In under 8 years since the house was built, we discovered a major structural blunder by Signature Construction. The architect specified in the drawings that these beams would be sitting on column caps (Simpson ECC44) and the wall properly flashed.
Signature:
- Did not have these caps.
- Did not properly flash the wall (the top was opened to the elements).
- Had small flashing strips on the top that channeled rain water into the wall.
- Notched 3 inches off the laminate beam.
We hired a structural engineer that reported the wall wasn't properly flashed and a laminate beam should not be notched this way. Signature Construction decided that this was not their problem. The 2-10 warranty had an exclusion clause for decks so they wouldn't cover this either.
The contractor opened the wall to find that:
- Used non-treated lumber for the wall and posts.
- Any water that got into the wall had no place to get out.
- The support posts were the consistency of balsa wood.
- The internal walls were seriously rotted.
The remaining walls were inspected. Fortunately two of them were under a gazebo that shielded them from any rain. The other wall had minor water damage and could be repaired and flashed properly.
Bottom line is that two support posts and two support beams, along with one wall had to be removed and replaced costing about 8 thousand dollars.
If they came out to look and gave reasonable reason why they wouldn't assistant in fixing this I wouldn't be this upset.

- PXL 20220721 145455644
This is how it was discovered. The Hardyboard had broken off revealing that the beam had dropped 3 inches. - PXL 20220721 145507213
A close up of the beam showing the notch and the laminate layers separating. - PXL 20220721 145511829.MP
What's that trying to hold up the beam? - PXL 20220721 145545119.MP
From the outside, The deck has a dip showing clearly on topside. - PXL 20221006 154355128
The support post has degraded so it is the consistency of balsa wood. It was removed easily by poking it with a screwdriver! - PXL 20221006 154422663
The top of the post was a bit better because it was the bottom that sat in the water that couldn't escape. - PXL 20221006 154445824
The beam is in bad shape and with the post gone would collapse if not taken care of soon. - PXL 20221006 170853274
Some help was added. The dip in the deck is resolved. - PXL 20221006 194642176.MP
The damage goes throughout the wall. - PXL 20221006 194725748
Yes, that crowbar was easily pushed through the beam. - PXL 20221007 142020614.MP
The rot continued downwards. - PXL 20221007 142030892
Rot continues halfway through the wall. This shows how easily the water came in from the top. - PXL 20221007 142042185
Looks like the cross members for the deck need to be repaired too. - PXL 20221007 142047567
And the damage continues. - PXL 20221014 124619493
The outside walls are damaged as well.