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[personal profile] carynb
Well, it's done. Yay! I've signed the contract, so I'm committed to lots of years of lots and lots of debt. Heh. I've taken one night to celebrate and laugh and feel great and ... still not sleep, dammit!

I'm still kinda nervous about the whole thing, but I think I'm starting to settle down a bit. Hopefully, sometime in the next 10 months, I'll start getting some sleep. *g* For now, it's all about the debates about upgrades - do I need the roughed-in bathroom in the basement? How about the vaulted ceiling in the family room? Should I get the oak staircase, or not? I have to set a budget going in and not spend more than that, but it's gonna be difficult. *g* At $80 a pop for the phone/cable/network outlets, how many do I want? Is the tiled backsplash in the kitchen necessary? How about potlights over the fireplace? Should I run a cold-water pipe to the fridge for a water dispenser, even though I'm not planning on getting a fridge with that in it right now? All these questions! I have to balance between what I want and what are good touches for resale, and not spend more than x. This is NOT going to be easy.

Have I ever mentioned how much I hate making decisions? The next 6 months should be fun. *g*

I took my camera with me last night, to get some shots of the lot.

Empty Lot The empty lot

This is where my new home is going to be. As you can see, there's not much there, yet. *g* The sewers, electrical and gas have already been run, though. They should start digging the hole very soon - they're going for building permits for the models going on the lots this week.
Empty Lot 2 Out my (future) front door

Looking to the southeast, out what will be my front door, this is what I see. Those trees are zoned to remain an open woodlot/green space area, with walking trails and such. Should be nice. I was kinda obsessive about looking for a place with green space nearby.
Empty Lot 3 Other direction

Looking out my front door, looking north east. That's a high school being constructed down at the end of the street. You can see a little of the funky streetlights, too.

Date: 2006-11-27 12:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] halfabee.livejournal.com
Congrats!

Now, my opinions:
roughed in basement bath - depends on whether you have a (half) bathroom on the first floor, if you do then you can probably do without. And one can be put in in the future, they'll just need to cut into the slab to run the drain.

vaulted ceiling - a matter of taste. I'd say yes, just to make that area more formal (and so you can have a bigger Christmas tree :-)

oak staircase - probably a good idea, although you will need to put down a runner or you will risk slipping in socks, slippers, etc.

As I've said before, the one regret I do have is not having them run phone/cable/network to every room in the house. Thus there's a long Cat5 running through the hallway. (Yes, I could go wireless, but I still have security concerns.) IIRC phone is dirt cheap. If you don't splurge on whole house wiring, do some thinking beforehand, i.e. a phone can plug into an RJ-45 jack. Also spend some time with the houseplan and think about where you want the jacks.

Tiled backsplash - do it yourself. We'll help, we did ours this year.

Potlights - probably not. On a related note, when we first moved in I was kicking myself for not getting potlights over the porch like the other end of the row. However, thinking about it not, neither one of us use our porch much (not wide enough).

Hadn't thought about running a cold line for a fridge. But I imagine it would be easy enough to put in when needed, as long as you don't have a finished basement. (Good drill with a tile/masonry bit.)

I would recommend having them put the pipes in for a central vac.

I'd say buy for what you want & can afford rather than some hypothetical resale. If it's really valuable to a future owner, they can put in what they want. However, if you do it, there's no guarantee they will value it as much as you paid for it.

One cool thing we did during the build was take a picture from the same spot (a fire hydrant in our case) facing the same general direction.

And if you think you're excited now, wait until there's a hole in the ground! :-)

Date: 2006-11-27 09:34 pm (UTC)
ext_1749: Me (Default)
From: [identity profile] carynb.livejournal.com
The pipes for central vac (along with the rough-in for AC) is already there as part of the base these days, which is good.

The vaulted ceiling is tempting - but I've just got a partial list of available upgrades, so far, and I would imagine that if I have the vaulted ceiling I'll find it impossible to resist the undoubtedly-offered skylights that will do with it. Talk about scope creep! *g*

I figure I'll run the cat5 to all three bedrooms and the family room - I don't think I need it in the kitchen... *g* That'll just be a phone jack. The fact that I have to decide where to put all these stuff is gonna drive me crazy, though. I've gotta decide where my furniture's gonna be already? That's insane! (To be fair, I imagine I'll have a few weeks for all that - hopefully they won't be doing any wire pulling type stuff until after Christmas - I can't imagine they would be doing it before then)

I'm planning on taking a series of pictures from that same spot, so I can track the progress. I think that'll be a neat pictorial history. *g* Wait 'til I have time to start making animated gif's for userpics!

Date: 2006-11-28 03:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marahsk.livejournal.com
We ran cat 5 between the two rooms that we're each using for offices, because that's where we figured we'd use it. By the time we think of selling, who knows if anyone will still use cat 5 at all? We ended up getting a wireless router, so it's already a moot point.

Date: 2006-11-28 01:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] halfabee.livejournal.com
If you don't have Cat5 in the kitchen, how are you going to have an Internet connected fridge? :-)

Seriously though, coax is as important as Cat5. Have an outlet for each (phone, coax, Cat5) in the living room, family room, and each bedroom. Put it on the short wall in the corner farthest from the door or where the bed/sofa would logically go.

Oh, and speaking of fridges, you may also want to budget for an upgrade to any appliances the builder is providing. The one's we have are functional, but kinda quirky. The dishwasher doesn't have a sprayer for the top rack, the fridge doesn't have a thermostat (it's timer based), and the stove doesn't have a self cleaning oven. And don't forget the appliances which aren't included, i.e. washer / dryer.

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