Do I really want to remodel my house?
Aug. 26th, 2011 05:10 pmAll right, I've mentioned this from time to time in my comments, but basically when I let my parents stay at my house, ostensibly to keep an eye on me, they wound up cluttering the place. There are a bunch of repairs that need to be done on it, and the wiring is just old and not intended for modern standards - the kitchen breaker goes out if someone runs a TV in the dining room at the same time as the dishwasher, for instance.
So my initial plan was to refurbish the place. Repaint the walls, rebuild the kitchen, it should be like a couple months, right?
Well, had a contractor in today to talk about it... After I explained what I was thinking of doing - stuff like this SketchUp model - he said that it would be feasible to, as I wanted, remove the fireplaces and the kitchen side wall, but with all the demolishing needed and rebuilding - basic things like the wiring and plumbing - it would probably take some six months or so.
He recommended that I think about demolishing the entire house and rebuilding from the start, and having struggled with the floor plan as I try to figure out where I can put everything, I can see his point. The current floor plan is just tight and cramped. But that gets pricey!
Then we went down to look at the house that he was building for a client - not mock-Tuscan as I was trying, and failing, to emulate, but the real thing. It was gorgeous.
It was also intimidating as heck. This wasn't an ordinary house, this was a mansion. $2 million for the house alone on a property worth $5 mil. Dang!
But it was gorgeous, I'll give it that! Here are a few pictures.
The office:

The kitchen:

The kitchen sink:

One of the bathrooms, a small one:

The other bathroom, unfortunately blurry:

So what I'm currently faced with is a choice between these alternatives:
1. Scale back my plans drastically but go ahead with the remodeling. Stuff like faux marble walls or Venetian plaster go out the window. Fresh coat of paint, do what's needed but no more. I'll still be dealing with a wretched floor plan. Probably take 4-6 months to finish.
2. Demolish the house, build a new one with a more awesome floor plan. It will probably look a lot nicer. We could be looking at a year to be done.
3. Buy a new house, sell this one. Property taxes go up about 25% plus I go through the hassle of refinancing, but I don't have to do any remodeling, just furnish the new house, and I can move in nearly immediately.
I'm going to evaluate my options over the coming weeks. As some of you know, I am a misercat so I hate spending money... But my current house is falling apart visibly. And if I'm going to get significant repairs, why not go a little farther and make it look nice?
Oy! Decisions, decisions.
So my initial plan was to refurbish the place. Repaint the walls, rebuild the kitchen, it should be like a couple months, right?
Well, had a contractor in today to talk about it... After I explained what I was thinking of doing - stuff like this SketchUp model - he said that it would be feasible to, as I wanted, remove the fireplaces and the kitchen side wall, but with all the demolishing needed and rebuilding - basic things like the wiring and plumbing - it would probably take some six months or so.
He recommended that I think about demolishing the entire house and rebuilding from the start, and having struggled with the floor plan as I try to figure out where I can put everything, I can see his point. The current floor plan is just tight and cramped. But that gets pricey!
Then we went down to look at the house that he was building for a client - not mock-Tuscan as I was trying, and failing, to emulate, but the real thing. It was gorgeous.
It was also intimidating as heck. This wasn't an ordinary house, this was a mansion. $2 million for the house alone on a property worth $5 mil. Dang!
But it was gorgeous, I'll give it that! Here are a few pictures.
The office:

The kitchen:

The kitchen sink:

One of the bathrooms, a small one:

The other bathroom, unfortunately blurry:

So what I'm currently faced with is a choice between these alternatives:
1. Scale back my plans drastically but go ahead with the remodeling. Stuff like faux marble walls or Venetian plaster go out the window. Fresh coat of paint, do what's needed but no more. I'll still be dealing with a wretched floor plan. Probably take 4-6 months to finish.
2. Demolish the house, build a new one with a more awesome floor plan. It will probably look a lot nicer. We could be looking at a year to be done.
3. Buy a new house, sell this one. Property taxes go up about 25% plus I go through the hassle of refinancing, but I don't have to do any remodeling, just furnish the new house, and I can move in nearly immediately.
I'm going to evaluate my options over the coming weeks. As some of you know, I am a misercat so I hate spending money... But my current house is falling apart visibly. And if I'm going to get significant repairs, why not go a little farther and make it look nice?
Oy! Decisions, decisions.
no subject
Date: 2011-08-27 04:00 am (UTC)When you say your current house is falling apart, is it REALLY? I mean, structurally? Or is it just looking run-down? I wish I could take a look at the floor plan, and compare to some of your wishes regards a new one. That might help me get a bit more context.
no subject
Date: 2011-08-27 07:14 am (UTC)Here's the rough plan: http://lynx.purrsia.com/~lynx/house.gif
It's actually somewhat off, but starting from the bottom left and going clockwise: garage, connects to the master bedroom (left) through the master bathroom, then the second bedroom (top left), third bedroom (top middle), with closets/air conditioner/bathroom in the middle, the half-bedroom is beneath the third bedroom. To the right of that is the family room, with kitchen nook in the spot with 3 walls on the right. (that's the area depicted in the Sketchup models, as I'd want it to be) And below that, bottom right, is the living room/entryway.
Sounds like you'd be a vote for option 1. };)
no subject
Date: 2011-08-27 02:48 pm (UTC)*beth eyes the bottleneck of doors*
If you do only partly renovate, you might want to take out the hall closet above the master bedroom there (if that's not a water-heater/AC closet, that is, as those are harder to move), and put the door into the master bedroom there, so it goes down. Then turn the door into a wall, and you've got hallways instead of door-orgies, at the cost of a closet. (Of course, I'm working from a floorplan.)
I do not think the designer of that house was very sensible -- the kitchen is too far away from the garage! You have to carry groceries all the way through the house! (Therefore, turn that middle half-bedroom's right wall into some kind of load-bearing archway, extend the house down 4-5 graph-squares into the porch, and move that side's garage door so you can at least go from the garage to the kitchen without going outside or through the bedroom. Though that does lose some porch, so it really depends a lot on how much "porch" matters to you.)
...I begin to see the appeal of "tear it down and put in something that makes sense." (Though on the other hand, a quirky floorplan is kind of amusing, too. If it's not unpleasantly quirky.)
no subject
Date: 2011-08-27 04:19 pm (UTC)The hall closet is indeed an AC closet!
There is a door in the side of the garage so if you had to do something crazy like parking in the garage, you could open that and go through it to get to the main entrance.
I'm not attached to the porch area, if it weren't for me wanting a lot of space for my library and for exercise equipment I plan to install, I could be happy in a 1-bedroom apartment. The contractor actually did suggest that the porch area could be turned into More House.
no subject
Date: 2011-08-27 06:45 pm (UTC)The Basement is where More Useless Junk lives!
And the designer of that floorplan is a fruitcake for making someone have to carry groceries around through so much house, going outside as the "fastest" way to the kitchen. No wonder there's no point to putting your car in there. It's useless!
I would totally turn the porch into More House. I would, personally and as someone who is terribly iffy about this Outdoors thing, say that you should eat at least half the porch for More House, and a better route to the kitchen from the garage, put a half-wall up to finish the square of the house, put in big screenable windows, and have a semi-outdoor area that a couple chairs can go on -- but you can also close it off in storms or yuck and open the door to the heat/AC.
Alternatively, if the porch is big enough for a car, turn it into a carport or garage (the path through entry room to kitchen isn't too awful) and make your existing garage into a bedroom, with the old bedroom becoming a sitting room/exercise room/library. (Replace the door, adjoining the AC closet, with a glass sliding or folding door or even an archway, stick a door between the old bedroom and the garage, and decide if you want to keep the two doors into the bathroom or if you'd rather have one of those doors become a wall with storage-space shelves or a fancier shower or something.)
I think this means option 1.5, gutting judiciously, is where I'd be leaning.
(Note: cjthomas is quite correct -- only renovate areas that are actually a nuisance. But do consider whether something is a subliminal nuisance or if it would be something you'd be actively sad to lose as a house-quirk. Or if it's a load-bearing wall.)
...what is that little room with two doors in and out of it, beside the half-bedroom? O_o
no subject
Date: 2011-08-27 06:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-08-27 08:48 pm (UTC)Turning porch into house is an expensive proposition and goes into the 'tear down and rebuild' option, really. };)
no subject
Date: 2011-08-27 09:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-08-27 09:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-08-29 12:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-08-27 03:42 pm (UTC)You can add me to the "option 1.5: gut some or all of it" category. Unless you regularly have a large number of people staying the night, the sanest option would probably be to renovate everything to the left of the family room (including the closet opposite the kitchen), repartitioning the space into something less awkward. You'd end up with one fewer rooms but traffic flow that doesn't require you to walk through as many tight spaces to get anywhere. You could optionally make the family room area larger by moving its leftmost wall left during this process, as well.
That said, a) I agree with the statements about making sure load-bearing walls stay in place, and b) only renovate if that area of the house is actually unpleasant for you. It's just what stood out to me on the floor plan =^.^=.
no subject
Date: 2011-08-30 04:28 pm (UTC)That's not a closet next to the kitchen, that's the half bathroom!
no subject
Date: 2011-08-30 04:59 pm (UTC)Unless the scale is larger than I'd thought, it does look _cramped_. There are several places where closet doors would obstruct things if open, and I'd hate to have to try to move furniture or bulky objects into or out of the bedrooms.
And that's assuming the layout is one square = one foot. Given that that would give you a family room as wide as my entire house, I'm thinking scale is a bit funny in the drawing.
no subject
Date: 2011-08-30 05:02 pm (UTC)There are some inaccuracies, some doors may not swing quite the way I indicated; for instance the closet doors opposite the master bedroom would swing to block the bathroom, not the main hall.
no subject
Date: 2011-08-30 05:29 pm (UTC)[Granted, we're similar for square footage across all floors, but still. =^.^=]
no subject
Date: 2011-08-30 05:33 pm (UTC)(Lagkitten batbatzaps!)
no subject
Date: 2011-08-30 06:13 pm (UTC)Houses here are usually main floor/upper floor/basement, so it's double or triple the footprint's square footage, depending on whether you've furnished the basement or not. There's usually a crawl space above the upper floor, but it's very rare for that to be used for anything but storage (and even that isn't a given).
I'd never live in a townhouse (assuming that means the same thing down there as it does up here: the equivalent of several houses stuck side to side with firewalls separating them). All it would take would be a kitchen fire or cigarette fire in one unit to have every unit burning, firewalls or no firewalls (firewalls stop localized fires but don't save you if everything including the roof is ablaze). Fires like that hit the news every year or so. Risk-averse kitty is risk-averse =^.^=.
Semi-detached houses (sharing one wall) are a grey area for me, though I'd still strongly prefer detached (don't have to worry about waking anyone up if doing laundry at 3am, or about carpentry noise during the day, etc).
I take it you're in suburbs or elsewhere where land is cheaper?
no subject
Date: 2011-08-30 06:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-08-30 06:24 pm (UTC)My square footage is about 1479 or so.