Home Additions Construction Process


Of all home improvement projects, none is more complicated or expensive than building a full room addition that changes the home's actual floor plan by digging and installing foundations, then framing and finishing a new living space. In rare cases, a spacious room addition can cost as much as the original construction cost of a home. Despite the enormous scope of such a project, room additions are highly prized, since no other project has such potential for improving the livability and real estate value of your home.

But building a room addition is virtually always a job for a general contractor and/or a variety of subcontractors, and it's very rare for a homeowner to tackle the work themselves. The skills required to complete a room addition include a very broad range of abilities, and almost no one-even a skilled tradesperson-is able to do it all themselves.

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That doesn't mean, however, that the owners are hands-off. On the contrary, homeowners need to be involved with every step of the process to make informed decisions and ensure the work meets their expectations. If you accept the challenge of managing the project yourself, understanding the steps will help you schedule and supervise the work of all the various subcontractors who will work on your project. And as homeowner, you may choose to tackle certain aspects of the overall project yourself, such as doing the final finish carpentry work or painting the walls.

Whatever your degree of participation, it helps to view the work as a single large step-by-step project in order to understand how contractors work and to effectively evaluate and supervise their activity and plan your own involvement.

Before You Begin

Specific building materials and the tools required to work with them vary from project to project, but as a general rule, home additions include most (if not all) of the same elements that building a new house requires. There can be dozens of materials and tools used in constructing a major room addition, ranging from major excavation equipment and concrete tools to the stains and varnishes used to put finishing touches on woodwork and cabinetry.

Few building trade professionals own all the tools or have all the skills required to complete a major room addition, so it is very common for the work to be supervised by a general contractor (GC) who will bid your job, then supervise and pay various specialist subcontractors to complete the project to the agreed-upon specifications. While it's possible to plan a project yourself, hiring and supervising the subcontractors on your own, this is a daunting task that many homeowners end up regretting. Your room addition will probably go together much more smoothly if you hire a general contractor.

Be prepared for your room addition project to take a lot of time. While the actual labor time may take only two to four weeks of eight-hour workdays in the hands of skilled contractors, there is typically a lot of downtime between phases as the project awaits the arrival of inspectors or the next subcontractor. It's not uncommon for a major room addition begun in late spring to reach its completion sometime in the fall. The time required is largely dependent on the availability of labor in your area.

Determine the Budget and Scope

Successful room addition projects begin with a considerable amount of research and a precise determination of the size and scale of the work. A home addition is just like building a house and it involves designing, budgeting, applying for permits, hiring contractors and subcontractors, and building the structure from the ground up.

t's important to be prepared for the work involved and to be realistic about your budget. While some homeowners report paying $50,000 to $75,000 for a full-scale, multi-room house addition, a more realistic number is probably in the low six figures. But a major bump-out to create a spacious new kitchen can push the cost into the $250,000 range.

Secure Funding

Few homeowners can pay for a full room additions in cash. Thus, a loan or line of credit is needed. This usually involves obtaining a home equity loan, second mortgage, or line of credit based on the amount of equity in the home-the current real estate value of the home minus any outstanding mortgage or loan balance.

Banks and other lenders are often reluctant to loan money to homeowners who still owe 85 percent or more of a home's assessed value, though this is not a hard and fast rule.

Where a homeowner does qualify for a second mortgage or home equity loan, banks will normally extend no more than about 85 percent of whatever equity you have in the home. For example, if your home is assessed at $500,000 and your remaining balance on the mortgage is $250,000, many banks will be willing to loan you an additional $212,000 (85 percent of $250,000) to complete a major room addition, if it promises to add a good amount of value to your home. Securing a loan is, of course, dependent on a homeowner that has good credit standing.

If you can't qualify for a bank loan, there are other ways to secure loan financing, such as borrowing against the value of a retirement fund or life insurance policy. Such borrowing should be done carefully, though, after consultation with a financial advisor.

Select a General Contractor

Most people will find it best to hire a general contractor (GC) to complete the work on a room addition. The GC may have a salaried staff of general carpenters that perform much of the work, but they also work with a variety of specialty subcontractors who will be hired for specific duties, such as plumbing, wiring, and HVAC work. You will pay the GC directly in agreed-upon installments for the project, and the GC will in turn pay and supervise his own employees and the various subcontractors that work on your project.

Everything hinges on finding a good contractor that you can work with, so take your time picking the GC. Get recommendations from neighbors, friends, or relatives. If they cannot recommend a contractor, lose your shyness and knock on the doors of homes that have recently had additions completed.

The importance of the contractor cannot be overestimated. For most people, this job is too big for you to manage on your own unless you have professional experience and ample time. Your first meeting with prospective contractors should discuss the scale of the project, the contractor's timeframe, general design issues, and cost-saving strategies.

Don't be afraid to ask the contractor about options for controlling costs during the early planning process. The GC's profit on your project is typically 10 to 20 percent of the total bid, so you have a right to negotiate assertively. This is the time when you might agree to tackle some of the finish work yourself in exchange for a discounted bid.

You and the general contractor should sign a contractual agreement before work begins, including a schedule for making payments. There is no hard-and-fast rule on how payments should be scheduled, but it's often regarded as a warning sign when a general contractor insists on more than 50 percent of the total as an upfront downpayment. A contractor who wants the majority of the payment upfront may be on shaky ground financially.

More commonly, payment is made in two or three equal installments, keyed to important completion milestones. But it's important that you're allowed to withhold a significant fee (10 to 25 percent) until you make a final walkthrough of the project to verify your satisfaction.

Work With an Architect (Where Appropriate)

While some contractors can design your addition or can work from stock building plans, in many cases it's best to hire an architect. There is some value in going with an architect recommended by the contractor, as this ensures both parties are familiar with one another. However, if you're considering this arrangement, make sure to perform due diligence and make sure the architect is qualified-not just a friend of the GC.

When searching for a contractor, you may see the term design-build contractor used. Design-build contractors have been around for many years and are commonplace. A design-build contractor is, in basic terms, the same as a building contractor, but one who forgoes the use of an architectural company. The design-build contractor doesn't necessarily employ an architect but instead may rely on an in-house designer to create the plans.

Though design-build contractors advertise themselves as one-stop-shops, there are pros and cons to hiring this type of contractor. Some design-build contractors are extremely competent, while others can be shoddy. If you're considering hiring a design-build contractor, carefully research their past work for several clients.

Obtain Permits and Prepare the Site

Your contractor will obtain permits and will be required to post the approved permits in a visible spot on your property. A crew will come and drop off a portable toilet, and perhaps put up an advertising sign identifying to the world the company that is building your addition.

To prepare the site, large earthmoving equipment may arrive to strip the site to level, bare dirt. Obstructions will be removed-perhaps even some trees (if permitted by your community). Fences will be temporarily taken down to allow heavy equipment to access the site.

Don't fret about this seemingly violent change to your property. This kind of earthmoving will make the construction go more smoothly, and the final steps usually involve additional earthmoving and contouring to restore the landscape to a finished appearance.

Build the Foundation

Most room additions get a full-scale foundation, just like a new house. Depending on the plans, the crew will begin pouring a concrete slab or excavating for a crawlspace or basement, followed by pouring concrete footers and foundation walls.

Foundation work is generally done by a specialist contractor hired by the general contractor-often the same crew who performs the early preparation of the site. It can take several days or the digging, pouring, and curing of the foundation before it's ready for the framing crew to begin work.

Frame the Structure

As soon as the foundation concrete is cured, the floors, walls, and roof are framed. This can happen with surprising speed when a large, experienced crew does the work. One day, you come home from work and find that the entire skeleton of framing members has appeared.

Some projects are "stick-built," with the framing crew building the floor platforms, the stud walls, and the roof rafters piece by piece before sheathing them. In other cases, certain elements are built off-site, then trucked in to erect in large pieces. It is now common, for example, for roof trusses to be built off-site, then hoisted into place by a crane. In other cases, though, even the framed walls are manufacturered off site, which can make the structural framing go quite fast.

The structural framing is often done by a crew of carpenters that work permanently on-staff for the general contractor, but it's also common for carpenters to be independent workers hired on an as-needed basis.

Framing happens quite quickly, often within a day or two, since there is an urgent need to get the structure sheathed to shelter it from the weather.

Add the Sheathing and Roofing

Wall and roof sheathing, followed by house wrap, roofing paper and shingles, quickly follow the framing work. The goal is to give the structure a good measure of weather-proofing and allow crews to continue their work under shelter. The wall and roof sheathing are usually installed by the same crew that does the basic framing, though shingles and other roofing materials are often done by a specialist subcontractor.

In today's construction, walls are usually sheathed with OSB panels and then covered with a fiberglass film known as house wrap. For the roof decking, it is more common to use plywood panels, though OSB and other materials are sometimes used.

The roof is almost immediately covered with shingles or another finish roofing material. This, along with the installation of the windows and doors, protects the structure from rain and allows the interior work to be completed in a more leisurely fashion.

As the roofing is completed, the project appears to be moving ahead at a fast pace, though what follows often takes quite a bit of time.

Install Windows and Doors

New windows and doors are installed just after the roof-or sometimes concurrently. This buttons up the structure and keep it weathertight for subsequent work. Construction pros describe the building as being "dried-in" after this stage, meaning the interior is protected from the elements.

Windows and doors for room addition are usually stock elements ordered from the manufacturer. They are easily installed by the general carpenters.

Rough-In the Electrical, Plumbing, and HVAC

Crucial services, like electrical, plumbing, and heating/cooling are "roughed-in," meaning the behind-the-scenes elements like pipes, wiring, and ductwork are installed while the walls, floors, and ceilings are still in their raw framed condition, with the framing members exposed.

It is normal for the project to appear to slow down when these subcontractors-the electricians, plumbers, and HVAC technicians-come in, but these trades tend to work fairly rapidly, often completing their work in a day or two. The real snags tend to be associated with waiting for city inspectors to inspect and approve the work. These systems need to be inspected and approved before any additional work can be done on the walls, floors, and ceilings.

Add Insulation and Drywall

With the addition of insulation and drywall after mechanical inspections are complete, the project is beginning to look like a real structure. Insulation may be one or more of many different types, from standard fiberglass batts to sprayed foam to blown-in cellulose. Drywalling is a multi-stage process: hanging the sheets, "mudding" the seams with wet drywall compound, letting that compound dry, and then sanding the seams.

Insulation and drywall are sometimes installed by the general framing carpenters, but it can also be done by subcontractors who specialize in this work. If they work steadily, workers will complete the insulation and drywall installation in just a couple of days.

Finish the Interior

The next step is for the flooring and cabinetry to be installed, and for the ceilings and walls to be painted. Either task can come first, and the order is often dictated by schedule availability. Painting contractors are experienced at painting cleanly after the finish flooring has been installed, but trim work is easier to install after the walls are painted. With small projects, painting and flooring are often completed by finish carpenters, though large jobs may call for flooring and painting subcontractors.

Installation of interior passage doors, baseboards, window and door trim, crown moldings and other trim is normally done by finish carpenters who specialize in this work, though some general carpenters are equally skilled at rough framing and finish work.

Make Fixture Connections

Near the end of the project, plumbers, electricians, and HVAC technicians will return to complete the installation and final hookups for plumbing fixtures, light fixtures, wall switches and outlets, and HVAC equipment. Some of this work may be done simultaneously with the interior finishing work.

Delays are common at this stage, as these mechanical system subcontractors are in fierce demand. Where allowed by code, the general contractor may have their own employees complete much of the final connection work.

Complete the Landscaping

As the interior of the home is nearing completion, the landscape that was uprooted to allow for easy access to the site is now repaired. Earthmoving equipment may return to backfill around the foundation, level ,and contour the yard, and landscaping contractors may arrive to plant trees and shrubs and restore the lawn.

While the earthmoving work is often under the general contractor's supervision, homeowners sometimes contract with a different firm to do the final landscaping work. Or, some homeowners choose to do planting and lawn restoration themselves.

Complete the Punch List

A punch list is a record of the miscellaneous items left to be done. Many of these are finishing touches that had to wait for other work or were simply missed in the process. Often, both the contractor and the homeowners compile their own lists and combine them into a master checklist.

Completion of the punch list and a final walkthrough by the general contractor and homeowner is the last step, and it marks the point where the contractor now invoices the homeowner for the final payment.

There are many ways to structure the payment schedule from the homeowner to the general contractor, but it is typical for there to be a substantial downpayment upfront, before work begins, followed by one or two payments made at agreed-upon intervals as the work progresses. It is typical for the last 10 to 25 percent of the payment to be contingent on the completion of the punch list and the final walkthrough by the homeowner and

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