Floor plan design for a two-family house on a slope

  • Erstellt am 2017-05-16 14:23:17

haydee

2019-09-05 11:28:07
  • #1
Nice that it continues.

Uh that is really intense. Good that you are not building [Spitz auf Knopf] and somehow get out of there. Although that is not easy. Keeping my fingers crossed for you.
 

kbt09

2019-09-05 18:13:58
  • #2
That is really something and my respect that you write so openly about it.
 

rick2018

2019-09-05 18:18:43
  • #3
Heavily with the additional costs. That's probably already 20% of the construction sum. We are trying to negotiate flat rates with the trades. If you change the equipment, of course it will get more expensive. It's more like an upgrade. I definitely wish you that 1. it progresses quickly now and 2. no unforeseen costs arise. Looking forward to new pictures. Lots of strength for the final stretch.
 

sichtbeton82

2019-09-07 11:21:57
  • #4
Thank you! And here we go. As my gut feeling already hinted, the windows are arriving a week later. Let's see if the appointment is kept. This helplessness just pisses me off. Apparently, every construction project has this phase. Right now, I always get a stomach ache just thinking about the construction site. Now the two biggest tyrants show themselves again: time and money.
 

haydee

2019-09-07 13:06:24
  • #5
I believe you. Especially since you have already been living in the house for a while until all the bills have been issued.
It will
 

sichtbeton82

2019-09-09 09:12:26
  • #6
It's already a bit more than 20%. If I had thought at the beginning that it would become seven-figure, we probably would never have started (been able to start). Flat rates are one option. Although, usually someone always bites the bullet. Often there is then the uneasy feeling of risk pricing. Unless you lump it into a unit price offer. Then the risk surcharge would be more clearly visible. But for the shell construction, the flat rate would not have helped much in retrospect, as there were changes, for example due to the statics. A building ground risk cannot be excluded either. For the subsequent trades, it certainly makes sense to make a flat rate based on unit prices in order to better secure the budget.
 
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