Need professional toilet installation services in Levittown, NY? Trust Joe Sampson’s Plumbing and Heating, LLC to make your plumbing upgrade simple and effective.
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Professional Plumbing Services
Providing dependable toilet installation services for homeowners in Levittown, NY is our goal at Joe Sampson’s Plumbing and Heating, LLC. Whether you’re upgrading your bathroom or replacing an outdated toilet, we bring the experience and skill needed to handle the job properly.
Serving Nassau County and surrounding areas, our team takes the guesswork out of plumbing upgrades. We approach every project with attention to detail, making sure your toilet installation is done right the first time.
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Importance of Proper Toilet Installation
A poorly installed toilet isn’t just an inconvenience – it can cause serious issues. That’s why it’s so important to get it done right the first time. At Joe Sampson’s Plumbing and Heating, LLC, our toilet installers take the time to do the job properly, so you won’t have to worry about surprise issues down the road.
Located in Levittown, NY, and serving homeowners throughout Nassau County, we strive to exceed expectations, and go the extra mile to make sure your bathroom upgrade is both reliable and hassle-free. Ready to improve your space? Call 631-430-5057 today!
The building firm, Levitt & Sons, headed by Abraham Levitt and his two sons, William and Alfred, built four planned communities called “Levittown”, in New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Puerto Rico; the Levittown in New York was the first. Additionally, Levitt & Sons’ designs are featured prominently in the older portion of Buffalo Grove, Illinois; Vernon Hills, Illinois; Willingboro Township, New Jersey; the Belair section of Bowie, Maryland; and the Greenbriar section of Fairfax, Virginia.
The Levitt firm began before World War II, as a builder of custom homes in upper middle-class communities on Long Island. During the war, however, the home building industry languished under a general embargo on private use of scarce raw materials. William “Bill” Levitt served in the Navy in the Seabees – the service’s construction battalions – and developed expertise in the mass-produced building of military housing using uniform and interchangeable parts. He was insistent that a postwar building boom would require similar mass-produced housing, and was able to purchase options on large swaths of onion and potato fields in undeveloped sections of Long Island.
Returning to the firm after war’s end, Bill Levitt persuaded his father and brother to embrace the utilitarian system of construction he had learned in the Navy. With his brother, Alfred, who was an architect, he designed a small one-floor house with an unfinished “expansion attic” that could be rapidly constructed and as rapidly rented to returning GIs and their young families. Levitt & Sons built the community with an eye towards speed, efficiency, and cost-effective construction; these methods led to a production rate of 30 houses a day by July 1948. They used pre-cut lumber and nails shipped from their own factories in Blue Lake, California, and built on concrete slabs, as they had done in a previous planned community in Norfolk, Virginia. This necessitated negotiating a change in the building code which, prior to the building of this community, did not permit concrete slabs. Given the urgent need for housing in the region, the town agreed. Levitt & Sons also controversially utilized non-union contractors in the project, a move which provoked picket lines. On the other hand, they paid their workers well and offered multiple incentives that allowed them to earn extra money, so that they often could earn twice as much a week as elsewhere. The company also cut out middlemen and purchased many items, including lumber and televisions, directly from manufacturers. The building of every house was reduced to 26 steps, with sub-contractors responsible for each step. His mass production of thousands of houses at virtually the same time allowed Levitt to sell them, with kitchens fully stocked with modern appliances, and a television in the living room, for as little as $8,000 each (equal to $109,162 today), which, with the G.I. Bill and federal housing subsidies, reduced the up-front cost of a house to many buyers to around $400 (equal to $5,458 today).
Learn more about Levittown.