Foreign.
Speaker BThe House with Eric G.
Speaker BYour go to source for everything home improvement.
Speaker BWhether you're a DIY enthusiast or just looking to make your space shine, Eric G.
Speaker BIs here to guide you through the latest tips, tricks and trends coming up.
Speaker BIn this week's first hour of the show, Eric G.
Speaker BSits down with Chris Higginbotham who teaches one of the top high school construction programs in the country.
Speaker BThe Viking house just hit 50 years old and this program teaches advanced building and construction techniques over the course of a school year.
Speaker BOne house is completed each year as it self funds the program.
Speaker CWe are we do all the carpentry on the job site.
Speaker CWe have a day of orientation, first day of school and then second day of class we're out framing the floor system.
Speaker BSo grab your toolbox, put on your thinking cap and let's get to work right here on around the House with Eric Garrett.
Speaker AWelcome to the around the House show, the next generation of home improvement.
Speaker AI'm Eric G.
Speaker AThanks for joining me today.
Speaker AThis hour is brought to you by our friends at Monument Grills.
Speaker ACheck them out for that brand new barbecue@monument grills.com today we are diving into education.
Speaker AAnd I tell you what, for me there is a gold standard of teaching kids construction skills out there and Forest Grove High School here in Oregon has got it dialed in and we got the leader of the band here, Chris Higginbotham, my friend.
Speaker AThanks for coming back on around the House brother.
Speaker CThank you for having us.
Speaker AMan.
Speaker AIt is so great to see you guys.
Speaker AYou guys have been doing what, 50 houses 50 years now, right?
Speaker AIs that what the program is for?
Speaker CWe're selling?
Speaker CYep.
Speaker CWe've done a house project a year for 50 years and this was our big 50th celebration and we just put that house on the market.
Speaker AMan, that is so exciting because as the trends have gone over the last decades of high school classes getting changed into sending kids to college and taking all of those skill building things out of high schools.
Speaker AThe the wood shops are now the computer labs and the metal shop is doing stuff and is now some other thing and going even through my old high school it was just all had been all the classes that I took back in the day that got me to where I am have been just robbed and stolen out of there and you guys over there at Forest Grove have been just waving the flag and doing it right year after year.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker CI mean we work really hard at it.
Speaker CI came in in the early 90s and someone had reached out to me.
Speaker CI was A home building construction superintendent and they were looking for someone to take over their home building program and also teach wood shop.
Speaker CAnd I didn't know I was qualified but.
Speaker CAnd I told them so when they, when they got ahold of me and.
Speaker CBut it turns out in Oregon that you can teach your trade, man.
Speaker CSo I jumped through a few hoops and it was culture shock coming from a job site to a classroom.
Speaker CBut I adjusted.
Speaker CYeah, I felt like a pioneer then.
Speaker CBut since then I have to say some.
Speaker CWe've had, we have a lot of successful.
Speaker CI'm going to use.
Speaker CIf I go old school, I call it vocational now it's called CTE Career Technical Education.
Speaker CMy co worker, Arnolfo Martinez, he's a master cabinet maker.
Speaker COur culinary teacher is a real chef.
Speaker CWe have a few engineers that are teaching robotics and things like that.
Speaker CSo it's cool when they bring people in from the professions to try to teach those.
Speaker CBut yeah, when I came in it was still, oh, I wouldn't say it was the most popular choice, you know, among electives.
Speaker CAnd it seemed like we struggled for quite a few years just to kind of gain equal footing that you don't have to go to college.
Speaker CThere's a lot of lucrative trades out there and professions associated with construction that, you know, you can do without student debt and get a good living wage almost right out of the gate.
Speaker CAnyway, yeah, we've been part of that message.
Speaker CBut you know, like nationally, obviously we were just talking about.
Speaker CMike Rowe has promulgated that for guys like us.
Speaker CYeah, and I have.
Speaker CWe have seen the tide turn.
Speaker CWhen I was a student in high school in the 80s, these programs were more common.
Speaker CIn fact, the three area high schools in Beaverton, we all built a house and went and toured each other's houses.
Speaker CBut like, like you, like you referred to, you know, a lot of those just went by the wayside.
Speaker CWhether it was just lack of funding, lack of interest or just changing priorities.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CBut anyway, I saw, I think I kind of saw the bottom of that in the early 90s.
Speaker CAnd then we really started to gain some more momentum in the early 2000s and they all of a sudden they realized that, hey, you know, the shop, the shop classes played an important role.
Speaker CAnd then there was some data that came out that showed that students that were in shop classes had a higher graduation rate, more buy in in high school.
Speaker CAnd so that kind of data helped us.
Speaker CAnyway, we have a strong, thriving, healthy wood shop program.
Speaker CAnd the pinnacle of that is students can apply for and try out for the Viking house, you know, we have a whole thing with prerequisites and tryouts and an application process.
Speaker CBut we choose typically our best 16.
Speaker CAnd then going into the next school year, they're our crew and we are, we do all the carpentry on the job site.
Speaker CWe have a day of orientation, first day of school, and then second day of class we're out framing the floor system.
Speaker CBut we, you know, we teach carpentry in the shop.
Speaker CSo that's what we do on the site.
Speaker CSo we obviously we frame it side it, set all the windows and doors.
Speaker CWe do extensive hardwood flooring.
Speaker CWe have our own cabinet shop here.
Speaker CWe produce our own cabinets.
Speaker CYou've seen those beautiful, you know, those are at a high level and doors and trim.
Speaker CI get a lot of help, I get a lot of industry experts that reach out to us, that want to help us.
Speaker CNot just our Nolfos, the master cabinet maker, but a local contractor named Curtis Ludwig, who's finished carpenter by trade, helps mentor our kids on that.
Speaker CAnd then we have some high level framers in the region that come out to help us do the most dangerous part, which is setting trusses.
Speaker CBut it's cool to have kids around those, those high level pros for a day.
Speaker COne thing I would note, you didn't ask me, but I'm going to tell you one thing.
Speaker COne thing I'm really proud of, especially on this year's house.
Speaker CEvery house that I've been involved in, I've done every viking house since 99.
Speaker CAnd one of my interests is home design.
Speaker CSo I've kind of kept that to myself and designed them all.
Speaker CBut this year this one was designed by a former student.
Speaker CSo she just graduated from Portland State and had has a degree in architecture.
Speaker CAnd I handed it off to her and she did an amazing job.
Speaker CIn fact, many people told me it was the best house I designed.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker CBut I'm really proud of what Cecilia did.
Speaker CAnd then another former student, Jasmine Flores, helped with the interior design.
Speaker CAnd then a former student, Kyle Ludwig is our excavator.
Speaker CAlso had to build some big boulder walls because we had some terrain challenges.
Speaker CAre my plumber, Jake Strother, another former student, him and Jeremy Sullivan, both former students.
Speaker CAnd then our electrician, Weston Dyke, wired the house.
Speaker CAnd then we also have, like I mentioned, some framers that come out and help us set trusses.
Speaker CAnd there's at least three of them, four of them actually, they're former students.
Speaker CAnd one of them is actually a father son tandem that both Were in the Viking.
Speaker AHow cool is that?
Speaker CYou know, you span 50 years, that's bound to happen.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker ABut that's awesome.
Speaker ATalk about a legacy.
Speaker AAnd what I love about your program too is it's pretty self sustainable as well.
Speaker ABy the time you sell the house and, and get that going.
Speaker COh, completely.
Speaker AIt's not a cost to do this really.
Speaker AIt's just a, it's just a perpetual motion machine.
Speaker CYeah, that's an important point to make.
Speaker CI mean, I get paid as a teacher, but other than that building, the house is completely self funded.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker CAnd it should be, you know, after 50 years.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CPart of that's been district support.
Speaker CYou know, we've always had good business managers looking out for us and they keep our funds separate.
Speaker ANice.
Speaker CAnd you know, that's what allowed us to survive the economic downturn, you know, in the early in the 209.
Speaker AAnd they happen about every decade.
Speaker AThey happen about every decade.
Speaker AThere's a little bit of crash where you go, oh, here we go.
Speaker AWe're on schedule, you know.
Speaker CWell, and that's a lesson in itself.
Speaker CYou know, it's when I say that we have tryouts and we pick a crew, I mean, we're no different than any contractor.
Speaker CWe're trying to hire the best people we can or in this case, recruit the best students we can.
Speaker CThe same ones everyone wants to hire.
Speaker CBut you know, they're all reliable.
Speaker CThey're all, they've got a certain level of skill, they're energetic, they're good problem solvers.
Speaker CAnd it's just kind of up to us to show them what to do.
Speaker BTo find out more information, head to aroundthehouseonline.com.
Speaker Bdon't change that dial.
Speaker BAround the House will be right back after these important messages.
Speaker CShould I be allowed to be so.
Speaker AHot.
Speaker CSo many people without.
Speaker AWelcome back to the around the House show.
Speaker AThe next generation of home improvement.
Speaker AI'm Eric G.
Speaker AThanks for joining me today.
Speaker AIf you want to find out more about us, head over to aroundthehouseonline.com Eric.
Speaker AAnd this hour is brought to you by our friends at Monty McGrills.
Speaker ACheck them out at monumcrills.com now we've been talking about one of the best programs in the country for getting kids into the trades and creating them into the world of construction and getting them going.
Speaker ASo let's get back to our conversation with Chris Higginbotham and the Viking House from Forest Grove, Oregon.
Speaker AWell, Chris, I think the cool thing too is that that because they've had to invest time and energy into trying out and being a part of it.
Speaker AIt's like being on the varsity football team.
Speaker AThey're like, hey, I got here.
Speaker AIt wasn't easy.
Speaker ASo I have to be there this morning when I really don't want to get up or I was out late with my friends last night and I got to get to work.
Speaker AAnd that creates a work ethic that really sets them straight for the profession.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CI mean, we talk about that all the time, that, you know, it takes extra effort to get these houses built, even though.
Speaker CSo it's a regular class, it's a double block.
Speaker CSo essentially, we're meeting for three hours as a class every other school day for the course of the year, but that's not quite enough time.
Speaker CSo we work.
Speaker CI'll host what we call work parties every most Saturdays, over half of them.
Speaker CAnd they'll come in as completely voluntary.
Speaker CBut on any given Saturday, I'll have probably half.
Speaker CHalf the students will be there.
Speaker ANice.
Speaker CAnd I assume it's everyone that can.
Speaker CBecause we.
Speaker CWe get a lot of kids that are getting pulled in many directions.
Speaker CYou know, they're A lot of them are high achievers, whether it's academics or athletics or.
Speaker CSome of them are working jobs.
Speaker AYeah, they're working at the burger joint or whatever.
Speaker ASo that's their money day.
Speaker ASo I get it.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CBut, yeah, I mean, that's how we're successful.
Speaker CAnd that's one of the things, I think one of the big lessons that Arnolfo and I talk about is, and try to model is you do whatever it takes.
Speaker CYou do whatever it takes to get the job done.
Speaker CAnd if it's not right, you do it over.
Speaker CAnd, you know, we set a standard and the standards pretty high.
Speaker CAnd, you know, it sounds a little harsh by today's standards, but I've always said that, you know, we build these houses without excuses.
Speaker ANice.
Speaker CYou know, either do it or don't do it.
Speaker CAnd anyway, well, I love the quality.
Speaker AOf construction you teach out there, because I don't like talking bad about builders out there.
Speaker ABut there's some of these guys out there, at least in my area, over here in the metro area, that I'm driving by, watching their houses get built.
Speaker AAnd these are one to $5 million homes.
Speaker AAnd I drive by and go, wow, you missed flashing day.
Speaker AWow, you missed house wrap day.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker AAnd it's just.
Speaker AI shake my head and then I know every time I've been over and seen one of your houses, it's just the drywall's right.
Speaker AThe cabinetry is gorgeous.
Speaker AYou know, you're, you're buying a, a livable family house with a higher quality of many of the luxury mansions around this area.
Speaker CThat's exactly what we're shooting for.
Speaker CWe built a high end one level try to make it somewhat affordable home.
Speaker CBut it's definitely like a move up buyer.
Speaker CSo this year's house for instance, about 1800ft.
Speaker CIn fact it just got listed on Zillow.
Speaker CBut it's beautiful.
Speaker CI mean everything in the house is an upgrade.
Speaker CSome of it you can see, you know, like the walnut inset cabinets with dovetail drawers to the traditional number one white oak tongue and groove floors that are finished in place.
Speaker CThat's old school.
Speaker AIt is.
Speaker CBut then there's also stuff that you can't see, like all CDX, plywood sheeting, 58 seating on the roof.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker CAll clipped.
Speaker CYou want to builders stuff that a builder would appreciate.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker ABy the way, the million dollar, the four million dollar house they're building down the street has got 716 OSB, no clips.
Speaker CYeah, well, you know what I mean, that's.
Speaker CThat can be a little scary when you're walking on the.
Speaker AYes, it is.
Speaker AIt is not my favorite.
Speaker CBut those, those are the things that, you know, a buyer never really knows about.
Speaker CAnd then I don't know if you recall the last time you visited us, but one of the things we've been doing since 2011 is we do a hybrid staggered stud wall.
Speaker CSo all our exterior walls are two by eight and then we do a staggered two by four and we get they, they blow in about an R31 into the wall cavity.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CSo it's nice.
Speaker CI mean you get the thermal efficiency and then you also get a little bit of sound deadening.
Speaker AA lot of it actually with that size of wall that really makes a difference and, and that pays for itself pretty quickly with that kind of construction.
Speaker ASo it's nice that you guys can do that.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CIf you combine that with ducts inside and you know, in some of these super high efficiency heat pumps that are coming out.
Speaker CWe've been in my H Vac, contractor's been using those recently and it seems like you could do a pretty good job keeping your bills pretty low.
Speaker AWhich is great.
Speaker AWhich is great.
Speaker AWhat's.
Speaker AI want to ask you, what's your biggest challenge this year?
Speaker AI know we've had so many challenges over the year like the building industry does, but what's your biggest challenge today?
Speaker AIs it trying to get Land, trying to get students.
Speaker AWhat's the big deal for you right now?
Speaker AI mean, every year, it's got to be different.
Speaker COh, I'm so glad you asked.
Speaker CYou know what?
Speaker CThis program doesn't exist if we don't have a lot to build on, and we have one left.
Speaker CThe last time I talked to you, I think I had about 10 ahead of me.
Speaker CYeah, here we are.
Speaker CI'm at a lot.
Speaker CWe can't find any for sale.
Speaker CYou know, we've approached some developers and haven't really gotten anywhere.
Speaker CSo I have a lot for next year, and we don't know where we're going after that, so that's a little disconcerting.
Speaker CAnd, you know, I'll tell you, people reach out to us.
Speaker CSeems like one or two folks will reach out to us a year.
Speaker COther schools wanting to get something like this started.
Speaker CBut you'd be glad to hear this.
Speaker CSome.
Speaker CSome nationwide, I've had.
Speaker CI've done some zoom calls with folks in Philadelphia, Chicago.
Speaker CI had somebody reach out to me from Europe.
Speaker ANice.
Speaker CBut it's.
Speaker CI don't know how I could help.
Speaker CYeah, but.
Speaker CBut, you know, you want to talk to someone that's done it to find out what the pitfalls are.
Speaker CAnd my answer is always, it's for us, it's land acquisition, you know, and, I mean, we're not asking.
Speaker CWe're not asking for it for free.
Speaker CI mean, we'll pay what the lot's worth.
Speaker CBut just trying to find a lot that someone's willing to sell, that's a challenge.
Speaker CSo we're.
Speaker CWe're working on some things right now, but nothing's for certain.
Speaker AAre you guys within the urban growth boundary down there?
Speaker AIs that what part of the problems are?
Speaker AOr are you guys outside of that?
Speaker CYeah, it's part of it.
Speaker CBut I was actually talking to the teacher when we had a big open house last Saturday, and I think we had about 500 folks through.
Speaker CAnyway, the teacher that I replaced in 99, he came up just for the occasion.
Speaker CHe just said how much easier it was to acquire lots back when he was running it, you know, because it was a lot of smaller developers.
Speaker CSmaller builders.
Speaker CYou have a small developer, they're willing to sell a few lots.
Speaker CBut as the bigger builders have come in, you know, and I understand.
Speaker CI mean, they're out running charities.
Speaker CNo, they're trying to.
Speaker CThey're trying to make a living, too.
Speaker CBut it would be great for them.
Speaker AIt would be great for them, as you know, as.
Speaker AAs you and I know, at least in the industry that there are these massive builders are coming in.
Speaker AI can be driving around in your area and you see a, what used to be a field that hasn't been farmed in 20 years and all of a sudden there's brand X of the top 10 builder in there.
Speaker AAnd they're putting in houses as tight as they can legally in those lots and getting every square foot, every piece of land that they can use.
Speaker AAnd boy, wouldn't it be awesome for them to go, okay, we're going to sell you one lot because we want to hire some of these kids down the road.
Speaker AThat would be pretty awesome.
Speaker CThat would be pretty awesome.
Speaker CYeah, that, you know, another challenge we face sometimes is that just from safety reasons, I stick with one levels, of course.
Speaker BTo find out more information, head to aroundthehouse online.com don't change that dial around the house.
Speaker BWe'll be right back after these important messages.
Speaker AWelcome back to the around the house show, the next generation of home improvement.
Speaker AI'm Eric G.
Speaker AThanks for joining me today.
Speaker AIf you want to find out more about us, head over to aroundthehouseonline.com and this hour is brought to you by our friends at Montymc Grills.
Speaker ACheck them out at monumcgrills.com now we've been talking about one of the best programs in the country for getting kids into the trades and creating them into the world of construction and getting them going.
Speaker ASo let's get back to our conversation with Chris Higginbotham and the Viking house from Forest Grove, Oregon.
Speaker CYeah, that, you know, another challenge we face sometimes is that just from safety, safety reasons, I stick with one levels, of course, which has also become kind of our niche.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CI get a lot of empty nesters that buy our houses because they're looking for a really nice one level house that has upgrades, that's also energy efficient.
Speaker CAnd yeah, I feel like it's a, it's a one off every year.
Speaker CBut the, you know, as the lots get tighter and tighter, it's harder to, harder to squeeze at one level onto those little lots.
Speaker CBut boy, you know, I'm almost willing to try anything at this.
Speaker ANo kidding.
Speaker ANo kidding.
Speaker AYou know, but you guys built such a great house and they're just so absolutely gorgeous and how they're built and you know, it's so great to see you guys teaching these kids how to, how to manage themselves as well as the trades.
Speaker AAnd I think that's so equal of learning the work ethic, learning how to show up to work on time.
Speaker AAnd then just learning the skills to be a craftsperson.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CYou know, you can teach them the skills.
Speaker CYou know, like we have our big open house every year and it's become quite a big community event for us.
Speaker CAnd the thing I'm most proud of, it's not, it's not so much the house every year, it's just how the students conduct themselves, giving tours.
Speaker CI don't, I always make it a point that day not to go in the house myself.
Speaker CI just stay out front and let them run it.
Speaker CBut they greet people and give tours and, you know, the best feedback I get is just how knowledgeable they are and how polite they are and how, how well they conduct themselves.
Speaker CSo that's.
Speaker CAny parent would like to hear that, right?
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AAnd then you can just see the proud just gleaming from them.
Speaker ABecause I noticed that every time I've been over there is you got these kids that are so proud that look what I built.
Speaker CYeah, it's.
Speaker CI would say that back when these home building programs were more common, a lot of them were on a two year cycle.
Speaker CSo it would take two years to build a house and you'd have multiple crews come through working on it.
Speaker CAnd myself being from the trades and having been a former construction superintendent, just that whole, that whole scheduling thing and that urgency to get things done, I couldn't quite shake that.
Speaker CBut also having done athletics and things, I really wanted them to have a, to feel an ownership and a sense of team over their house in particular.
Speaker CSo I didn't want it just to be a house they're working on.
Speaker CI wanted it to be a house that they felt ownership and pride for.
Speaker CAnd you know, I'm glad you said that too, because that is, that's one of the best things like I'm.
Speaker CThey're having, it's an all senior crew many years, not every year, but many years.
Speaker CAnd it is this year.
Speaker CBut they'll be having graduation on Saturday.
Speaker CAnd I'm going to hold it open for them and their parents if they'd like to come by and take pictures and that.
Speaker CAnd just seeing how proud they are, you know, to show their mom and dad and friends and family it's not, it's not just a thing they're doing.
Speaker CIt's something that they're invested in.
Speaker AAnd now these kids for the rest of their lives can drive their family nuts by driving by and going.
Speaker CWhere are we going?
Speaker CI was going to quick take a quick detour the house.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker AWe've all done that.
Speaker AWe've all Done that in the trades.
Speaker AAnd it's so funny because you're like, oh, I worked on that house and I worked on this house.
Speaker AAnd as you're driving down the street pointing out to projects you've worked on, no matter what city you're in, if you've even moved away, it's fun to go back and take a look and see what's happened.
Speaker ABut I'm sure you've got that now with.
Speaker ASince 99, you've got plenty of homes around the area that you're driving by going, oh, that's looking pretty good.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CThis is my person for some of the 50 houses.
Speaker CThis is my 27.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker CSo I do.
Speaker CI, I.
Speaker CYou know, people always ask me, you know, what's your favorite house?
Speaker CAnd it sounds like just something I'm saying, but, you know, it's the one I'm working on at the time.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CBecause you put your all into it.
Speaker CYou put your whole heart and energy into it.
Speaker CAnd, you know, I certainly have some that I'm very fond of.
Speaker CAnd it.
Speaker CThat it's always.
Speaker CIt's just more the personality of the cruise, I think, than.
Speaker CThe houses are all great, I like to think.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CBut some of the personalities of the crews really stand out, of course.
Speaker CAnyway.
Speaker AYeah, that's one of the things.
Speaker AThat's one of the things we've learned as part of the trades as well, is.
Speaker AAnd, you know, my girlfriend was asking me that.
Speaker AWho you went to school with?
Speaker AElise asked me the day she goes, how do you let go of projects?
Speaker AIt's like when you've done so many projects, when you hand it off to the homeowner, the new owner, or whatever, or whatever goes on, you have to have a little bit of a disconnect that it's like, wow, you've got your pride in it, but it's like you're setting it free to go live its life in a way where you're like, all right, there we go, next project.
Speaker AAnd we have to learn that in the trades as, okay, that's my blood, sweat and tears.
Speaker AAnd now it's got a new home.
Speaker CYeah, you kind of.
Speaker CYou hit the nail on the head again.
Speaker CI do.
Speaker CI get sentimentally attached to every one of these houses, you know, and.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd I.
Speaker CI can see it in a lot of the students, too.
Speaker CYou know, it's.
Speaker CIt's like, we'll meet for the last time officially tomorrow.
Speaker CWe'll meet it.
Speaker CWe'll go to the job site one last time, and, you know, we'll Have a little bit of a going away ceremony.
Speaker CAnd of course I'll give them 100 question final.
Speaker CI want them to get their money's worth, but you, you know, the time we have left to sit around and chit chat, enjoy the space, you know, but yeah, yeah, they are.
Speaker CIt's, it's.
Speaker CI'm sure you agree.
Speaker CI mean, the, the best craftspeople you meet, you know, they put their heart and soul into what they're doing and it is a little hard.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CSometimes it feels like artwork you're letting go every time.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker CI gotta fight my, you know, I do.
Speaker CI get overly sentimental about all of them.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker CAnd you get a little, you know, a little picky about.
Speaker CYou can't.
Speaker CYou don't always have a say so.
Speaker CBut I'm always relieved when the new buyers care for and love the house and appreciate it for what it is.
Speaker AHow many times do we drive by a project that we've done in the past and you're like, oh, it's got the wrong owners because they're not taking care of it right?
Speaker CYeah, unfortunately, that's only happened a few times.
Speaker AI know, but you know what I mean, those things happen.
Speaker CYeah, no, I, Yeah, I mean that's, that's one thing I'll say too.
Speaker CWe just.
Speaker CWay back in the early 2000s, we were able to buy 10 lots in a row in a small subdivision by the high school.
Speaker ANice.
Speaker CAnd I, you know, we built their on and off, depending on other opportunities that might have presented themselves.
Speaker CLike for instance, we built in three home shows through Stonebridge when they hosted some summer showcases and they were.
Speaker CHappened to be in Forest Grove and they graciously invited us to participate.
Speaker CSo that was three years, you know, where I could offset my.
Speaker CSave my lots and go build on a lot.
Speaker CThey sold me.
Speaker CBut anyway, this, this one long, this one street, we bought 10 lots in a row.
Speaker CSo just over the year, we just built on the last one last year.
Speaker CAnd it was a little sad to leave that street.
Speaker CYou know, you got to know all the neighbors and knew all the homeowners, you know.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AIt's family street right there of everybody.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CBut it's cool because so many of them, you know, they're really, they really appreciate the home.
Speaker CThey, they.
Speaker CIn fact, one of them that bought one of our houses used to be a home inspector and he said it was the finest home he'd ever seen and he knew what he was looking at, you know, so I mean, those kind of accolades from somebody in the Industry, you know, it's more meaningful.
Speaker CYeah, but just seeing and then seeing people sometimes get emotional about the houses.
Speaker CI had an owner a couple years ago.
Speaker CIn fact, she came.
Speaker CA lot of them will come to every open house.
Speaker CSo I saw a bunch of them on Saturday, came through to see the latest one.
Speaker CAnd it just makes me feel good that she says, I feel like this house was designed just for me.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASuch a personal connection.
Speaker AAnd then you've got the personal connections of the students and their love and their blood, sweat and tears and hard work and they're learning.
Speaker AIt's a part of that.
Speaker ASo that's just good vibes everywhere.
Speaker AYeah, that is.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CIt's a good experience that way.
Speaker CIt's, it's, you know, my, I remember my mom telling me when I was a kid, if you, if you enjoy what you're doing, you do for a living, you know, you're way ahead in life no matter what your paycheck is, if you're able to pay the bills and that you really love going to work, that's really worth something.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker CYou know, and I could, I can honestly say that this has delivered that for me.
Speaker ANice.
Speaker ANice.
Speaker AAnd you've delivered so many careers for kids out there that, that would have been ignored in the school systems out there because these are kids that want to do something with their hands, that have the skills they have.
Speaker AThey can do the math to build something.
Speaker BTo find out more information, head to aroundthehouse online dot com.
Speaker BDon't change that dial.
Speaker BAround the House will be right back after these important messages.
Speaker AWelcome back to the around the House show, the next generation of home improvement.
Speaker AI'm Eric G.
Speaker AThanks for joining me today.
Speaker AIf you want to find out more about us, head over to aroundthe house online.com and this hour is brought to you by our friends at Monument Grills.
Speaker ACheck them out@monument grills.com now we've been talking about one of the best programs in the country for getting kids into the trades and creating them into the world of construction and getting them going.
Speaker ASo let's get back to our conversation with Chris Higginbotham and the Viking House from Forest Grove, Oregon.
Speaker AAnd the right way to install things versus Geez, like I was talking earlier about some of the stuff that I've seen around here where I'm like, that siding's coming off in five to seven years because that's going to be an issue, you know, and, and these kids get to show, get to be shown as they go off into their next career doing this, they've learned the right way to do it, which is so much easier than having to get taught the right way when they get on the job site, because sometimes even the building superintendent or the person running the job site doesn't fully understand the right way in some of these very important tasks in building a home.
Speaker CYeah, I actually just had a teacher right before.
Speaker CBefore I logged in here, sharing her contractor horror story and showing me many pictures on her phone.
Speaker CAnd it's.
Speaker CSometimes it's just simple stuff, too.
Speaker CI mean, above and beyond even paying attention to all the details, but just leaving a clean work site, you know, to show that you have pride in what you're doing.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd that's another thing that we try to promote with them is, you know, this is what a professional looks like.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CYou know, this.
Speaker CThis is what a professional site looks like.
Speaker CYou know, you clean things, you organize things, you.
Speaker CYou handle things with care.
Speaker CYou don't walk over the top of your siding when you're installing it.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CI mean, we all have to learn sometime.
Speaker CAnd, you know, like, sightings different than framing, you know, finish is different than sighting.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker AAll those details, which are awesome.
Speaker AWhich are awesome.
Speaker AAnd that's.
Speaker AThat's just the best practices for the kids to base the rest of their career off of.
Speaker ASo it's awesome.
Speaker AIt's awesome.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CYou know, that.
Speaker CThat point was kind of driven home.
Speaker CWe just.
Speaker CWe took a field trip.
Speaker CWell, I've taken a couple field trips here this last week, but last week we took a field trip to Cornelius Elementary School, which is being rebuilt.
Speaker CAnd the exciting thing about that is our.
Speaker COur host for that field trip is a former Viking House member that's now construction engineer.
Speaker CAnd she was motivated to take that career path because of her time on the Viking House.
Speaker CAnd we went and we went and toured another school being built by another former Viking House student that was the construction site superintendent for a high school build.
Speaker CSo we went and toured that, and then she was inspired by that and did the Oregon State program.
Speaker CAnd then now she's hosting her former high school in her hometown to tour the.
Speaker CThe build that she's running.
Speaker CBut it was cool just as we wandered through.
Speaker CYou know, they have the same challenges that we do in residential construction.
Speaker CYou know, things get missed.
Speaker AYou know, materials, all the different stuff that you're fighting.
Speaker CSomebody's got to mind the store.
Speaker CAnd they were definitely experience a little bit of a material.
Speaker CYou know, they were in the midst of resolving a material issue.
Speaker CBut she was told Us how, how it came about and the things they tried and now what the remedy was.
Speaker CAnd you know, it was just.
Speaker CIt was just on a bigger scale.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker CBut it's pretty awe inspiring to walk into a project that big.
Speaker CYou know, having been a former superintendent.
Speaker CYou know, you look at that stuff and you try to imagine running it and it's.
Speaker CIt just seems like a.
Speaker CA whole different ball game.
Speaker CBut they assure me it's not.
Speaker ABut, you know, it feels that way.
Speaker AI tell you what, I mean, I did my biggest project I did in.
Speaker AIn my kitchen of bath design stuff was I did a.
Speaker AA huge build in Bellevue, Washington that was a high rise that we did.
Speaker AWhat floor?
Speaker A28 to 40 on that building.
Speaker AAnd oh my gosh, I did cabinetry for that whole thing.
Speaker ASo I worked for a year on that project before we shipped the first cabinet part, you know.
Speaker AYou know, and that was crazy.
Speaker AAnd that was the design, the redesign.
Speaker AI mean, it was literally a year of designing and meetings and everything else before we even started shipping parts.
Speaker AAnd then we had to use a helicopter to take the oven cabinets to put them on the roof because.
Speaker AOh my gosh, I mean, so they could carry them down because they didn't want.
Speaker CWas that part of the original build?
Speaker AWell, yes, in a way it was.
Speaker AIt was a great thing because we weren't a union shop, but it was a union build.
Speaker ASo we brought the cabinets basically to the loading dock and they unloaded out of the truck.
Speaker AAnd because the hotel wanted to have the construction elevator taken down so they could rent out the hotel, the cabinets wouldn't fit into the residential elevators for the condos.
Speaker AAnd so they ended up putting them in a container and dropping them on the roof and unloading that up there and taking that off.
Speaker AAnd they had to carry these oven cabinets, double oven cabinets, down, down the stairs.
Speaker AAnd that was the most.
Speaker AThat was the easiest way to do that.
Speaker AAnd I was just like, oh my gosh, most insane project delivery.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ASo, yeah, helicopter rooftop.
Speaker CI can't wait to see.
Speaker CTell her no.
Speaker AYeah, helicopter rooftop delivery.
Speaker ASo it was nuts.
Speaker CJust pick those cabinets up, drop them right down.
Speaker ABut yeah, that was, it was an interesting design.
Speaker AYou know, there was a lot of weird stuff like that that you had to work through.
Speaker AThat was just part of that design process.
Speaker AThat was really cool.
Speaker CSo I'm pitch.
Speaker CI'm picturing Colonel Kilbar saying, we're going to pick those cameras up somewhere.
Speaker AAbsolutely, absolutely.
Speaker AI was just shaking my head going, this is.
Speaker AIs probably the nuttiest moment of My cabinetry career.
Speaker ALet's see what happens.
Speaker AYou know, so.
Speaker ABut you know, and that's just in the cabinet world and I know there's so many people out there that are doing those high schools and that are graduates of your program.
Speaker AThat's awesome.
Speaker AAnd do you get a lot of.
Speaker AA lot of support from manufacturers out there as well?
Speaker ADo they.
Speaker ADo they help you guys a lot as far as getting materials and tools and working with you guys?
Speaker AOr is that.
Speaker AAre you guys pretty independent of that?
Speaker CWell, we welcome it.
Speaker CSome.
Speaker CSome.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CSo PAR has always helped us out a lot.
Speaker CLike they host our open house.
Speaker CThey're great people and I, and I know that costs.
Speaker CThat costs them a lot of money and they donate a lot of tools and things like that to it.
Speaker CThey've been very supportive.
Speaker CRotter Paint's been one of our most generous suppliers for years and years.
Speaker CThey just.
Speaker CHundreds of gallons, you know, because just.
Speaker CAnd they treat us like we're their biggest customer.
Speaker AThat is great.
Speaker AThat is great.
Speaker CCertainty Roofing has been real good.
Speaker CStimson Lumber has donated our studs for many years in a row.
Speaker CSo they'll send us out 2 units of studs and that really helps with our hybrid wall because they're a little.
Speaker CThey're a little stud heavy because of the stagger that.
Speaker AI'm sure you've got a lot out there that are important so we won't.
Speaker CBut those are big ones.
Speaker AThose are big ones.
Speaker AAnd, and so hint, hint to manufacturers out there if you want to get these products in these kids hands, you know, reach out to Chris to see how you guys can partner together.
Speaker ABecause everybody wins in that.
Speaker ABecause that they get to play with new stuff and get introduced to new stuff and you get to put it in a beautiful house.
Speaker CYeah, that's all.
Speaker CAppreciate.
Speaker CAll helps, you know, because we, we give scholarships and things like that too.
Speaker CAnd the kids all vote on it.
Speaker CWe give a little MVP award, you know, which is usually like a cordless kid of some sort.
Speaker CGet a kid started with a good quality one.
Speaker CAnd PAR usually donates that.
Speaker CAnd then this year they also covered my scholarship.
Speaker ASo nice.
Speaker CWe'll give a scholarship that the kids also vote on.
Speaker CHas a little different criteria, but we try to recognize.
Speaker CLet them recognize one of their peers every year.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CIn each category.
Speaker AThat is so smart.
Speaker AThat is so smart.
Speaker AWell, we're running out of time, Chris.
Speaker AAnd you got a class to teach here coming up pretty soon.
Speaker ABut what's the.
Speaker AWhat's the best way for people to find out about Your program and to get a hold of you guys because I know you guys have such a great legacy.
Speaker CWell, they can look for us on Facebook, but also we have probably the best ways.
Speaker COur website, so that's FGHS, stands for Forest Grove High School, VikingHouse.com and they can see every house we've ever built.
Speaker CThey can see information about upcoming events.
Speaker CHeck, they can even order gear.
Speaker ASee, There we go.
Speaker AThere we go.
Speaker CThank you so much for having me.
Speaker CHaving us.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CTo talk about our program, we.
Speaker COne thing I might mention is we took a field trip yesterday to the street of Dreams.
Speaker ANice.
Speaker CThat's always a good one to see it under construction.
Speaker CYou know, just the complexity and all the.
Speaker CAll the subs running around.
Speaker CIt makes an impression too, because, you know, they're three times the size of what we're building.
Speaker AMultiple stories.
Speaker CIt's the same, but different, right?
Speaker CIt's the same, but different.
Speaker CWe just don't have an elevator.
Speaker AYeah, exactly.
Speaker AOr steep roof like that too.
Speaker CYeah, yeah.
Speaker CSo I had an email this morning and it looks like we might be part of the street of Dreams tour this year.
Speaker CStill trying to work those details out.
Speaker AThat would be great.
Speaker AThat would be great.
Speaker CAnyway, look for us there maybe.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AChris, thanks, brother.
Speaker AI appreciate what you're doing out there for the next generation of trades people out there.
Speaker AAnd you guys have just a great gold standard program out there.
Speaker AKeep it up.
Speaker AAnd anybody out there in the Forest Grove area that have property that would like to be a part of this, do your civic duty and help these guys out and reach out so they can buy it at a fair market price.
Speaker ABut support the kids and get them back on track with property.
Speaker CThank you, Eric.
Speaker AAll right, I'm Eric G.
Speaker AThanks, Chris.
Speaker AYou've been listening to around the House.
Speaker BThank you for tuning into the around the House show.
Speaker BIf you are on the radio, make sure you check out the podcast for additional content during the week on your favorite podcast player or at aroundthehouseonline.com we will see you next time.