Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

sgarst t1_j1130m8 wrote

Rivera Structural Engineering, LLC. / riverastructural@aol.com. 215-922-5614

Amy is outstanding. We've used her, and recommended her to a few friends. She provided strategic advice, like "fix this part now, then wait and watch. If X happens, then do Y."

6

lapeirousia t1_j11dv7n wrote

On the other hand… I hired Amy to do a structural inspection of my house. I was impressed with her knowledge and really wanted to work with her, but unfortunately she ghosted us after the inspection. Never sent us the inspection report she promised, never replied to any of my follow-up emails, never even sent a bill (despite me asking for it more than once). It was weird.

I recommend Mark Yerges. He was the third structural engineer we used, and the only one we had a positive experience with. He was competent, reliable, and a good communicator.

14

hethuisje t1_j13yvrm wrote

Do you have contact info or a website for Mark? I googled him and found a LinkedIn that lists a company on whose staff page he doesn't appear. They might simply not list all their staff but it's confusing.

1

lapeirousia t1_j14b0br wrote

I don't think he has a website, but his number is (484) 624-7521 and email is markyerges at gmail dot com. I think he works independently.

1

William_d7 t1_j140b4x wrote

Was the advice “maybe star bolts would help and if that doesn’t try a new wall”? That what she recommended to me and a friend. In my case it wasn’t necessarily bad advice but a mason could have told me the same thing.

In my friend’s case it was a load bearing wall that essentially needed to be rebuilt.

1

lapeirousia t1_j14bo8a wrote

A mason could tell you the same thing, but if you wanted to have the work done legally (and be assured that it was being done properly), you would need to hire a structural engineer to make plans so you could get a permit. Just for anyone who may be wondering.

2