Anonymous wrote:it seems high but not unreasonable. you are doing really a lot of work and it takes more time to gut a full house down to the studs then building a new addition.
last year i was was quoted 150K-200K just to enclose a second floor sleeping porch so it would result in a room and a new smallish full bathroom, and to remodel the current full bathroom (5X7) that is next to the porch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi- we just got a bid from a design build firm for a renovation of our home and are in absolute shock. Here’s what we are doing:
-gutting the house down to the studs on the first and second floor
-replumbing, upgrading electrical, installing hvac,
- adding a powder room on the first floor, a second bath on the second floor
-gutting kitchen
-adding laundry room to the first floor
- replacing floors that cannot be salvaged refinishing the wooden floors so they match
We are not: finishing our basement or changing the existing footprint of the house, or touching the exterior.
We were not prepared for the number they suggested-$599k. The structural elements before any fixtures or cabinets alone was $475k. The SOW did not include a price breakdown of any of these items, just a grand total at the end. Is that normal?
Why did you buy a house that was in such bad shape? Did you get a major discount for the poor condition? Unless you bought it for way under market due to conditions, it’s hard to see how that reno makes financial sense.
Anonymous wrote:Hi- we just got a bid from a design build firm for a renovation of our home and are in absolute shock. Here’s what we are doing:
-gutting the house down to the studs on the first and second floor
-replumbing, upgrading electrical, installing hvac,
- adding a powder room on the first floor, a second bath on the second floor
-gutting kitchen
-adding laundry room to the first floor
- replacing floors that cannot be salvaged refinishing the wooden floors so they match
We are not: finishing our basement or changing the existing footprint of the house, or touching the exterior.
We were not prepared for the number they suggested-$599k. The structural elements before any fixtures or cabinets alone was $475k. The SOW did not include a price breakdown of any of these items, just a grand total at the end. Is that normal?
Anonymous wrote:Hi- we just got a bid from a design build firm for a renovation of our home and are in absolute shock. Here’s what we are doing:
-gutting the house down to the studs on the first and second floor
-replumbing, upgrading electrical, installing hvac,
- adding a powder room on the first floor, a second bath on the second floor
-gutting kitchen
-adding laundry room to the first floor
- replacing floors that cannot be salvaged refinishing the wooden floors so they match
We are not: finishing our basement or changing the existing footprint of the house, or touching the exterior.
We were not prepared for the number they suggested-$599k. The structural elements before any fixtures or cabinets alone was $475k. The SOW did not include a price breakdown of any of these items, just a grand total at the end. Is that normal?