Hello,
I am currently holding the offer from our shell construction contractor, and it states that a portable toilet must be provided by the client. I haven’t been able to contact him yet, but I would have expected the contractor to arrange this. Could you share how this was handled in your cases?
How much does it usually cost to rent a portable toilet? What are the typical maintenance or cleaning intervals required?
Are there any alternatives? How did you solve this?
Best regards,
grobi
I am currently holding the offer from our shell construction contractor, and it states that a portable toilet must be provided by the client. I haven’t been able to contact him yet, but I would have expected the contractor to arrange this. Could you share how this was handled in your cases?
How much does it usually cost to rent a portable toilet? What are the typical maintenance or cleaning intervals required?
Are there any alternatives? How did you solve this?
Best regards,
grobi
D
Doc.Schnaggls22 Jul 2016 10:52Hello,
In our case, the portable toilet (porta potty) was included as part of the overall package from the construction company. It was emptied and cleaned weekly.
An additional tip from me:
Get a padlock so you can lock the cabin from the outside.
This is especially useful if there are other construction sites nearby where cost-cutting measures are common at this location.
It was absolutely unbelievable what condition the landscaping contractors of a housing development project in our neighborhood left "our" cabin in almost daily – and mind you, they used it without permission and the "boss" even denied it, although we caught his "guys" several times and repeatedly forbade them from entering our property and the portable toilet.
After the third paid "special cleaning" within one week (!!!), we finally installed a padlock and hung the key with a clear label at our construction site.
Regards,
Dirk
In our case, the portable toilet (porta potty) was included as part of the overall package from the construction company. It was emptied and cleaned weekly.
An additional tip from me:
Get a padlock so you can lock the cabin from the outside.
This is especially useful if there are other construction sites nearby where cost-cutting measures are common at this location.
It was absolutely unbelievable what condition the landscaping contractors of a housing development project in our neighborhood left "our" cabin in almost daily – and mind you, they used it without permission and the "boss" even denied it, although we caught his "guys" several times and repeatedly forbade them from entering our property and the portable toilet.
After the third paid "special cleaning" within one week (!!!), we finally installed a padlock and hung the key with a clear label at our construction site.
Regards,
Dirk
Oh no!
There are pigs everywhere.
When building in a new development area, I can see potential savings if several construction sites share one or more toilets.
However, if there are pigs involved, that is, of course, problematic.
There are pigs everywhere.
Doc.Schnaggls schrieb:
This is especially sensible when there are other construction sites nearby where savings are being made at this location.
When building in a new development area, I can see potential savings if several construction sites share one or more toilets.
However, if there are pigs involved, that is, of course, problematic.
Hello,
As a Wacken Open Air visitor, I can only recommend: having your own toilets is priceless, no matter the cost.
Kermit
sent from tablet
Jochen104 schrieb:
But when you have such pigs around, it’s obviously a problem.
As a Wacken Open Air visitor, I can only recommend: having your own toilets is priceless, no matter the cost.
Kermit
sent from tablet