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Becky
Renovating: if, when, and how DIY you keep it
by Becky - September 28, 2007 - 8:03 PM

sSome friends of mine are going to be collapsing their garage soon; that’ll be the first stage in a major renovation on the house they’ve lived in for ten years. They have a contractor on board, but much of it will be DIY. They also know that to complete the project, they’ll probably have to temporarily move out (like when my family lived in the RV park when we renovated!). Just hearing about it, renovating one’s own home seems like a giant commitment–maybe not the Oregon Trail, but perhaps more like donning a paper gown and letting the anesthesiologist give you whatever it takes to get you through surgery.

The Home & Garden section of the NY Times had an interesting profile this week of a Chelsea couple who did a gut renovation for $12,000.

Perhaps just as impressive, Mr. Robohm (who was not sharing the apartment with Ms. Doucette during the renovation) lived in the space for the year and a half it took to do the work — a cost-saving move that required him to vacuum the bed before he could go to sleep. Especially after he demolished the nonworking brick fireplace, which resulted in what he calls a waterfall of soot and ash. Getting rid of the bricks was another problem.

“Ever see ‘Papillon,’ where they break out of prison?” Mr. Robohm said. “Or maybe it was ‘The Shawshank Redemption’? They cut holes in their pockets and they dribble gravel, a little bit at a time. It was kind of like that. I paid to get the bulk of it taken out, but there was a tree on the street that didn’t have a flower bed. Now it has a nice brick wall where somebody put one in.”

I’m always shocked to hear about single room renovation costs–the above article quotes Manhattan kitchen renovations going for about $30k. Even in other parts of the country, relatively financially solvent people can’t renovate their kitchens. I know a woman in my area who has a picture of a newly remodeled kitchen on her dream board! There’s a stigma–definitely in LA–that women are obsessed with their bodies and employing strange serums and tonics in the name of upkeep, but more and more I’m meeting homeowners who would much, much rather have a new kitchen. Or at least tilework.

My leasing lifestyle disqualifies me from any firsthand input, but I’d be interested to hear any renovating success stories/nightmares you have…

Comments (3)
  1. Well I must tell the story of the ex-Sheriff of my city and how I sold him a home in pasture country where he could house his kids + grandkids, and we found this great 3 bedroom traditional that had a giant shop a mere 10 yards from the house.

    He had the home’s garage converted to a 2nd master bedroom for him and wifey, and plans are in place for the house to have a connecting walkway to the shop, which could be a luxury garage. He had professionals come out and plan the job, and in the end, his cost was indeed about 12K. But the value added…probably around 300% of cost.

  2. We did a kitchen renovation last year, while still living in the house. I did most of the work, with hired guns doing most of the finish work (what can be seen). Most people thought we were nuts, but it worked ok; we just set up a temporary kitchen in the living room (known as the LRK), making use of a hot plate and a microwave. We did the same thing in our last house, so we had learned some lessons there.

    Our first house was worse; we gutted & remodeled the one bathroom it had while living there. No shower for weeks; just a bathtub with bare stud walls around it. It was an adventure.

  3. Advice to anyone: Don’t remodel while you live there. It’s unhealthy and incredibly stressful. It will also put a strain on your marriage!

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