T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
193.1 | Ask the Town Engineering Department | HYEND::DHILL | Transformation Technologist | Wed Jan 17 1990 11:02 | 7 |
| Before you start construction, the Town will probably require some
sort of bond on your part to insure you have the required money to
complete the road. To estimate the amount of the bond, the Town
Engineering Department will estimate the cost of the Town required
improvements using a standard reference text. They can probably
either provide a rough estimate before you get started, or point
you to the text so you can do the estimate.
|
193.2 | Estimate would be nice... | ULTRA::DWINELLS | | Wed Jan 17 1990 12:23 | 6 |
| Thank you for responding to my note. So far, the only estimate we have
is one that the surveyor gave us. From what we can gather, the road
will be a 500' cul-de-sac, including all utilities i.e.; gas, sewer,
electric, etc.
This should prove to be interesting
|
193.3 | Do it right | SENIOR::IGNACHUCK | | Sat Jan 27 1990 17:27 | 28 |
| I know of two local engineers who could give you advice on costs
and plans. Dave Perley (369-2689) would be my first choice. He
is a former town engineer for the Town of Concord and is excellent.
Ralph Nelson, also in Concord (369-4901) is a much larger company
and may be more expensive than Dave, but is also a quality engineer.
Remember that dealing with the local planning board and zoning rules
and regulations is often more difficult than just having someone lay
out a road for you. Look for more than just a surveyor when planning
a subdivision. The added cost of a registered professional engineer
may seem like a big expense up-front, but you'll save a lot of heart
ache in the long run by hiring someone who can manage the entire
construction project.
From my past experiences, if I were to undertake the type of project
you mention, I would hire Dave Perley to be my engineer and John
Melone (J. Melone and Sons) of Stow as my Contractor. These two men
are very reputable and honest, but not cheap. They have worked
together on projects many times and will get you through the ordeal
with a minimum of pain. They both have 20 plus years of experience
and neither will disappear on you during your project.
Bottom line: If you're going to do it, do it right. Otherwise, you
and your entire family will be scratching dirt for many hours and
will regret the day you ever decided to undertake this.
Good luck,
Frank
|
193.4 | Town Engineer, hey? | ULTRA::DWINELLS | | Thu Feb 01 1990 12:31 | 12 |
| re: .3
Thanks Frank. I will check out your references. We are currently
working with a suveyor who has done work on the property before (He
surveyed a parcel of land that my folks sold about 13 years ago.)
Next week we are meeting with him to go over the topography plans.
We all are aware of the enormous tasks that are ahead of us, but
something tells _me_ that we are only looking at the tip of the
iceberg.
Thanks for the Good Luck wishes, we may need them.
|
193.5 | Town rules and regs | VAXRT::HOLTORF | | Tue Apr 10 1990 16:45 | 4 |
| Go to the Town Hall and buy the bylaws, Subdivision rules and regs, and
site plan regs. Get an experienced engineer,preferably one who has
designed a subdivision in Maynard and knows the Regs. Good luck!
|