07-20-2007, 09:21 AM
There is supposed to be a new lumber mill in Pepeeko which will be making dimensional lumber for local use, that might help bring down prices.
There are also some moveable timber milling rigs that can make trees into lumber if you happen to have some large trees which will be cleared during the construction of your house. There is a drying kiln in Hilo, so if you provide the trees, the milling guy will usually cut them up into lumber and he gets a percentage of the lumber. Have the lumber taken to the dryer and then final milling in Hilo as well. That gets you hardwood at really good prices.
I've also been seeing a lot of good concrete counter tops made by "regular" people. One was a computer chip designer for Intel and one was an attorney. All the countertops they made for their houses turned out really nice and concrete is an inexpensive building material. They both recommended having your own small concrete mixer.
Depending on your plans, a house can cost $25 per square foot in materials or $300 per square foot for materials so square foot doesn't always get you useable numbers. To keep the cost of construction down, you could try looking to see what construction materials are available locally and use those. Even if a specific material is the cheapest in the mainland hardware stores, if you have to ship it in, the price probably won't be the cheapest here.
There are also some moveable timber milling rigs that can make trees into lumber if you happen to have some large trees which will be cleared during the construction of your house. There is a drying kiln in Hilo, so if you provide the trees, the milling guy will usually cut them up into lumber and he gets a percentage of the lumber. Have the lumber taken to the dryer and then final milling in Hilo as well. That gets you hardwood at really good prices.
I've also been seeing a lot of good concrete counter tops made by "regular" people. One was a computer chip designer for Intel and one was an attorney. All the countertops they made for their houses turned out really nice and concrete is an inexpensive building material. They both recommended having your own small concrete mixer.
Depending on your plans, a house can cost $25 per square foot in materials or $300 per square foot for materials so square foot doesn't always get you useable numbers. To keep the cost of construction down, you could try looking to see what construction materials are available locally and use those. Even if a specific material is the cheapest in the mainland hardware stores, if you have to ship it in, the price probably won't be the cheapest here.
Kurt Wilson