Category Archives: Building a House

Building a House – Cost Breakdown

cost breakdown pie chartI never got around to post this final post in the “Building a House” series which shares some of experiences we had in tearing down our old house and rebuilding a new one.

We have been in the new house for 2+ years now and love every moment of it. This breakdown will give you a clue as to where you can expect funds to go.  As mentioned, in our case we tore down an old house so the cost of buying that house is not part of this, rather the demolition is baked into the land & site improvement portion. And of course this will vary depending on where you build, how you build and what your priorities are.

Also, I tracked what was budgeted against how actual costs came in and that looks like this:

budgeted vs actual

Building a House – Final stages

It’s been a while since the last post on this topic, reason being not enough hrs in a day but here are random updates:

  • Networking – This was one of the few decisions that I was solely in charge of and debated much with myself, asked around, and read even more but finally what I went with was a very simple solution. For the den, the family room (area where the entertainment devices will be),  a corner in the garage (for the family backup/server) and a couple of strategic points in the house I had CAT6 wires drawn. The rest of the house will be wireless and given that I have those strategic points where I can have the wireless routers placed to ensure maximum coverage I think this will be enough as there is really no place where wired network is a must have and the areas that do need it will have it. And I chose CAT 6 because it is more reliable for transmission of data than the traditional CAT 5E. For Cable, we have two sets of coax running to most areas. This way we can have internet through cable company and say TV through satellite.
  • Light switches – Trivial matter yes, but a couple useful points: for bathroom fans we got timer switches instead of regular ones, that way the fan does not have be on for hrs. Also we have dimmers for most rooms which is far more useful than what you would think.
  • Decisions – People ask, would you build a house again? Truthfully it has been very exhausting to make decisions on everything and anything that goes into building a house. And apparently spouses tend to get into tense situations as tastes differ, but aside from the energy and time spend on researching and deciding on things, it has been very smooth and a great learning experience. And as a side note, I notice details about other people’s house that I had never noticed in going to these houses for years, be it the color or material of window blinds to cabinet knobs etc.

Like any other project, it did feel like the last 20% of the work took 80% of the time and it did. But we are very happy with the results. Next post:  cost breakdown.

Building a House – Framing and decisions

Since the last post a lot has happened. On one hand getting the foundation related items out of the way took a while, from rain detention tank, to rebars, to many inspections, then came the concrete pouring followed by layering the drainage pipes and whole lot of other visually boring items. But once all these were done, the more visual part and apparently the most exciting part of the building started, the framing.

Framing went at an unbelievable pace, 3 weeks in total. From one day to the next you have nothing but a foundation to the next day where outer walls and floors are in place. and within a week you actually see the shape of the rooms which is an amazing experience after months and months of planning and adjusting and moving this wall over there and that room over here, seeing it take form day over day is pretty exciting. You go from thinking, this is smaller than I thought untill the walls come up and then you realize its actually bigger than you thought and I am told once everything is finished before furniture is moved in, the feeling of everything is smaller than we thought will be back but then go away once moved in. We did make some very minor changes from the original plan on the fly as we saw the shape of the rooms and windows.

So here is a chronological order of things once foundation has been laid (including drainage pipes):

  • Framing
  • Roofing & Windows/External doors
  • plumbing and electrical
  • HVAC/Exterior stone & paint/Gutters
  • Insulation
  • Drywall
  • Trim work
  • Tiles and cabinet
  • Interior doors
  • Hardwood floors
  • Interior paint
  • Plumbing and lighting fixtures

Fixtures are the last on the list, before framing started we started deciding on cabinetry, plumbing fixtures, counter tops and appliances and are now done, we think. Deciding can take a while though; you see something you like, but you may not feel that way tomorrow or in a week, so you have to make sure what you choose as part of your finalists are real keepers.

Some thoughts on different areas:

  • Appliances – pretty straight forward, the only thing that took time was fridge in deciding between french doors, side-by-side or single door and french door won finally as everything is in convenient height (since freezer is at the bottom)and it can fit big platters. The drawback could be that you forget which side an item is on opening both doors, but that’s minor.
  • Kitchen Countertop – Still TBD as we are still deciding between lime stone(not durable), granite (comes in matt, aka honed and glossy), soap stone (40% more than granite and same durability) and concrete(not as durable). We want a unique look rather than typical glossy granite but given all the factors including price we will see what we end up with.
  • Heating/Cooling – Important realization here was to go with multizone control (ie since you only have one unit for AC or heating, the ability to control without manual work how certain parts of the house will get more heat/cool than others). Saves energy and better for the environment. We dropped the option of going with radiant heating which we initially really wanted for environmental reasons, but that would have meant buying, installing, and operating two completely different systems.
  • Other – I also briefly looked into things like motorized painting to cover the TV as well as home automation control, and cool as the result may be, given the costs and what you get out of it, we dropped it simply wasn’t worth it. The one luxury that I am very much looking forward to is the rain head shower.
  • Networking – will do a separate post on this as I geeked out a little, at least on paper.

Building a House – preperations for teardown (Part I)

Building a House – preperations for teardown

Our house was build in early 50s and although we remodeled somewhat a few years back, many factors contributed to our decision of tearing down the house and rebuilding a new one. In this series of posts I will talk about each step as we take it and while it will be a good read 20 years from now when all the details will be long gone from the memory, hopefully it will help any readers out there in similar situation to take advantage of our learning during this process as well as maybe soliciting feedback & tips that will lead us to make better decisions.

So let’s get started on the steps taken so far. Here is a summary in bullet points

  • Custom plan vs. stock plan – after much going back and forth on this, we started by looking at stock plans sold by variuos firms and since we found a plan that had pretty much 90% of what we wanted, we decided to go with a stock plan and modify it rather than do a fully custom plan which would have cost probably 5-7X the amount for a stock plan.
  • Permits - once the modification was done with the stock plan and we were happy with everything which took about 3-4 months (tips: do not rush into finalizing the plan, sleep on it, then sleep some more on it as something that may sound great for a day or two a week later may sound blah) you submit it to the city and wait for request for revisions and clarifications etc. That’s all part of the process and there is no way you can get your plan approved in one shot. With the semi slow market thankfully this has gone pretty smoothly so far. and that’s where we still are to get the permit finalized. The plan itself includes multiple dimensions of the house from draining plan, structural plan, foundation plan, the house itself (layout) and a few others and each go through a review and approval through various experts within the housing department of the city.
  • Moving out – this is going to take a while as for some reason we humans are good at collecting junk over time and not getting rid of it, so moving once in a while a good thing as it allows to get rid of the junk.
  • Salvaging the house – being environmentally conscious we didn’t want to have the entire house to waste so we called several companies that salvage parts of the house (anything from light/bathroom switches/fixtures to the floors, doors, windows and some parts of the exterior of the house. Benefit of this primarly is the fact that there will be less junk produced as most of the salvaged parts get resold/reused by other people and we get some sort of tax deduction as you are donating that material. We called three companies available in our area

    • Re Store – never got back to us despite several calls
    • Earthwise  – came and assessed and we went with them.
    • Second use – came and assessed and felt it was not worth their effort.
  • Old appliances, computers and other stuff - our appliances were all from early 70s and worked so so, along with a couple of old desktops, laptops, cables, vases, chairs and other items that was no longer any use to us. Craigslist.org was invaluable as anything we put on there as free to be picked up, were gone in less than 24 hrs! I also put the house to be salvaged further after the company above came and there people that are interested in salvage more items from the house! This was a great surprise and since others find this useful, it’s win win as far as I am concerned.
  • Paying the costs – From the blogsphere I came across this credit card from Schwab that according to them : “You earn 2% cash back on all retail purchases, including purchases for services and recurring payments. This excludes transactions relating to refunds or returns, balance transfers, cash advance transactions (including the purchase of money orders or other cash equivalents), out-of-network payments made through FIA Card Services’ Bill Pay Choice® service, purchases made by or for a business or for a business purpose, fees, finance charges, unauthorized/fraudulent transactions and other charges.” Hey, that’s better than any other useless credit card out there that gives you 1% cashback on selected transactions or lots of air milage or other crap that end up never using. And while I won’t be able to pay for the entire house using this card of course, whatever I gain back can be used for other purposes at least.

Once we have the permit ready, next step will be to getting contractors to tear down the house and excavate…and that will the topic of the next post.