Special offer

Building a New Home: 3 Critical Construction Components

By
Real Estate Agent with Platinum Realty, LLC KS# BR00012805

3 Critical Construction Components in Building a New Home 

I was talking to my father this weekend as we were working on my son's home, remodeling his basement with a new bathroom and utility room.  During our casual conversations, I mentioned to my father that I was putting this blog together to share information about new home building and one of the first words out of my father's mouth was the 3 critical construction components of building a new home.  As I was thinking about these 3 components, I had to ask myself, do builders really think about these 3 critical construction components and are buyers really aware of how critical these 3 components are in building a new home?  What do you think? 

3 Critical Construction Components in Building a New Home:

  1. Elevation: land is land, right?  Well, positioning of your new home on this land can be the difference in long term satisfaction and a life of problems.  Think with the end in mind.  Do you want a steep driveway?  How about landscaping and water problems?  What will the neighborhood allow, are you blocking someone else's view? 
  2. Foundation/Basement: does it really matter how thick the walls are in a basement and how long the concrete has time to cure?  What about the positioning of the sump pump, practical positioning with respect to basement utilitization?  Proper drainage piping and diversion.  Sealing the exterior. What about how the basement and be utilitized with the positioning of the HVAC, sump pump, electrical?
  3. Framing: I've heard more complaints from builders about the quality of framing a new home than should be necessary.  Keeping the framework from sill to roof, square and level are oh so critical, using the 3, 4,5 rule!  If you think about it, everything you do after this will make the job easy or hard.  Trimwork will fit with nice tight joints with little effort in cutting angles, cabinetry can be created to fit a level and square kitchen, bath, etc... Carpeting, tile, granite can be cut to fit without difficulty. 

If these things are a constant thought to the builders, then you can save yourself grief and some of that hard earned dollars to put into other things in your new home!!   What do you think?  I'm I wrong?

Steve Dalton
219-465-8352 - Valparaiso, IN
Northwest Indiana Home Builder
David, post this in Home Builders of America group too and I'll feature it.  Very consumer friendly.
Mar 27, 2007 02:19 AM
David L. Britt
Platinum Realty, LLC - Olathe, KS
MBA
Thank you Steve, I appreciate your comments and support.  I'm posting it now.
Mar 27, 2007 03:23 PM
Tom Sinclair
About the House - Home Inspections - Fairhope, AL
Most critical component is having the GC onsite overseeing all of the work.
Mar 30, 2007 02:04 AM
David L. Britt
Platinum Realty, LLC - Olathe, KS
MBA
Tom,  having a general contractor onsite 24 x 7 just doesn't happen unless the GC is also doing the work.  Most GC's will be doing multiple projects at once.  However, this doesn't mean they are not a critical component, because they are.  It's just that most of the job sites I have been at, the GC is not always there 24x7. 
Apr 01, 2007 12:43 PM
Tom Francis
Chase Toppers, LLC - Pottstown, PA
I agree David.  Thanks for bringing this information to the table.  I think it will be very valuable to folks getting ready to build.  -Tom
Apr 11, 2007 01:25 AM
David L. Britt
Platinum Realty, LLC - Olathe, KS
MBA
Tom, thank you for reading and providing feedback.
Apr 11, 2007 05:12 PM