The most dangerous word in the modern construction industry is not “expensive,” nor is it “delayed,” or even “hazardous”-it is “easy.” We have been conditioned to believe that ease is a fundamental right of the consumer, a baseline expectation that accompanies every transaction from the purchase of a toaster to the total recladding of a three-story residential complex.
We seek out the word on labels like a starving man seeks a campfire, believing that if we can just find the product that is sufficiently effortless, we will finally unlock that mythical vault of free time we were promised back in the late nineties. But in my professional life as a safety compliance auditor, I have learned that “easy” is almost always a linguistic mask for a deferred crisis.
The Anatomy of Low-Maintenance
I remember sitting in my home office last Tuesday, surrounded by four different brochures for exterior renovation materials. I had a yellow highlighter in my hand, the kind with the felt tip that squeaks against glossy paper, and I was methodically circling the phrase “low-maintenance.”
I circled it on the brochure for natural Western Red Cedar; I circled it on the pamphlet for a high-density polyethylene board that looked suspiciously like a melted milk jug; I circled it on the technical sheet for a corrugated metal system; and I circled it on the literature for
