Anonymous wrote:Fed gonna raise the rate another 3/4 point next month. Contractors will be taking it on the chin for the foreseeable future.
Anonymous wrote:Contractor required $100 for an estimate. It's been a month. They haven't given us an estimate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is what I posed in another thread. However we have since received the final invoice and we are up to 83k
I’m in loudoun county and am waiting on final building and electrical inspection next for my brand new screened in porch. Here are my specs:
Trex transcend all composite build
20x20, plus an 8x12 open area for grilling (a total of 500sqft of decking)
3 infrared 6000w heaters
5 sconces
6 uplights
Ceiling fan
Wainscot covering the house side wall, painted ceiling
2 oversized sky lights
TV
Remote controlled floor to ceiling solar shades that can cover the entire screened in area for full privacy.
Everything, including all materials I had to get in my own is sitting at 80k. My screened in porch is not basic, lots of extras.
Can you share the name of your contractor?
This is great but I wouldn’t count on being able to build a trex screened porch anywhere in town. I don’t think you can do that on a brick colonial in Bethesda.
I know nothing of brick colonials and wasn’t aware of a trex transcend ban in Bethesda. However I did just finish a trex transcend screened in deck on my home in Bethesda. Had no issues either permitting other than the process is a colossal pain in the ass. The finished product is amazing and looks so nice. I got the contractor from a neighbor who also had a trex transcend deck…..in Bethesda.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is what I posed in another thread. However we have since received the final invoice and we are up to 83k
I’m in loudoun county and am waiting on final building and electrical inspection next for my brand new screened in porch. Here are my specs:
Trex transcend all composite build
20x20, plus an 8x12 open area for grilling (a total of 500sqft of decking)
3 infrared 6000w heaters
5 sconces
6 uplights
Ceiling fan
Wainscot covering the house side wall, painted ceiling
2 oversized sky lights
TV
Remote controlled floor to ceiling solar shades that can cover the entire screened in area for full privacy.
Everything, including all materials I had to get in my own is sitting at 80k. My screened in porch is not basic, lots of extras.
Can you share the name of your contractor?
This is great but I wouldn’t count on being able to build a trex screened porch anywhere in town. I don’t think you can do that on a brick colonial in Bethesda.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is what I posed in another thread. However we have since received the final invoice and we are up to 83k
I’m in loudoun county and am waiting on final building and electrical inspection next for my brand new screened in porch. Here are my specs:
Trex transcend all composite build
20x20, plus an 8x12 open area for grilling (a total of 500sqft of decking)
3 infrared 6000w heaters
5 sconces
6 uplights
Ceiling fan
Wainscot covering the house side wall, painted ceiling
2 oversized sky lights
TV
Remote controlled floor to ceiling solar shades that can cover the entire screened in area for full privacy.
Everything, including all materials I had to get in my own is sitting at 80k. My screened in porch is not basic, lots of extras.
Can you share the name of your contractor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Really?
I need ground prep and concrete base. 3 walls with aluminium posts and mesh with single screen door. A single roof in the continuation of our existing roof. Electric installed for fan and light. No fireplace, hardwood, fireplace, gizmos, etc.
It’s basically an addition because of the requirements for the roof. Indeed, most people eventually just enclose them anyway.
Not really - if it's essentially a screened patio, there's no insulation, no drywall, no flooring, minimal painting because no walls... If contractors are charging $70K for that type of work, I don't believe you. But I can believe that some close-in luxury contractors might not accept such a humble project, or they'd mark it up just because they're looking for bigger things.
So what should a screened patio cost? I have a brick patio. I am envisioning some poles bolted into the brick, probably some kind of barrier between the siding and the pole where the screens meet the exterior wall, and a metal roof - If you've ever been to the Pope-Leighey House, that is what I have in mind. What should that cost me? What is likely to cost me in the DMV?
$75-100k. If there isn’t already a roof, the patio is meaningless. The PP above is wrong. You have to have a proper foundation with a structure that can support a roof that can hold a snow load and keep it from blowing away in high winds, that’s integrated into your existing roof. You can’t just slap a roof on some poles above your patio like you were stringing lights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I looked into this pre-pandemic and it was 40k then for a reputable insured/bonded contractor. I don’t know what it is now, but 70k sounds right. Contractors have to eat too.
?
It's two weeks work at best and maybe 10k in materials, tops.
You think 30 grand a week is a fair salary?
How old are you that you think life is "fair?" Free market, baby.
Free market is 100% correct. Keep saying that as all your work dries up for the next 5 years. All contractors are about to eat a sh*t sandwich for a loooong time.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is what I posed in another thread. However we have since received the final invoice and we are up to 83k
I’m in loudoun county and am waiting on final building and electrical inspection next for my brand new screened in porch. Here are my specs:
Trex transcend all composite build
20x20, plus an 8x12 open area for grilling (a total of 500sqft of decking)
3 infrared 6000w heaters
5 sconces
6 uplights
Ceiling fan
Wainscot covering the house side wall, painted ceiling
2 oversized sky lights
TV
Remote controlled floor to ceiling solar shades that can cover the entire screened in area for full privacy.
Everything, including all materials I had to get in my own is sitting at 80k. My screened in porch is not basic, lots of extras.
Can you share the name of your contractor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Really?
I need ground prep and concrete base. 3 walls with aluminium posts and mesh with single screen door. A single roof in the continuation of our existing roof. Electric installed for fan and light. No fireplace, hardwood, fireplace, gizmos, etc.
It’s basically an addition because of the requirements for the roof. Indeed, most people eventually just enclose them anyway.
Not really - if it's essentially a screened patio, there's no insulation, no drywall, no flooring, minimal painting because no walls... If contractors are charging $70K for that type of work, I don't believe you. But I can believe that some close-in luxury contractors might not accept such a humble project, or they'd mark it up just because they're looking for bigger things.
So what should a screened patio cost? I have a brick patio. I am envisioning some poles bolted into the brick, probably some kind of barrier between the siding and the pole where the screens meet the exterior wall, and a metal roof - If you've ever been to the Pope-Leighey House, that is what I have in mind. What should that cost me? What is likely to cost me in the DMV?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Really?
I need ground prep and concrete base. 3 walls with aluminium posts and mesh with single screen door. A single roof in the continuation of our existing roof. Electric installed for fan and light. No fireplace, hardwood, fireplace, gizmos, etc.
It’s basically an addition because of the requirements for the roof. Indeed, most people eventually just enclose them anyway.
Not really - if it's essentially a screened patio, there's no insulation, no drywall, no flooring, minimal painting because no walls... If contractors are charging $70K for that type of work, I don't believe you. But I can believe that some close-in luxury contractors might not accept such a humble project, or they'd mark it up just because they're looking for bigger things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I looked into this pre-pandemic and it was 40k then for a reputable insured/bonded contractor. I don’t know what it is now, but 70k sounds right. Contractors have to eat too.
?
It's two weeks work at best and maybe 10k in materials, tops.
You think 30 grand a week is a fair salary?
How old are you that you think life is "fair?" Free market, baby.