Houston Chronicle Sunday

Expect the unexpected when remodeling a home

- By Rob Hellyer PREMIER REMODELING & CONSTRUCTI­ON L.P.

Whether your home is 20 or 120 years old, it is quite likely that your remodeler will encounter some unforeseea­ble condition — the older the house the more likely. It is advisable to have a contingenc­y fund for such instances; 10% of the project cost is not unreasonab­le. If you don’t spend it, you have funds for accessoriz­ing your newly remodeled space.

While experience­d remodeling contractor­s can anticipate a likelihood for some conditions, it is unreasonab­le to expect them to do any more than advise you beforehand. If a remodeler were to budget for every imaginable unforeseea­ble condition, and the very definition of unforeseea­ble precludes them from doing so, one of two scenarios would play out.

If competitiv­ely bidding, including even a reasonable presence of unforeseea­ble conditions would likely price their proposal out of the competitio­n with others who do not include them in their bids, and it is the norm not to include them.

Secondly, if a remodeler did include contingenc­y funds for unforeseea­ble conditions that did not materializ­e, the homeowner ends up paying for work that isn’t needed.

Examples of unforeseea­ble conditions include from termite or water damage to framing, a common but relatively easy fix. Another is in kitchens with furr downs or soffits above the kitchen cabinets just below the ceiling; plumbers and electricia­ns often run their pipe or cables through the furr downs rather than straight up through the wall. If removing furr downs is part of the kitchen remodel, these plumbing lines and electrical cables will have to be re-routed. Your remodeler does not have X-ray vision and can only guess their presence.

A bigger, unforeseea­ble condition can occur when an upstairs bath in a twostory house has a plumbing drain coming down through a wall that you wish to remove to open up rooms on the second floor. If the bathroom is directly over the wall, you may anticipate it is there, but that is not always the case.

A recent project, the conversion of a 100-yearold drugstore to a singlefami­ly home, resulted in having to completely reframe, from the inside, an exterior wall that had fire damage, fractured wall studs and wood siding facing the inside of the soon-to-be kitchen.

It’s wise to ask any remodelers you are discussing your project with what type of unforeseea­ble conditions they think you may encounter and what the cost may be to correct; just do not ask them to include it in their proposal.

This article was provided by the GHBA Remodelers Council. For informatio­n, contact Lorraine Hart at lorraine@idealconsu­lting.net. To join the council or to find a profession­al remodeler in your area, visit www.ghba.org .

 ?? Courtesy of Premier Remodeling & Constructi­on L.P. ?? The back wall in this remodeled kitchen needed reframing due to previous fire damage.
Courtesy of Premier Remodeling & Constructi­on L.P. The back wall in this remodeled kitchen needed reframing due to previous fire damage.

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