My mom maybe discharged very soon and I have to have a ramp installed, but I'm not sure which ramp I should get. I live in New England. I've had two companies come out and give estimates for wood,steel,and aluminum.I'm looking for the safest option being that winter in coming and we live in New England and one that will allow less friction ,so I /we can push her up the ramp.I also have no idea if the estimates are fair,or my gender makes me an easy mark.Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
My mother and father lived in a house in Westchester County NY; when my dad became disabled some 20 years ago, my brother built them a wooden ramp. It needs replacing now but has given 20 years of service.
I tend to think aluminum would be a bit light; wood would absolutely have to be finished, which would add extra time and work. On the other hand, I don't know which material would be the most expensive.
Something you might want to consider, considering the NE climate, is using space in the garage for the ramp, if you can afford to give up one parking space and if you have an attached garage.
Then both you and your mother could leave the house in the comfort of the garage, protected from the inclement weather. It's a lot safer as well; there won't be any ice on the garage ramp unless the weather becomes really frigid and moisture accumulates on the ramp - another factor to consider.
Believe me, even in SE Michigan weather, it would make a huge difference. It takes between 5 and 10 minutes to get my car loaded up with the rollator, portable oxygen, and of course the 2 of us. If it's cold and windy, as it was today, it's uncomfortable.
In the meantime, you might contact your state's department of licensing and regulation for building trades, research to determine whether the potential contractors are required to be licensed and if they are, and whether there have been any complaints against them.
I've also called my city's building inspection department to ask if they're familiar with a specific contractor and had any complaints against it. It also wouldn't hurt to ask whether that department does inspections on ramps, and what its standards are.
After a home therapist adamantly felt a ramp should be installed at my father's house, I contacted the building department of his community, was recommended to speak with a specific conctractor ( who I thought was arrogant and condescending), who told me that the inspection fee alone is about $100, and that the work would only take a few days but it often takes a whole month to get the ramp inspected and approved.
You should ask the potential contractors if their bids include inspection fees, as well as in their experience how that factors into the total building and completion time.
First things first.
You need to determine the size shape and placement before you get in what materials to use