Remodeling is Good Alternative to Moving

December 7 - 13, 2001

By Bill Rauser

So, you’re in love with your location, but your home just doesn’t accommodate your lifestyle anymore. Maybe your family has grown or gotten smaller.

Maybe you have different interests or responsibilities that require more space, such as a home office. Or, maybe today’s space-hogging technology and “fun” lifestyle items, (such as a spa tub, large screen television, or entertainment center) just don’t fit in that house that was built around the old “modern” conveniences.

To begin addressing this issue, start with a wish list. What changes need to be made to make your existing home “perfect?” Forget the “re-sale” value of these modifications for a moment and just consider your happiness.  What would that list include?

For many homeowners, the list includes a master suite, often with a complete bathroom modification to include a whirlpool tub, a steam shower and a compartmentalized toilet. Also on the list is a new kitchen. In some cases, it is simply to update it and make it brighter and lighter.

Another popular trend in home remodeling is the “great” room. Simply, homeowners are combining a formal living room, dining room, and kitchen area to make it a tied-together gathering spot, often with the use of pillars instead of separating walls or half-walls.

Devise a strategy

Now take the next step. Contact a reputable architect and request a consultation to make sure your ideas are even feasible based on your current structure, lot, area restrictions, etc.

Once your ideas are deemed “doable,” contact a builder who specializes in remodeling projects of your size and complexity.

For experienced builders, it will be a fairly simple process to give you a ballpark budget for the project you want completed, especially if you have rough drawings.

Such preliminary research with the architect and builder will often prevent a homeowner from going the more expensive route of detailed drawings only to discover the project is either not feasible for construction reasons or simply too expensive to justify.

Let the building begin

Now, armed with this information, it is time to decide.

Are you staying and remodeling? Or, do you think the cost of the remodel is so far above your budget that you’d prefer to simply move?

Assuming you don’t want to choose that last option, you may want to go back to what I told you to forget earlier — the resale value of your proposed changes. (If you have equity in the house and the changes will be recouped to a great extent when you move, maybe the sticker-shock will be less intense.)

Speak with an experienced Realtor in the area to see the value of your current home “as is” (or with typical, but minor fix-ups, such as the fresh paint, cut grass, etc.) versus the one you will have once the remodeling is done.

Remember, the same improvement in one area of the country or state is not necessarily going to reap the same return to you in another area. 

Consider how much pleasure those changes will bring to your family for the length of time you spend in your home. 

Now that you’ve weighed the costs and benefits, you’ll likely have your answer. 

And if remodeling is the choice you make, you already have the two other team members in the loop — your architect and builder. 

So let the drawings begin to make that home “perfect.”

Bill Rauser is president of Rauser Professional Contracting. He can be reached at 410-833-3883 or br@rauser.com.

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Rauser Professional Contracting can be reached at 410-252-9494 or by email at:info@rauser.com

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