Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what do you mean by "sunroom"--like a 3 or 4 season glass enclosure or a framed out room with windows and skylights?
This is OP— that’s what we’re trying to figure out! We want something that can also be used as an office (so is comfortable year round). But it would nice to have a lot of light, too. We’re all over the place right now.
it's a 2 or 3 level TH and you're looking to extend just the ground level, is that right?
Yes, exactly. Essentially, adding a 10x12 room onto the back of the home.
We rented a place that had a similar sunroom, but I do remember it being pretty cold in the winter. So we’d need to make sure it’s well insulated/has adequate heating and cooling.
Smaller projects like this usually have a much larger cost per foot. If you want heating and cooling, well insulated, I’d recommend what the poster above said. Pretty much a room added on the house with a lot of windows versus a traditional “sun room or 3 season room”.
I’d guess when all said and done $125k of you don’t need plumbing or anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what do you mean by "sunroom"--like a 3 or 4 season glass enclosure or a framed out room with windows and skylights?
This is OP— that’s what we’re trying to figure out! We want something that can also be used as an office (so is comfortable year round). But it would nice to have a lot of light, too. We’re all over the place right now.
it's a 2 or 3 level TH and you're looking to extend just the ground level, is that right?
Yes, exactly. Essentially, adding a 10x12 room onto the back of the home.
We rented a place that had a similar sunroom, but I do remember it being pretty cold in the winter. So we’d need to make sure it’s well insulated/has adequate heating and cooling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what do you mean by "sunroom"--like a 3 or 4 season glass enclosure or a framed out room with windows and skylights?
This is OP— that’s what we’re trying to figure out! We want something that can also be used as an office (so is comfortable year round). But it would nice to have a lot of light, too. We’re all over the place right now.
it's a 2 or 3 level TH and you're looking to extend just the ground level, is that right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:what do you mean by "sunroom"--like a 3 or 4 season glass enclosure or a framed out room with windows and skylights?
This is OP— that’s what we’re trying to figure out! We want something that can also be used as an office (so is comfortable year round). But it would nice to have a lot of light, too. We’re all over the place right now.
Anonymous wrote:are you in the Cap HIll Historic District? If so, you have to submit plans - that's as far as my attempt to do exactly the same as you want to do OP, went. My neighbor disregarded the HIstoric District and got slammed for installing much better window frames but not ones that were aesthetically pleasing. She had to yank everything out
Anonymous wrote:what do you mean by "sunroom"--like a 3 or 4 season glass enclosure or a framed out room with windows and skylights?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We did a 14x14 addition with a lot of windows. We roughed in our HVAC as well. And added a powder room (the main point of the sunroom was to get a toilet on main level of house).
All in with permitting, drawings, finishes, etc. was $190k
We went with a design build firm.
Did you like the firm? Would you share the name? We’re looking to do something similar.
Anonymous wrote:We did a 14x14 addition with a lot of windows. We roughed in our HVAC as well. And added a powder room (the main point of the sunroom was to get a toilet on main level of house).
All in with permitting, drawings, finishes, etc. was $190k
We went with a design build firm.