The Home Improvement Thread

tex

That's Mr Asshole to you
As @Taco Loco said about doing it myself. Done that on this and my last house. No more. I will do demo at the new house but not doing sheet rock, painting, floors, electrical or anything like that. There are some very limited build options in our target area so buying a house and renovating is a very likely reality.
 

balakay

BabyMax
I just got home from looking at a fixer upper. If I was in a position to buy it just to flip I would have - there's $15-20k to be made on it. But it's not a house I see myself wanting to stay in long term even after the remodel so I passed. If I'm gonna put that much work into a place I want it to be somewhere I'm going to want to live. This place needed everything comsetic. Floors, ceiling scraped, wood paneling in kitchen and living room removed, sheetrock work, texturing, kitchen cabinets and countertops, all appliances, back patio roof needs rebuilt, outside siding replacement and painting, bathroom tile work and counter tops. Oh well, on to the next one.
 

Silverback

Lima Gulf Bravo Foxtrot Juliet Bravo
There comes a point in which your time is money. Do I want to spend the next 3 months after work doing a bathroom reno or pay someone and have it done in a week?
 

balakay

BabyMax
My work schedule allows me to do the renovations better than most people's schedules would. At the same time, it sucks for having a contractor do the work. Not to mention I've seen way too many botched contractor jobs and can't recall a single good story of using a contractor for anything. The only thing I plan to use a contractor for is any tape/bed/texture work. I'll hang the sheetrock but that's as far as I go with that. Anything else, I'll do with the help of some family.
 

Silverback

Lima Gulf Bravo Foxtrot Juliet Bravo
I have a guy... that being said I did all the reno in our condo. I have my guy doing thngs like outdoor kitchen and outdoor concrete work. House is new, no real reno required.
 

TacoXpo

HOAX DENIER
When you are buying, be grateful you get what you get in Tejas. Just input a 2b 2bth listing. The range of 2b/2b condos in this county $300,000-4,350,000.
 

TacoXpo

HOAX DENIER
When I clean out things these days I look at it and if it means a new project, I typically throw it out!
 

Anathollo

Armorall is my choice of lube
Staff member
I just got home from looking at a fixer upper. If I was in a position to buy it just to flip I would have - there's $15-20k to be made on it. But it's not a house I see myself wanting to stay in long term even after the remodel so I passed. If I'm gonna put that much work into a place I want it to be somewhere I'm going to want to live. This place needed everything comsetic. Floors, ceiling scraped, wood paneling in kitchen and living room removed, sheetrock work, texturing, kitchen cabinets and countertops, all appliances, back patio roof needs rebuilt, outside siding replacement and painting, bathroom tile work and counter tops. Oh well, on to the next one.
$15k-$20k after all you pay for the material, labor and state taxes? Not worth it...
 

Taco Loco

Tired and Lazy, married to ‘The Laundry Fairy’
$15k-$20k after all you pay for the material, labor and state taxes? Not worth it...

You can exclude up to 250k in profit, tax free if you lived there two years and it’s your primary residence.
 

Taco Loco

Tired and Lazy, married to ‘The Laundry Fairy’
When you are buying, be grateful you get what you get in Tejas. Just input a 2b 2bth listing. The range of 2b/2b condos in this county $300,000-4,350,000.

we’re not on Cali drugs...
01465B42-CAF4-4925-A736-8FE9CB3F455E.jpeg
 

TacoXpo

HOAX DENIER
You can exclude up to 250k in profit, tax free if you lived there two years and it’s your primary residence.
Ding! Ding! Ding!!!
 

TacoXpo

HOAX DENIER

Taco Loco

Tired and Lazy, married to ‘The Laundry Fairy’
There comes a point in which your time is money. Do I want to spend the next 3 months after work doing a bathroom reno or pay someone and have it done in a week?

In economic terms, this is referred to as your Opportunity Cost, it’s a great term to understand when it comes to decision making and saving/investing/spending money, sounds like it’s part of the Sheep Build...
 

CowboyTaco

Well-Known Member
When we bought our house, we knew it needed some renovation. The previous home owners did a good job making the inside of the house look like something out of HGTV, but didn't do squat to the outside. They also closed in the garage and converted to 2 bedrooms to make it a 5/2.5 house on an acre lot in Keller. We looked at it and didn't think much of the work that needed to be done on the outside.

2.5 years later, we're still fixing stuff. To date, we've fixed the non-permitted garage conversion, replaced all the siding, all the trim, all the fascia and even some of the sub-fascia. Replaced all the wood in the front entryway, built a front porch, replaced the columns on the back porch, installed cedar railing. We also took the electric underground, poured a new driveway and built a detached garage after a VERY long ordeal with the city and a contractor that stole nearly $20k for a project....not to mention the legal costs trying to go after him just to not be able to collect.

We're finally to a point that we aren't working on the house every weekend, but we still put in a decent amount of work in upkeep. An acre takes a lot more time to maintain than a tenth of an acre like most people seem to have in our area.

I'm not saying that I wouldn't do it again. In fact, I probably will. There's nothing pansie about what we have done with this house, and it did get me a lot more tools than I had before. (Also, carrying tools from the back half of the acre to wherever we were working each day and putting it up each night got old fast.) However, with how much money we've put into making this house the way we want it, I could have just spent a little more up front and been done with it. Had everything I wanted and gotten to spend more time with my wife and daughter. Oh, and on that note, nothing like having your pregnant wife up on a ladder to help replace siding in 110* weather in July/August. Our daughter was born in September.
 

Oswego

n00b
I just got home from looking at a fixer upper. If I was in a position to buy it just to flip I would have - there's $15-20k to be made on it. But it's not a house I see myself wanting to stay in long term even after the remodel so I passed. If I'm gonna put that much work into a place I want it to be somewhere I'm going to want to live. This place needed everything comsetic. Floors, ceiling scraped, wood paneling in kitchen and living room removed, sheetrock work, texturing, kitchen cabinets and countertops, all appliances, back patio roof needs rebuilt, outside siding replacement and painting, bathroom tile work and counter tops. Oh well, on to the next one.

My work schedule allows me to do the renovations better than most people's schedules would. At the same time, it sucks for having a contractor do the work. Not to mention I've seen way too many botched contractor jobs and can't recall a single good story of using a contractor for anything. The only thing I plan to use a contractor for is any tape/bed/texture work. I'll hang the sheetrock but that's as far as I go with that. Anything else, I'll do with the help of some family.

I always will recommend any/all people get a good GC and then also hire a CM if doing legit permitted residential construction.

For all the rest of under the table projects I would never ever work on after my own remodel ~ the reward had better be much greater than the risk and with most homeowners the law is on the contractors side so this can be messy.
 

Oswego

n00b
Thoughts on a pole barn type shop like @PSU Taco85 built vs a regular metal shop?

Only downfall I could ever see for a pole barn is that moisture and bugs love wood that's underground. PT or not I've had PT posts I set properly into concrete with stones on the bottom for drainage and caulked the seams between the wood and concrete and they still went bad within 5 years (not pole barn posts - fence posts). All depends on how long you want it to be around and your region IMHO.
 

balakay

BabyMax
Only downfall I could ever see for a pole barn is that moisture and bugs love wood that's underground. PT or not I've had PT posts I set properly into concrete with stones on the bottom for drainage and caulked the seams between the wood and concrete and they still went bad within 5 years (not pole barn posts - fence posts). All depends on how long you want it to be around and your region IMHO.

That's kind of what I was thinking. But I see more and more people putting up the wood ones here than the metal framed ones. Was thinking maybe there was something I wasn't seeing.
 
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