Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have been in our house for six months and although I hate looking at my bathrooms, my kitchen and my basement, they are totally functional. We don't even have AC! But I love my neighborhood, my neighbors, and our yards and garage. The things we hate are things we can change. That's why we bought the house, and we don't regret it. Now if we could just save a bit quicker...
No AC in DC is straight up hardcore.
I worry you might be my neighbor. 1950s kitchen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This might need a s/o, but what is people's definition of gutting? I like older houses too and don't mind customizing, but what about when they need new heat and AC? How involved does that become in a "gut" and what kind of $$ are we talking?
We got brand new hvac and it cost 10k and took three days. This is for a 1500 sq foot house, but even for a bigger house it's not a huge deal. We did a lot of other renovations before moving in but the hvac was the least of our worries.
Did you also replace all of the ductwork?
Yes, floor registers replaced with ceiling registers.
No, I meant the duct work that runs in the walls...
She's trying to suggest you paid too much for an HVAC, pp. And she'd be right.
But it sounds like duct work too. What about those in the 20-25K range with ductwork. That sounds excessive to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have been in our house for six months and although I hate looking at my bathrooms, my kitchen and my basement, they are totally functional. We don't even have AC! But I love my neighborhood, my neighbors, and our yards and garage. The things we hate are things we can change. That's why we bought the house, and we don't regret it. Now if we could just save a bit quicker...
No AC in DC is straight up hardcore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This might need a s/o, but what is people's definition of gutting? I like older houses too and don't mind customizing, but what about when they need new heat and AC? How involved does that become in a "gut" and what kind of $$ are we talking?
We got brand new hvac and it cost 10k and took three days. This is for a 1500 sq foot house, but even for a bigger house it's not a huge deal. We did a lot of other renovations before moving in but the hvac was the least of our worries.
Did you also replace all of the ductwork?
Yes, floor registers replaced with ceiling registers.
No, I meant the duct work that runs in the walls...
She's trying to suggest you paid too much for an HVAC, pp. And she'd be right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This might need a s/o, but what is people's definition of gutting? I like older houses too and don't mind customizing, but what about when they need new heat and AC? How involved does that become in a "gut" and what kind of $$ are we talking?
We got brand new hvac and it cost 10k and took three days. This is for a 1500 sq foot house, but even for a bigger house it's not a huge deal. We did a lot of other renovations before moving in but the hvac was the least of our worries.
Did you also replace all of the ductwork?
Yes, floor registers replaced with ceiling registers.
No, I meant the duct work that runs in the walls...
Anonymous wrote:This is what we did and we don't regret it bc we love our neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:We have been in our house for six months and although I hate looking at my bathrooms, my kitchen and my basement, they are totally functional. We don't even have AC! But I love my neighborhood, my neighbors, and our yards and garage. The things we hate are things we can change. That's why we bought the house, and we don't regret it. Now if we could just save a bit quicker...