safety hazards and maintenance issues I find during home and commercial building property in Chicago area.
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