After your blueprints are finalized and you get the go-ahead from local building authorities, your lot will be prepared for building. It’s heavy equipment time, so expect backhoes, bulldozers and dump trucks. Workers will clear trees and other obstructions, level the lot and dig the holes and trenches.
Now it’s time for the home’s footings and foundation. What’s a footing? Essentially footings are the things beneath the foundation that keep everything from sinking into the ground. Most footings and foundations are poured cement reinforced with steel rods called re-bars. Footing forms are laid along the outline of your home and filled with concrete.
What the foundation looks like depends on whether the design includes a full basement or what’s called a “slab on grade.” In any case, the builder should spray waterproofing material on the foundation to keep ground water from seeping through. Once the local building inspector signs off, the wooden forms will be pulled off and the house starts to go up.