"Your Dream Home - How to Build It For Less Than $3,500" (1950)
It's a fun book, but a little disheartening to think how much the price of building your own home has soared astronomically in 60 years...
What do YOU think is a reasonable price for a well-built home of decent (not tiny, not enormous) home?
(I also posted this in the Lounge ... am very interested in what my fellow frugals think).
mopinko
(71,597 posts)Flaxbee
(13,661 posts)Hm. Good question. Wherever you are, I guess.
I'm in a rural part of northwestern Virginia; it would certainly cost less to build here than the DC area...
cbayer
(146,218 posts)I think you could build the actual building pretty cheaply.
I have also seen some fascinating things like reusing abandoned planes, railroad cars, and other containers.
Maybe we will just put our boat on a little piece of land when we (if) ever leave the water. Now that could be fun!
mopinko
(71,597 posts)but the train thing is cool, too. i think the supply of train cars might be about gone.
cbayer
(146,218 posts)One thing I thought of was how many solar panels you could put on those wings.
a lot of times they have to take the wings off to move them, but i suppose you could put them back on.
got a feeling i wouldn't get it past the zoning people.
jwirr
(39,215 posts)My brother and his wife still live in it.
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)of just simple remodelling jobs, I cannot begin to imagine what a reasonable price to build a house would be these days.
Flaxbee
(13,661 posts)like that.
No freaking way.
My husband and I remodeled our kitchen for about $2000 10 years ago in our former house -- might have cost a bit more if we'd gotten a new fridge. And I should have paid someone to lay the tile (oh my goodness that was difficult).
But even if we'd sourced out some of the work, it would have been TOPS $4-5K.
I don't think it should cost that much. People's entire net worth should not be tied up in their homes.... and that's the bubble Bush tried to create.
lumberjack_jeff
(33,224 posts)Key to building for that price is to get/make a plan that fits within the "prescriptive building code". If your house fits within that range of criteria, the plans don't need engineering or a bunch of mitigation.
Unfortunately, that code kind of enforces a "ticky tacky little box" architecture. Interesting architecture and a strong structure are mutually incompatible, the interesting architecture requires a bunch of additional structure to make it sound.
dimbear
(6,271 posts)if you get to keep all the materials. Take it apart and put it back together on the new lot.
Should be able to break even on the deal.
TxRider
(2,183 posts)I moved out to 11 acres I own this year, bought a 1950's house that was on some land that a gas station was built on and had it moved to the property and set up for about $13 per square foot. Plus I went from no house to having a house in less than a week.
After I upgrade it by tightening up the insulation and getting it a lot more energy efficient and remodeling most of the interior myself I will have maybe 50k in the 1900 sq ft house. My living expenses should be down to under $1000 per month as soon as I finish paying the land off in a few years.
dimbear
(6,271 posts)Flaxbee
(13,661 posts)I'd really rather not have to start from scratch; sounds like you found a really good solution!
oldandhappy
(6,719 posts)You did well.
Flaxbee
(13,661 posts)So many people, though, still want upwards of $100K for a shitty house just because there's a (questionable) foundation, well and septic.
Kaleva
(37,946 posts)It did and still does require a great deal of work to get it up to code and make it a very nice, energy efficient home. Off the top of my head, I'd estimate it will take about $20k to $25k to accomplish this and those figures include money already spent.
Improvements accomplished
Home is re-plumbed and that includes new water lines.
New high efficiency furnace
Adequate insulation in attic
Projects more then 50% done
House re-wired
Kitchen remodeled
Bedroom hardwood floors redone
Living room floor
Projects less then 50% done
Bathroom re-modeled
Windows and doors replaced
Unattached garage re-wired
Enclosed entry way interior (drywall and flooring)
Projects not started yet
House re-sided
Garage re-sided
Two old maple trees in the yard removed
New drywall in bedrooms, upstairs landing area and living room
Entry way supports replaced
New garage door
Basement walls painted
Gas water heater replaced
10k btuh vent free space gas space heater installed in living room
Woodstove in basement replaced
Much of the work I can do myself and that saves a great deal on labor and where I need help, I can get that for free from family members as I do electrical, heating and plumbing work for them for nothing.
Flaxbee
(13,661 posts)How much land do you have?
Squinch
(52,397 posts)I'm at the bottom of a large family, so they had moved by the time I came along, but the house is still standing a few towns away from where I live now.
Even then, though, he thought the house cost him more than $3500. He estimated that it cost something between $6000 and $7500..
The last time it sold it was over $500K.
Flaxbee
(13,661 posts)in the 50s it seems the materials were much higher quality.
It's an incredibly detailed book! Did your dad build the entire house 'from scratch', so to speak?
Squinch
(52,397 posts)got a licensed electrician. But the rest he did.
BobUp
(347 posts)My wife and I spent about 5 years kicking around New Mexico, kind of scouring the countryside for a cheap place to go. I browsed craigslist for cheap land to either put a travel trailer on or a container, yeah! Cheap! 1/2 acre lots priced @ $500 or slightly more, awesome, I thought.
No you can't do that here. uh oh.
You must own one acre to put anything on it, alright I thought, not that difficult. Except, the people selling those 1/2 acre lots knew full well what they were doing. They split them up, so no one person could own two 1/2 acre adjacent lots, smart huh?
The other catch is that your "structure" must be at least 500 sq. feet in size, that rules out the travel trailer idea, but not the container idea. But, other problems arise with my strategy, to drill a well for water costs about $15K to $20K, plus, you must install a septic system, and also pay the electric company to run your line to your property from a main road.
The ads running for 1/2 acre lots is funny...
snip
No time limit for building.
Meaning, take all the time you want trying to build... not funny.
This this in a Google search, follow links.
Deming New Mexico lots for sale
Anywho, we also thought about just buying a improved lot in small cities in New Mexico and planting a travel trailer or a couple of shipping containers bolted together, but that state must have a 500 square foot minimum structure size law somewhere because none of the communities we looked into allowed any thing smaller.
For people out there who might be considering buying a small piece of land or a lot, do some looking around pertaining to local and state laws before you open your wallet and buy anything.