Thank you for letting me know. I'm glad your back. Nikola Chubrich has invited himself for 7 p.m. tomorrow May 31. I will telephone you when he has left, and then if you are not too angry with me, you can come over and tell me what's on your mind. What on my mind is that I worry about you and about your plans for the house. I believe that the presence of the lumber bales of fibreglass insulation precludes the final inspection of the house. What's on my mind is that I worry about you. You insist on soliciting a final inspection and then fill the house with lumber and insulation which is irrefutable evidence that you are planning further construction not included in the building permit, and arguably in violation of the building code which requires a minimum ceiling clearance of 7.5 feet and absent mechanical ventilation, window openings of 49.92 sq ft. or 12.48 sq.ft. for each of the four hopper windows, which have only 4.00 sq ft of glass and can be opened to expose only a fraction of that area to admit air. The wiring code requires the installation of numerous receptacles on each wall. You propose to insulate the ceiling with fiberglass. Do your really think. How will you keep its toxic fibres out And then the concrete floor. How do you propose to deal with the sumps, of which there are at least two, and maybe more, and the large opening for the subsurface tank which would need to be covered in some way. And to what end? The house has four bathrooms and six bedrooms with views of the moors and of the ocean. Whom are you going to ask to sleep - or work or spend time any time in a dark windowless basement? If you want a bar or a pool table or a ping pong table, your guests can play pool, or, ping pong or drink in an unfinished basement. What the house needs is storage space. That's what the basement was intended for, and making the basement pretty by "finishing" it will significantly impair its storage capacity.