Erie County, Pennsylvania
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Building permits are issued by Erie County or the City of Erie Building Department. Most projects over $500 require a permit.
Exterior projects fail in ways that compound with weather. Erie's freeze-thaw cycles punish small problems faster than warmer climates; catching them early is the difference between $200 and $5,000.
These don't need action today but signal the system is aging or stressed. Note the date you first noticed; if it persists or worsens, schedule a visit.
Seal beginning to fail in insulated glass unit. Replacement window opens within a year or two.
Routine maintenance — recaulk before water entry.
Early signs of larger problem. Address while cheap.
Symptoms that mean something is actually wrong and will get worse. Schedule within days to a couple of weeks.
IGU has failed. Replacement glass unit needed.
Replace promptly — broken safety glass is a hazard.
Frame moving or shifting. Adjust before glass breaks under stress.
Major air leak. Worth replacement for energy savings.
Re-pointing window opening. Untreated leads to water entry and structural damage.
If you see any of these, stop reading and pick up the phone. Erie concierge line: (814) 200-0328.
Egress emergency. Fire code requires functioning emergency exits.
Safety hazard; could shatter. Don't operate.
Public-safety concern. Stay back; cordon off; call structural mason.
Exterior work in Erie's climate is uniquely punishing. Small cracks become large cracks in one freeze-thaw season. A $200 repointing job becomes a $4,000 brick rebuild. A $300 fence post becomes a $3,000 full fence section. Pennsylvania's PA HICPA requires registered contractors for work over $500/year; insurance coverage often hinges on proper installation.
Erie averages 60-80 freeze-thaw cycles per winter. Each one expands water in any crack or pore. Even hairline cracks let water in; one season can turn a 1/16-inch crack into 1/4-inch.
Mortar joint crumbling. Homeowners notice the dust at the base of brick walls and shrug. Untreated, it leads to water entering the structure within 2-5 years.
Cracks under 1/4 inch: sealer repair ($50-200). 1/4 to 1 inch with no settlement: repair ($300-1,500). Settlement or larger cracks: replace ($1,500-15,000 depending on area).
Always. Buyers' inspectors flag exterior issues prominently. A bowed retaining wall or active drainage issue can knock $5,000-$30,000 off offer prices or kill deals.
Driveways, sidewalks tied to public right-of-way, retaining walls over 4 feet, structural masonry work, and most window/door replacements — yes. Cosmetic work usually doesn't.