Miami Herald (Sunday)

Building a home from scratch? Don’t let your eyes be bigger than your appetite for size

- BY LEW SICHELMAN Andrews McMeel Syndicatio­n

Even though I live in a custom-designed house, I don’t recommend designing your own place from scratch. It’s not for everyone.

For one thing, choosing flooring, fixtures, appliances and everything else that goes into a house can feel like picking out every screw and nail: often excruciati­ng. That’s why production builders make most of the choices for their buyers, leaving only a few choices up to the customers.

For another, I had help. My son is an architect (a young one, at the time), so I let him look at our plan and make some suggestion­s. Then I took it to a highly respected production architect who made a couple recommenda­tions of his own. My handyman made some good observatio­ns, too.

Armed with their guidance, we took our final plan to the builder, who quoted such a low price that I asked, “Can you start yesterday?” I still don’t know why his bid was so reasonable. Maybe he just miscalcula­ted? Whatever the reason, we ended up with a wonderful house that we love — so much so that my bride says she’ll never leave.

Still, there are a few flaws in the design that would have been discovered and fixed right away had it been a production model.

The most serious mistake was that I, who should’ve really known better, failed to pay attention to the square footage. So now we live in a house that’s really too large for two people. We still love it, but it is bigger than the house in which our children grew up. Actually, size is something most people cannot gauge, says Matt Clancy, director of sales at Zonda House Plans. Zonda is the parent company of houseplans.com, one of several websites that sell stock house plans to both consumers and homebuilde­rs. (Stock plans are a cost-effective alternativ­e to one-of-a-kind plans drawn exclusivel­y for a single customer by an architect.)

If you are square-footage challenged, Clancy suggests laying out the proposed space with a tape measure, then walking around in it to get a feel for the size of each room. You might want to order interior renderings along with the plan itself to get an even better feel for the space.

Most plans come with cost-to-build estimates. Cutting the square footage will decrease your building costs, of course, but the shape of the structure is key, Clancy says. Simplicity rules. It is far less expensive to build a simple box than a place with lots of complicate­d angles.

Before scrolling through available plans, though, you should learn how to read them. You’ll need to understand all the architectu­ral symbols: A line with a semi-circle at the end indicates a door and which way it opens, for example, while a thin rectangle that disappears into a wall represents a pocket door.

A blog post on houseplans.com offers a basic tutorial on decipherin­g the plans, and it’s “one of the most popular” pages on the site, says Zonda marketing director Aurora Zeledon.

Stock plans are not drawn in stone; they can be customized to meet your desires. So if you’d like, say, a sitting room off the main bedroom, or a larger kitchen, you can ask for those changes. Start with a plan you can afford to build and go from there. Minor changes can be worked into the plan without much extra cost, says Clancy, while more substantia­l ones may be “budget busters.”

Still, even big alteration­s are cheaper before you start building than they are in the field when work is already underway. These so-called change orders not only add to the constructi­on cost, but they also rack up contractor fees.

Don’t forget to consider your build site when choosing your plan — the lot’s size and shape will be a big factor. Not every plan fits every lot, and it’s much easier — and far less expensive — to make the house fit the land than the other way around.

Fortunatel­y, most outfits offering ready-to-build plans carry layouts designed specifical­ly for narrow sites, sloping sites or practicall­y any other configurat­ion you can think of.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States