| It really depends on the neighbor. If they are nice, sure. If they are the neighborhood busy body, no. |
Really? I'm always interested in seeing what work people have done on their houses. On the other hand I don't live in McLean but in a close-in part of DC. |
OuR McLean neighbors are interested too (most have renovated or have plans to do so). I don't know what's up with the grumpy pps. |
THIS. There is a big difference! |
Bizarre. I live in a sort of shabby house but LOVE to look at renovations. A girl can dream. |
If you give them a heads up, they will take the time to whine and then have more time to build up their whining and resentment into a major drama. |
Why are you using a port a potty, instead of letting the workers use the inside bathroom in the house? Disgusting. I'd file a nuisance lawsuit against you, just for that. |
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When we were doing an addition we definitely did. Port-a-potty went as far back from the street as possible - no running water means construction staff can't use the indoor facilities.
The other thing you might want to do is give the crew a heads-up on ways not to annoy the neighbors. For example, if there are places to park on the street that aren't as disruptive to normal neighborhood flow, or what day is trash day to leave room for owners to put their cans on the street, etc. To the open house, love the idea. I live in an older neighborhood of identical homes. We have all always loved seeing the work other neighbors have done, and often find lots of neighbors visiting open houses in the 'hood when houses go on the market. "Oh, that's how you handled that quirk in the layout!" |