quote:
Originally posted by StillHope
Kapohocat,did SB build your house ? What did he used to prevent termites? I looked up termimesh (thanks,Rob) - wondering if someone used it.
Absolutely not (build this house). This house is a disaster that drives SB crazy every day fixing, maintaining, repairing and correcting. Not two straight walls in this entire house. But that said, it is cedar and seems to have withstood the termite issues fairly well. But the bottom section is not wood. It is concrete filled cinder blocks with rebar.
Still Hope, basically what Rob Tucker has said rings really true - if your worry is termites or fire, go with concrete product like Rob's. No matter what treatment you do, termites can get to it. They will eat (IMHO) pine or untreated Doug fir first, HiBor next, CCA treated after that, and ohia last. They dont seem to like ohia much because of the nasty oil in it. But eventually they do get to it.
A concrete product will probably also withstand a hurricane fairly well although depending on wind speed may lose roofing materials. As for the earthquake issues, cracks can be of different kinds. There are structural cracks that are dangerous such as those found at the Mauna Kea Beach Hotel after the Oct 06 earthquake, and there a smaller cracks that are not structural but only the result of different heating and cooling and do not affect the buildings structural integrity. Slabs can get stress cracks from heating and cooling differently (like a slab poured half in the shade and half in sun). These cracks are usually only cosmetic.
I also want to caution you about ballpark figures that someone mentioned. Is that ballpark Yankee stadium or the little league field down the street? You need a set of plans to get a ballpark figure. One caveat - unless you are doing
a kit house with no changes that the contractor or builder has done
recently. Then you can get a decent ballpark.
Now with Rob's product, he estimates the material pretty regularly so he may be able to give you a decent SF price on materials but labor still it depends on your plans. it also depends on how soon you will be building - no one can forecast prices of materials and transportation too far in the future.
This is the proverbial chicken and the egg - which comes first? Plans or costs.
Now you all might just throw me out of the thread but if you estimate your costs at $150-175, you probably will be adequately safe unless you really go to town on finishes, or conversely do most of the work yourself.
Take your budget, divide by $150 and then by $175 and that is your range of SF - so
as an example say you had $100K to build - that is 571 to 667 SF range.
You can bring the SF price down but based on the info you have provided in these threads the last few months - you may only be doing painting? (Pardon me if I am wrong on that.)
Do what you really like - you will be living in it for awhile. And do it affordable for you. If you want to add on later on, have your draftsperson design it so it is easier to do an addition.
Catherine Dumond
Blue Water Project Management
808 965-9261
"We help make building your dream home a reality"