Are your doors and trim Alder?Sorry for not posting on the new house build for quite sometime. Only so many hours in a day and I honestly need a lot more! We are going to start moving in tomorrow. Still a few large projects left and just like any house always a list of little projects. But it’s definitely livable! View attachment 76446View attachment 76447View attachment 76448View attachment 76448View attachment 76449View attachment 76450View attachment 76451View attachment 76452View attachment 76453View attachment 76454
Doors are Alder and the trim is Hickory. Close enough in appearance that most people won't know there is a difference. When things are all done I will try to do a break down on products the good the bad and the ugly! LOL Real happy with the doors other than the manufacturer needs to invest in new equipment for drilling hinge pockets and door knob holes/ strike plate holes or train their employees on proper setup. Lots of inconsistencies in depth and alignment, nothing a guy can't overcome, but spent way more time tweaking doors to align properly than I have ever had to in the past.Are your doors and trim Alder?
Depends on if you are literally building it mostly yourself and are the GC or if you are having it built for you. The biggest problem we have is that our build got delayed by 6 months because our original bank was a complete cluster F! Timing is everything. We had to constantly tell the subs that we planned on using that we were still delayed, lost a couple of good ones after awhile because we had to keep changing the start date. Now we are trying to finish a house in literally the busiest time of year for us job wise. Our initial "house designer" was a waste of time and money. She was hired to take our rough sketches and layout to a finished draft for our use. She was more interested in putting imaginary digital furniture in house to show us how it looked. In the long run our lumber yard has a couple of guys on staff that could have done the plans in house and saved us a lot of money. We had to eventually due that anyhow as she had made so many mistakes. I originally had a plumber hired, but after he did a terrible job installing the below basement stuff, I fired him and have done the rest of the plumbing myself. Took forever to get a reasonable bid on septic system install and then had to wait 3 months for him to come do the job. Great guy, just a symptom of the lack of enough workers in some blue collar fields. I will put a list together when time permits. Overall though I think things have went pretty smooth. My wife would say the hardest part is picking out the damn paint and tile! Way too many choices and that in itself gets a bit tiresome.Wow! It is looking great, I like it all.
One year from right now we should be starting ours.
Tell me what you would have done different if anything. Any unforeseen hurdles that popped up?
The kitchen counter backsplash has been our nemesis in terms of picking something. I literally have the 3rd "Yea this is the one." setting on the floor waiting to be installed! LOL Thus no picture of the kitchen yet. One of the previous choices has been relegated to the "bar" area in the basement for some time in the future and the other went back to the supplier.Lol, picking out paint, countertops, light fixtures, pull handles, tiles, and floors were a major headache! I didn't care, the wife did and she stressed about it.
Depends on if you are literally building it mostly yourself and are the GC or if you are having it built for you. The biggest problem we have is that our build got delayed by 6 months because our original bank was a complete cluster F! Timing is everything. We had to constantly tell the subs that we planned on using that we were still delayed, lost a couple of good ones after awhile because we had to keep changing the start date. Now we are trying to finish a house in literally the busiest time of year for us job wise. Our initial "house designer" was a waste of time and money. She was hired to take our rough sketches and layout to a finished draft for our use. She was more interested in putting imaginary digital furniture in house to show us how it looked. In the long run our lumber yard has a couple of guys on staff that could have done the plans in house and saved us a lot of money. We had to eventually due that anyhow as she had made so many mistakes. I originally had a plumber hired, but after he did a terrible job installing the below basement stuff, I fired him and have done the rest of the plumbing myself. Took forever to get a reasonable bid on septic system install and then had to wait 3 months for him to come do the job. Great guy, just a symptom of the lack of enough workers in some blue collar fields. I will put a list together when time permits. Overall though I think things have went pretty smooth. My wife would say the hardest part is picking out the damn paint and tile! Way too many choices and that in itself gets a bit tiresome.
This is what we did. Even if you trust the GC you still have to show up at the site every day to check on the project. We also took pictures of everything that was being done, it can be used as a reference in the future.We drew up our own plans. Gave them to the GC and asked for advice. He pointed us in the right direction through decades of experience. It worked out well. I found the GC invaluable. He had contractors on standby who he had vetted over the years. He bought materials at discount through bulk. EVERYTHING ran smooth as silk. I figure the money spent on him was saved by him doing that stuff rather than me.
I showed up every Saturday with a grill and sausages, left a 6 pack of barley pop, and brought a couple of drivers and some ball to hit at the pond. On Sundays I swept the floors, picked up trash, and hauled off scraps.This is what we did. Even if you trust the GC you still have to show up at the site every day to check on the project. We also took pictures of everything that was being done, it can be used as a reference in the future.