Well I am eyeball deep in this remodel. Much of it is from the studs IN and OUT. I am tearing out supporting walls, replacing with architectural beams, master bdrm becomes the guest bdrm, living room becomes the master bdrm, the other guest bedroom, becomes the dining room, opened up to the kitchen and both open up to the office. Been working on it for 3 years in and out. Now the heat is on to finish the inside by taking up the entire tile floor, polishing/staining the concrete, all new cabinets thru the house, new everything.
Much of the work I do, but some I contract out, flooring, electrical, plumbing, mostly due to time for me to do vs time for them to bring in a crew and do it over a few days. Here are a few tips I have learned from working with contractors...
TIPS: You can only imagine how many bids we need and workers to do a remodel at this level. Here are a few things to remember if you request a bid on work.
ALWAYS ask for a break down of material and labor. You would be stunned at what some of these folks want to charge for labor!! We needed a AC duct move up about 7 in, the duct was about 8 feet long. Labor charge $400 per hour x 4 hr min. If you annualize that, its a bit more than $800,000 per year for duct work??? Only the best Doctors make that kind of money.
The other trick they like to pull is to pad the materials. Say you want a typical bedroom painted, about 2 gallons will do it. But they will bid 4, generally they will double betting you will have no idea of how much paint it will take. One plumbing bid I got he said I needed over 3000 feet of of PEX plumbing tubing, well over ½ mile. I told him OK, but if I pay for 3000 ft of PEX then when the job is finished I keep what is left over...never heard from him again. Just something to remember, if you pay them for materials they belong to you.
What out for 'GOTCHAS': We have all heard of Lumber Liquidators, a nation wide chain of floor covering stores. I wanted to put down a cork floor on top of an existing wooden floor in a room 12x14. The room is a guest bedroom. The cork was very inexpensive. But the cost to install was staggering. What they did what take installation and break it down like Glue. The glue was $180 per bucket, $40 per bucket at Home Depot. And it went on and on from there. I took their estimate per sq ft and multiplied it by the size of my home (2500 sq ft) and the cost to buy and install Cork floor covering would be over $35,000 dollars, almost all of the cost was in the install, as the Cork was only about $3 per sq ft.
The remodeling business is one of the most profitable business in the US, now you know why. Be cautious...
View from office into dinning room and kitchen, laundry room on the far right
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