Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi,
My wife and I are going to build a new house. My father (a builder) is going to act as the general contractor. We want to take a stock plan and make some modifications. Primarily, we want to remove vaulted ceilings where present, and open up the area off the bonus room for use as a walkup attic. Are these type of modifications simple enough to be done to stock plans or are they too extensive? Thanks! |
#2
![]()
Posted to misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#3
![]()
Posted to misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message oups.com... wrote: Hi, My wife and I are going to build a new house. My father (a builder) is going to act as the general contractor. We want to take a stock plan and make some modifications. Primarily, we want to remove vaulted ceilings where present, and open up the area off the bonus room for use as a walkup attic. Are these type of modifications simple enough to be done to stock plans or are they too extensive? Thanks! If your father is a builder, I would hope he knows the answer to your question. My answer is that it all depends on what you mean by simple or extensive and it's not clear exactly what you want to do. What do you mean by removing vaulted ceilings? Does that mean just put in a conventional ceiling with attic space above? If that's all it is, then it is pretty simple. You'll still need an architect to approve the plans and put a seal on them. But you'd have to do that even without the mods, so if they are fairly straightforward, it shouldn't cost very much additional. Not every locale requires an AIA stamp for residential construction. (Although, even if the local gov unit doesn't, whoever is financing the place might.) If OP's father is a GC in the area, he should be familiar with all this. If he is operating outside his normal area (like from the next county over), y'all may wanna call the buiding permit office and ask. And even with stock plans, you often have to modify for site-specific stuff anyway, like foundation depth, entry point for utilities, etc. Changing the roof framing system may or may not be trivial- as you pointed out- we can't see the plans from here. Some builders are competent and experienced at residential design, and some aren't. Not a slam, just an observation- if all they ever built was other people's cookie cutters, they never had any reason to learn. Even if OP's locale doesn't require an AIA stamp, if his father doesn't have a warm fuzzy about making the design changes, hiring a competent designer or architect is cheap insurance. aem sends.... |
#4
![]()
Posted to misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 20 Mar 2006 16:21:40 -0800, someone wrote:
.... My father (a builder) is going to act as the general contractor. We want to take a stock plan and make some modifications. Primarily, we want to remove vaulted ceilings where present, and open up the area off the bonus room for use as a walkup attic. Are these type of modifications simple enough to be done to stock plans or are they too extensive? Uhhhh, your father is a builder, and is going to be the GC. So why not ask him? (Why are you asking us.) Reply to NG only - this e.mail address goes to a kill file. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
The End of Pensions -- But Keep Voting for Republicans as You Spend Your Golden Years in a Cardboard Box on the Street | Metalworking | |||
Gingery Lathe casting stock.. | Metalworking | |||
Isn't relying of someone else's plans kinda like painting by paintby numbers? | Woodworking |