Horizon Towers · Reserve Study
The cladding record
Horizon Towers was constructed in 1984 and clad in a synthetic stucco
(EIFS) system. In September 1991, a contractor told the building's
prospective owner the cladding could be expected to last 20–25 years.
Across the four decades since, the building's face has never been
comprehensively repainted. The 2001 minutes contain the sentence that
explains why: a bid arrived, it was declared "entirely too high,"
and the work was deferred to "next year" — a "next year"
the documentary record shows never came. The first engineer-of-record
envelope assessment happened in 2023 and found exactly the conditions
the 1991 projection implied. This page assembles the documented record
between those points.
Every claim is sourced to board minutes, the original contractor letter,
the Knott Lab Facility Condition Assessment, or current published industry data.
Owners can verify any item against the originals under
CCIOA § 38-33.3-317.
The pattern, in one sentence
For roughly thirty years, the HOA treated the building's exterior cladding
as a series of small features to patch — front walls, planter walls,
balcony railings, the gazebo header — rather than as a system with a
finite life. Outside specialists handled isolated stucco patches and parapet
recoats; in-house staff handled paint touch-ups on features and balcony
railings. The building's actual face was treated differently. Every time a
contractor's bid for the upper elevations arrived — in 1999, 2001, and
again in 2011 — the bid was declared too high or the scope was tagged
as having "unknown issues," and the work was either put off to a "next year"
that never produced action or absorbed into in-house handyman scope on the
upper outer walls. The 2001 "next year we will need to contact other
contractors" sentence is the clearest articulation of the mechanism; the
2002 "no bid from Tony for the repair and painting of the outside walls"
sentence is the documentary proof that the mechanism operated in the real
world within twelve months. No engineer-of-record reviewed the cladding
system until 2023. By then, the conditions the 1991 contractor letter had
implicitly warned about — sealant failure, stucco cracking, moisture
intrusion — were widespread. The current SOCOTEC facade engagement is
the catch-up work.
"The existing synthetic stucco system finish on the exterior of the
facility can be expected to last 20–25 years with minimal
maintenance costs [from when it was installed in 1984 —
not from the date of this 1991 letter]. This system will give the longevity
of a masonry product. It is designed to last for the lifetime of the building
with proper maintenance."
Ron L. Choate, Francis Constructors, Inc. — letter to Mr. Jack Branagh,
4432 Piedmont Avenue, Oakland CA, dated September 19, 1991. Attached as a reference
document in the December 1995 Annual Meeting minutes. The bracketed clarification
is the audit's reading: a contractor's lifespan statement about an existing cladding
system describes the system's expected service life from new (i.e., from 1984 construction),
not from the date of the statement. Either reading still lands within the historical
record this page covers.
The 1991 Choate letter is the anchor of everything that follows. The
building was 7 years old when it was written. The plain reading of
"can be expected to last 20–25 years" — that the cladding
technology has a typical service life of two to two and a half decades
from new — puts projected end-of-life at 2004–2009.
A more generous reading from the date of the letter puts it at 2011–2016.
Either way, both endpoints fall inside the historical record this page covers.
The single most consequential finding in the 1996–2024 board record:
there is no documented full-building exterior repaint of Horizon Towers in its 42-year life.
No assessment vote authorizing one. No contracted paint vendor for facade work. No reserve-fund line
for exterior painting. Every paint event in the record is either interior, per-floor water-damage repair,
or perimeter-feature work (planters, gazebo header, balcony railings, the front feature wall). The
documented absence is corroborated by long-term residents: the claim that "the building has never been
repainted" is common knowledge here and has been stated publicly without contradiction. The
industry-standard EIFS 40 Year Assessment in the corpus describes the predictable outcome:
"After approximately 40 years without repainting, an exterior insulated finish system (EIFS) is
typically well beyond its intended service life. Significant cosmetic degradation and high risk of
concealed moisture damage should be expected."
Documentary finding (board record 1996–2024) corroborated by long-term-resident common knowledge. Industry context: EIFS 40 Year Assessment document in the audit corpus.
Why the building was never repainted
Across the four decades since 1984, every time the board encountered a price for exterior
work that touched the building face, the price was declared too high and the work was
deferred. The clearest single example is in the 2001 minutes. After what the secretary
described as "considerable delay," a contractor finally submitted a proposal for upper-elevation
stucco repair:
"Lena finally received, after considerable delay, a proposal from the contractor which also
included the repair of stucco near the top balconies of the building and the bid was
entirely too high. Next year we will need to contact other contractors who have proper
equipment to reach the balconies and experience in the type of repairs that are needed."
HTCA Board Minutes, 2001 (Lena Elliott reporting on the year's projects, in the
Annual Meeting recap).
The next year never happened
The 2001 sentence is not just a complaint about pricing. It is a promise: "Next year we will
need to contact other contractors." The 2002 board minutes record what came of that promise.
Lena did, in fact, reach out to a different contractor — "Tony" — for the same
upper-elevation work. By May 2002, the official record reads:
"Barbara stated that there has been no bid from Tony for the repair and painting of
the outside walls."
HTCA Board Minutes, May 2002 Treasurer's Report. Same year, separate minutes: "Barbara talked
with Tony and he will meet with Barbara and Lena tomorrow morning to reevaluate the holes
in the outer walls and the use of a crane." The crane reference confirms the scope was
upper-elevation skin work, not perimeter feature work.
The 2001 "next year" promise did not survive twelve months. The replacement contractor Lena had
promised the membership the board would find never produced a bid for the outside walls. The
upper-elevation skin work was then quietly absorbed into in-house scope. By the time of the 2002
Annual Meeting in November, the board reported it was still "repairing the holes in the
upper outer walls of the buildings" — the same upper outer walls a
crane was needed to reach — with the work being performed by in-house staff because cash
flow was "the controlling factor at this time." The 2003 minutes continued the same
sentence: the patching of the upper outer walls was still in progress. And the new monthly retainer
handyman, Rick, was "requested to get some bids for painting the soffits that are peeling"
— the first documented appearance of "peeling" on a facade-visible building element,
six years before the 2009 owner complaint that would name it again.
The same pattern then operated for the next two decades. The 1999 MB Enterprises bid for
outside-building stucco had already been "declared to be exorbitant" and "removed from the project
list." A 2009 owner request for parking-level repainting was "tabled at this time for further
discussion at a later date" alongside a board discussion of "the challenges in finding business
with the expertise and equipment to work eleven stories" on upper soffits. In October 2011, the
board recorded receipt of a single $36,000 proposal for soffit and upper-wall work; the President's
report on it could have been a transcription of the 2001 sentence ten years later:
"Soffit Repair: There is more than just painting the soffits. The height of the project
is a big issue, and because of the condition of the soffits there are also unknown issues. The
board has one proposal at a cost of $36,000."
HTCA Board Minutes, October 3, 2011, President Wagner's report. Same access concern as 2001
("height of the project is a big issue"); same singular-bid pattern (one proposal); same surprise
at the actual condition ("unknown issues") of a skin the board had been operating for twenty-seven
years.
The 2011 proposal was the only one of the six events in this arc that produced executed work. In
the spring of 2012 the soffit project began; by June it was complete. The completion report's
sentence about the actual building skin is the documentary tell:
"Soffit repair project has been completed. Extra work and time involved in getting to the soffits
on the south. All the residue from bees and other incidences on the upper exterior walls
were addressed also."
HTCA Board Minutes, June 13, 2012 Board Meeting. "Addressed also" — the upper-exterior-wall
cleanup was framed as a side effect of soffit access, not as a planned cladding intervention. It is
the single most substantive upper-elevation engagement in the entire pre-Knott 1996–2023 board
record, and its self-description treats the skin as an afterthought.
That is the documentary arc of the building's actual skin between 1999 and 2012: an outside-contractor
bid in 1999 declared exorbitant; the 2001 "next year" promise; the 2002 follow-through that produced
no bid; the 2003 collapse into in-house patches of the upper outer walls; the 2009 owner complaint
about peeling; the 2011 $36K single-bid proposal with the same access concern as 2001; the 2012
execution as a soffit project that "addressed also" the skin. Six documented touchpoints across
thirteen years, every one of them tracing the same mechanism the 2001 sentence first articulated.
None of them produced a comprehensive exterior repaint cycle. After 2012, the next time the building's
cladding was discussed at the board level was the 2023 Knott engagement — eleven years later.
The structural reason was the same in every instance: the upper elevations of an 8-story
EIFS-clad building require boom-lift or swing-stage equipment that smaller local contractors
don't own. The vendors who do own that equipment price accordingly. Each time a quote
arrived, the price reflected the access requirement, and each time the board's response
was to defer or to absorb the work into in-house scope rather than to fund the access cost.
The cumulative effect is the finding above: a building that has never received a comprehensive
exterior repaint in 42 years, not because no one ever asked for one, but because every time
someone asked, the price became the reason not to do it.
Decade by decade
Legend:
PATCH small repair or in-house fix
DEFERRAL repair postponed for budget
PROJECT multi-feature campaign
FCA formal engineering assessment
INCIDENT owner complaint or notable event
QUIET no recorded envelope activity
RESKIN system-level replacement work
1991–2003 · The patch baseline
- FCASept 19, 1991: Ron L. Choate of Francis Constructors, Inc. delivers a major-systems condition assessment to Jack Branagh (attorney, Oakland CA) as part of due-diligence for the building's sale out of bank receivership. The letter projects exterior synthetic stucco lifespan at "20–25 years with minimal maintenance costs." Letter is later attached as a reference document to the December 1995 Annual Meeting minutes.
- PROJECT1995: Board's year-end accomplishments list (Dec 1995 Annual Meeting): "Stucco repaired all around the building." First documented full-building stucco repair under HOA stewardship. Power caulking with epoxy was on the same year's "still to be accomplished" list.
- PATCHDec 1995: Balcony railing paint discussion: "It would be preferable to have a color with the least chance of fading. Dave Nowlin pointed out that Walmart paint is very well rated and would be 1/2 the price." The cost-driven, in-house pattern that would replicate for the next 30 years begins here.
- PROJECT1997: $32,000 from reserves for stucco wall, canopy, and roof repair combined. Quality Stucco's $4,200 patch-only bid for the front wall is approved over the same vendor's $14,200 full-reface option. Annual-patch baseline articulated: "the wall has been patched each year for several years."
- DEFERRALNov 1999: MB Enterprises bid for upper-elevation stucco repairs declared "exorbitant." Minutes: "The exterior stucco repairs will be removed from the project list until the Board has a more realistic cost of repairs."
- DEFERRAL2001: Window-washing contractor's bundled bid that included "the repair of stucco near the top balconies" again declared "entirely too high." Minutes: "Next year we will need to contact other contractors who have proper equipment to reach the balconies."
- DEFERRALMay 2002: The 2001 "next year" promise fails inside twelve months. Lena reaches out to a different contractor — "Tony" — for the upper-elevation work. "Barbara stated that there has been no bid from Tony for the repair and painting of the outside walls." Same year separately: "Barbara talked with Tony and he will meet with Barbara and Lena tomorrow morning to reevaluate the holes in the outer walls and the use of a crane." The crane reference confirms upper-elevation skin scope.
- PATCHOct 2002: In-house stucco work documented: "Bob and Perry are making repairs to the stucco on the walls in front of the building." First explicit board-recorded in-house stucco repair on the building cladding.
- PATCHNov 2002 — 2003: Outside-contractor scope quietly dropped; upper-elevation skin work absorbed into in-house scope. 2002 Annual Meeting and 2003 minutes continue the same sentence: "we are still in the process of...repairing the holes in the upper outer walls of the buildings." Cash flow cited as "the controlling factor at this time." The work was performed in-house by HT staff.
- PATCHFeb 2003: Monthly retainer handyman Rick "was requested to get some bids for painting the soffits that are peeling." First documented appearance of "peeling" on a facade-visible building element. Scope assigned in-house, not bid to an outside contractor.
2004–2011 · Inside the projected end-of-life window
Under the from-new reading of the 1991 Choate projection, this era is exactly when the cladding was projected to be hitting end-of-life.
The 2006–2007 minutes contain the heaviest concentration of envelope discussion in the entire 1996–2024 record — 124 envelope-keyword hits across those two years alone.
Yet no engineer-of-record envelope assessment was commissioned in this era.
- PATCH2004: Odom Construction repairs cracks and stucco on the front wall. Reserve draw $900 for various projects.
- DEFERRALJun 30, 2005: Explicit DIY vs contractor decision on red-concrete resealing. "Michelle Smith will charge $500 to just reseal the red concrete. Perry said he could buy sealer for $50–$100 and he and Jack could do the resealing." Board chose the in-house option.
- PATCH2005: First parapet/roof-interface assessment of the era. "Krueger is to come out and look at the roof and find out the cost of redoing where the roofing material goes up the parapet."
- PROJECT2007: Multi-thread envelope year. Mike Kreuger recoats parapet wall and seals tower leak area. Prestige Stucco contracts at $850 (verbal bid; $900 reserve line) for planters/patio/awning header repairs — Lowell Gilbert oversees the contract. The gazebo header re-stucco is the most-repeated single action item on the year's agendas.
- PATCHMar–May 2007: Tony DiGrado Painting contracted to "Paint the 8th floor and second floor balcony" — per-floor and per-balcony water-damage repair work. April 2007: "Lena Elliott will have Tony revise his bid to do the painting on her water damage in her unit and the water damage on the 8th floor, since Perry McGinnis will re-seal the colored concrete in front of the building." Tony was the actual outside paint contractor for 2007. He was not engaged for facade or full-building work.
- PATCHSept–Nov 2007: Diamond Vogel (a paint manufacturer/supplier) appears on the September–November 2007 bill list as a vendor: "Diamond Vogel Paint for outside of the building." The bill list is a routine-operational-expenses category — the other entries are pool chemicals, fertilizer, carpet spot removal, sprinkler valve leak detection, bromite, fire-system monthly testing. This is a materials-only purchase, not a facade-paint event. The paint material was used by in-house staff to touch up exterior features (perimeter walls, planters, gazebo header, balcony railings) — consistent with the era 1–2 in-house pattern. No assessment vote, no contracted paint labor, no reserve-fund line for exterior painting in 2007.
- PATCHApril 2008: Prestige Stucco / Ed Adams contract from 2007 ends with in-house finish: "Rod will paint the stucco and Darrell will be out to fix the gate."
- INCIDENT2009: Owner Ted Joslyn writes to the board about "Lighting, Watering and Peeling Paint." Board's response addresses lighting and watering; the paint response is truncated in the captured record. First explicit homeowner complaint about visibly failing exterior paint.
- INCIDENTAug 11, 2010: Board-acknowledged sealant installation-quality failure on a previously-executed in-house sealant. "The current sealant was not installed correctly. Rod has reviewed the necessary procedures to apply the sealant correctly and will move forward on completing the patio by Sep 3. It is a detailed and intensive 7-Step process." Fix is in-house with greater process discipline; no engineer consulted.
- PROJECT2011: Roof reconstruction by TL Roofing reveals undocumented original-construction defect: parapet walls had no insulation. Board characterizes as "expected surprises" — the underlying fact is that the 1984 construction had defects undetected for 27 years. Same year, first formal board motion designating stucco as a maintenance priority: "Motion by McGinnis. Seconded by Meens that the following be designated as priorities for maintenance. Soffit repair / Leakage in garages / Stucco repair. Motion carried."
- DEFERRALOct 3, 2011: The 2001 sentence is echoed in the President's Report on the soffit-and-upper-wall proposal received that fall. Verbatim: "Soffit Repair: There is more than just painting the soffits. The height of the project is a big issue, and because of the condition of the soffits there are also unknown issues. The board has one proposal at a cost of $36,000." Same access concern as 2001, same singular-bid pattern, same surprise at the actual condition of the skin after twenty-seven years of operating the building. This single bid was eventually accepted; execution recorded in 2012 era 3 below.
An early-2000s reserve-study-style document in the archive (author not captured in OCR; titled "Early 2000s attempts at Reserve Study") explicitly budgeted exterior painting at $60,000 current value, $120,000 expected replacement, with 240 months (20 years) remaining in the current life cycle. A study dated to the early 2000s with 240 months remaining puts the projected paint-replacement window at 2021–2025 — precisely the era 4 silence below. The board had the information; the era 4 silence happened anyway.
2012–2014 · The last substantial in-house era
- PROJECTMar–Jun 2012: The single most substantive upper-elevation engagement in the entire pre-Knott 1996–2023 record. The 2011 $36K single-bid proposal executed. March 2012 report: "Soffit repair will begin this month after approval by HTCA Board last fall. Expected completion by end of April. There may be some drive and front door access issues by the equipment used to reach the soffits." June 2012 completion report: "Soffit repair project has been completed. Extra work and time involved in getting to the soffits on the south. All the residue from bees and other incidences on the upper exterior walls were addressed also." The phrase "addressed also" is the documentary tell — upper-exterior-wall cleanup framed as a side effect of soffit access, not as a planned cladding intervention.
- PATCH2013: Iterative concrete-sealant campaign. Canopy area sealed first; effectiveness validated; expanded to all front-of-building concrete plus reseal of the prior year's area. Sequencing differs from the era 1–2 patch-and-defer pattern — it's validate-then-expand. Still operating-budget scale, no specialist evaluation.
- PROJECT2014: Multi-feature re-stucco campaign — "Stucco — Front walls, planter walls, parapet walls re-stucco." Three distinct envelope features re-stuccoed within the operating budget. Executed by the year's "Contract work" personnel named in the Annual Meeting President's Report: Lowell, Rod, Bonnie, Ryan, Steve — in-house / handyman staff. No outside stucco-specialty vendor named for 2014 in any monthly minute.
- INCIDENTNov 3, 2014: Same Annual Meeting President's Report on a parallel 2013 soffit failure: "This year I have to report we have experienced water damage on one soffit. It is our current intent to evaluate through this fall/winter weather cycle before we initiate any activity to repair the damage. At this time it appears everyone acted responsibly and we do not have any contractor recourse. I believe we were caught not asking the correct questions." The most candid in-house quality-issue admission in the entire era 1–4 record.
2015–2021 · The silence
0
envelope-keyword hits across 7 years and ~300 KB of board record
Across 11 board-record files spanning 2015 through 2021 — Annual Meetings, monthly minutes, mixed scans — the search for envelope keywords
(paint, repaint, stucco, caulk, parapet, reskin, EIFS, elastomeric, coating, sealant, facade, envelope) returns zero hits in any exterior-substantive context.
Other building work continued. The November 2021 President's Report (Ron Kukuk) lists garage door maintenance, electric heat tape, a new emergency generator, doubled lighting in P-1 garage, additional ceiling lights in residents' hallways, all interior walls and doors repainted by Prestige Painting, carpet cleaning, pool table covering replacement, water pump in the cooling tower loop, elevator #2 traveling cable replacement. Substantial, professionally executed, well-documented — none of it touched the building's exterior envelope.
The from-new reading of the 1991 Choate projection put projected end-of-life at 2004–2009; the from-1991 reading put it at 2011–2016. The Early 2000s Reserve Study put projected paint replacement at 2021–2025. Whichever clock the board was running on, era 4 sat at or past projected end-of-life.
The 2001 minutes had said "next year we will need to contact other contractors."
Twenty "next years" lay between that sentence and the end of era 4. Six of the twenty
— 2002, 2003, 2009, 2011, 2012, and the immediate pre-Knott period — produced
documented attempts at the actual upper-elevation skin work. None produced a comprehensive
cycle. The other fourteen passed without it appearing on the agenda. The pattern the
2001 sentence first articulated then carried straight into the era 4 silence.
2022–2026 · The engineer-of-record era
- FCAOctober 25, 2023: Knott Laboratory delivers the first engineer-of-record envelope assessment in the building's 39-year history. Project number 20849. The 76-page Facility Condition Assessment includes plumb surveys of north and south elevations, EPDM membrane inspection at the lower garage roof (membrane removed in select areas), drainage analysis, and graded ratings by element. Four items receive Grade D ("Unsatisfactory: Repairs and Maintenance Required"); balconies receive Grade C; exterior walls receive specific repair recommendations.
- FCAKnott on exterior walls (FCA, Oct 2023): "Remove existing sealants and replace at the gaps between concrete panel edges and dissimilar materials to prevent water penetration. Apply sealant and skim coat to existing stucco cracks around the perimeter of the building. Anticipate vast majority of exposed sealants between concrete panels will require repair as deterioration was observed on many."
- FCAKnott on lower roof / parapet (FCA, Oct 2023): "The EPDM membrane contracted or 'shrank' consistent with the aged and heated membrane over time. This caused it to pull and separate from the attachment with the parapet wall creating large gaps around most of the perimeter."
- PROJECT2024: First envelope-related special assessment in HT's documented history. By July 2024, $283,566 collected from approximately 64 of 83 owners paid in full plus 18 on payment plans. Of six Colorado contractors Knott recommended, only one (Summit Sealants) returned a proposal. $220,000 contract authorized for double-tee + exterior-slab moisture work. Knott Engineering retained for $20,000 ongoing oversight.
- FCAJune 18, 2025: 3–4 hour flood test on front entrance by Summit Sealant with Knott Laboratory observers, plus board members, owners, and maintenance staff. Findings: several drains failed, three areas of delamination/bubbling in the coating identified. This is a substantive process improvement over the era 1–4 pattern — proactive quality control with engineering oversight, catching the failure mode that era 2's "the current sealant was not installed correctly" admission documented only after the fact.
- FCAAugust 18, 2025: Knott Laboratory issues formal Closeout Letter on the structural + moisture management scope (garage double-Ts, lower roof EPDM, front-entrance traffic coating). Closeout explicitly covers structural + moisture only; the EIFS facade is reserved for a separate engagement.
- PROJECTFeb 2025: 2025 Reserve Study (Facilities Advisors / Robbie Pepper) allocates $750,000 to remaining Knott-recommended repairs and recommends $500,000 additional