(Massive Attack, 1991)
There were always going to have to be compromises.
We started the process of getting quotes from builders who could manage the whole project ("entreprise général") back in May/June. We had rather optimistically hoped to get these in before we went on holiday in July (but we did get one in - definite points for them).
So in August we do more house visits with contractors, hoping to have a few offers to chose from by the end of the month.
It was only at the end of August that we had enough offers to compare. And the prices we got back were fairly eye watering. So we decided to go back for another round, and also ask separate contractors to see if that made a difference (knowing that this makes the project much harder to coordinate and means the whole thing can take longer).
We have now, after months of hassling, finally got those offers in - all except one (which has been delaying and delaying for the last two months).
It's still not looking brilliant: if we do everything we wanted to do, it would almost double the cost.
So we have been painstakingly going through individual items, deciding what we need to do now (or never will) and what we can do later, and seeing what this does to the total budget.
Staying in are the under-floor heating in the kitchen, the rain-water circuit for the downstairs loo and utility room, the top-grade insulation needed to be 'low energy', the roof, windows, and the necessary water/electrics/heating etc.
The 'to do later list' is rather longer: re-plastering, all the painting, the green roof, anything in the garden, the second bathroom, the floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, sanding and oiling the wooden floorboards and stairs. Depending on how brave we feel, we might have a go at doing some of this ourselves.
Needless to say, we'll not be splashing out on any new furniture and fittings for a while.
But frankly, I don't care if we're dining off tea chests, as long as we're there...
2 comments:
Hi G, I think we're about to suffer the same fate - our project is going out to tender soon. I think our architect has rather heavily over-stretched our budget....
Hope you're both well. James
It seems they have a tendency to do that... Plenty of nice ideas but not brilliant on the feasibility/practicalities.
Good luck with yours - would be very curious to see pics/plans if ever you get inspired to do a blog (maybe even one day in real life)!
I hope that London contractors are a bit more enterprising that their Belgian colleagues, who need months of chasing to even submit a quote.
G x
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