What Every Building Owner Needs To Know About Doors & Windows

Published: April 30, 2020, 1:30 p.m.

b'
About The Everything Building Envelope Podcast: Everything Building Envelope\\u2120 is a dedicated podcast and video forum for understanding the building envelope. Our podcast series discusses current trends and issues that contractors, developers and building owners have to deal with related to pre and post construction. Our series touches on various topics related to water infiltration, litigation and construction methods related to the building envelope.
https://www.everythingbuildingenvelope.com
*** Subscribe to the show and leave us a Review on ITunes!
Derek: Welcome to the \\u201cEverything Building Envelope\\u201d podcast. I\'m Derek Segal, and I\'m a building envelope consultant with GCI Consultants. And I will be your host today. We\'ve got a very special guest today, Paul Del Vecchio, who\'s the owner of PJDCCI Construction Consultants, based out of Boca Raton, Florida, who is joining us. And today, we we\'re talking about fenestration. Welcome, Paul.
Paul: Thank you, Derek.
Derek: Paul, can you start off by telling us a little bit about yourself and also, I\'d like you to maybe just give us a brief description of what we\'re talking about today being fenestration so all of our guests can understand what the topic applies to.
Paul: Okay. I have been a contractor in Florida since 1979. And I\'ve worked in Florida in the construction industry since 1970. I sold my construction company about 12 years ago or so, and ended up providing consulting services as I do today. A lot of the consulting services I provide have to do with building envelope and, more specifically, windows and doors, the world of fenestration, if you will.
Derek: Thank you for that. So wow. So you started your career here in 1970, which, obviously, I guess, things were quite a bit different back then, regarding building codes and the construction industry, so I\'m sure you\'ve seen quite a bit of changes over the last 40-plus years.
Paul: Absolutely.
Derek: Yeah, I mean, things are changing on a rapid pace here. So, maybe just to start out, let\'s talk a little bit about, because I think you were pretty active, as you said, in the construction industry licensing board, what is that board? What is it responsible for and how is it structured? And what did you folks do while being a part of that licensing board?
Paul: Well, the Construction Industry Licensing Board is a division or element of the Department of Business and Professional Regulation of Florida. That\'s the entity that, basically, as the title would infer, regulates our specific businesses, among them construction as well as architecture, engineering, and building inspectors and building officials. On the CILB, which is an acronym for the Construction Industry Licensing Board, there are 18 members. The vast majority of them are contractors of various disciplines, two of them are building officials, and two are consumer people who have no connection to the construction industry at all. And the CILB is tasked with regulating construction in the state of Florida. So we have a statute, like all disciplines do, and it\'s Florida State Statute 489. And it really dictates the requirements of a contractor, since it\'s considered a professional license in the state of Florida.
Derek: Got it. So you folks sat on this board, and you managed, if you will, the construction industry, or the licensees in the state of Florida, actually of which I\'m one. I\'m a state licensed roofing contractor, so I\'m very familiar with the board. I got licensed in 1992 after Hurricane Andrew. What type of disciplinary cases would you folks hear and how many involved fenestration, windows and doors, openings, building envelope issues? Do you have any type of percentage or…?


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

'