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The Complete Guide to Contracting Your Home

The Complete Guide to Contracting Your Home

List Price: $18.99
Your Price: $12.91
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Book, Highly Recommended
Review: I built an addition onto my home, and what I learned from that is, it is easier than you think. A friend of mine just had extensive work done remodeling an older home that he just bought. New electric, plumbing, heating, landscaping, garage-shop addition etc. What he learned from that is the General Contractor he hired was busier making everything more expensive, rather than running the job. Now he is finishing the job himself, and doing a good job of being his own GC. This book gives you step by step instructions> great hand holding every step of the way. With checklists for each stage of the game: What to look out for, what is needed, and what works. This book can save you a bundle, and keep you on top of what is going on. Definitely worth every penny. Highly recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent, informative book
Review: I found this book to be what I was looking for, unlike some other books, this one gives you facts and information that I could use. We are currently under construction and I use the check list, the time lines, and the sample sheets to help me stay organized. This is a meat and potatoes type of book for the person that is serious about building. I higly recommend this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Contracting Your Home- A Great Place to start
Review: I found this book to be what I was looking for, unlike some other books, this one gives you facts and information that I could use. We are currently under construction and I use the check list, the time lines, and the sample sheets to help me stay organized. This is a meat and potatoes type of book for the person that is serious about building. I higly recommend this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: ideal instructions for the "do-it-yourselfer"
Review: I found this book to be written in easy to understand instructions for the average person and especially liked the check off list.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: junk
Review: i have done several remodels. i bought this book specifically for the contractor agreement.

this book is nothing but a series of lists and a few illustrated methods. there is no advice, very few professional tips to help you avoid traps when working with contractors. and the contract at the end is worthless. i've seen a lot of contracts, and i wouldn't recommend that anyone sign that document.

a waste of money.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Too basic and incomplete
Review: I just finished doing a major remodel. I'm not a contractor so I bought a few books on the subject - this being one of them. I knew I'd be working with experienced tradespeople, but I wanted to know enough to make sure they were doing things right. The information in this book was too basic and incomplete. It might be more appropriate for someone who has a contractor building their home and wants to understand the scope of their work rather than as a guide for doing it yourself.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The essentials.
Review: The practical explaination of construction management and essential descriptions of the tasks, gave me confidence to try contracting out my own home. I used it to manage the construction of our current home - a 1 1/2 story brick home. It is not a detailed "how to build" book - it carefully descibes all the major steps of construction with just the essential information needed to manage the project and the sub-contractors. The authors use plain language and diagrams. You still need to use common sense to schedule things properly and know where to adapt to your local building practice and materials. It is full of practical advice for each stage of construction.

I found the authors' advice to "hang around" construction sites valuable. They are not suggesting you "pretend" to be a builder, but to see and understand how a house goes together. If you have a sense for construction and a passion to build your own home, this is a great reference and guide book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best book on the subject!
Review: This book is a must have for anyone planning to build or contract their own home. I was amazed at the complete detail of everything. Unlike most how-to books, this one is organized like a project manual, with checklists and inspection criteria. I have no doubt that anyone could build a house with this book as a guide. I especially liked the sources lists and the chapter on computers.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Bad Ideas that Save You Pennies
Review: This book starts out by suggesting that the reader obtain a pair of work boots and a flannel shirt and go hang out at construction sites so that you can act like a builder and impress your subs. Not to get construction experience, but to know when to spit and how to yell at people properly. What a joke.

The authors' approach to building is very much in that vein. Cut corners in foolish places and cover it all up with drywall later. He advocates things like single-headers on loadbearing walls and butting up 2 sections of joist sistered with plywood (!) over an open span - not on top of the beam. Whatever pocket change is saved by stunts like this is not worth it in light of the structural and code deficiencies you'd be left with.

If you have read a few other books about frame construction, you can spot the patently crazy ideas among the other bits of very sound advice in this book. But if you are starting from scratch, run away from it. You may not spot the difference between the smart and the stupid here. I get the impression that the authors are coming from the perspective of a penny-conscious builder of tract houses who is just trying to move as many Mchouses as fast as possible without much care for quality. Fine from a business point of view, but it is exactly the kind of mindset that most owner-builders are trying to avoid.

Rather than this book, I would suggest picking up 'Build Your Dream Home for Less,' by R. Dodge Woodson. Woodson's book gives you the perspective of a professional builder who has also built homes for himself and walks a fine line between the perspective of the businessman who needs to maintain a healthy margin and a homeowner who doesn't want ot get stuck with a lousy house. The two books are priced about the same and Woodson's is the one you won't regret.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I built my house with this book!
Review: This book was the best bargain I made while building my house. It saved me thousands of dollars in materials savings, increased productivity, and unforeseen expenses. The schedule and checklists were particularly helpful. I knew exactly what to look for in workmanship at every stage of the project. I contracted the house myself and the subcontractors were amazed that I knew so much about construction. If they only knew...

I've read all the other contracting books. This one is the best hands down. The computer section and suppliers lists were really helpful too. I find it highly amusing that the only negative review of this book came from a professional contractor from Canada. He should be worried! With this book you will be empowered to contract your own home, or at least know what to expect when hiring someone else for the job.


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