How to Stress
a Marriage
Or, Should
You Be Your Own General Contractor?
By Jonathan Norling
 |
| Addition
during construction. |
 |
| After
construction the Norlin family now have a new 1,000-square foot
addition to their home. |
Recently, my wife
Kelly and I set out to answer that age-old question; should you serve
as your own general contractor? We had just discovered that Kelly
was pregnant, and it didnt take a genius to see that we needed
more room. We put our plans for a kitchen remodel on hold, and began
planning a 1,000-square foot two bedroom/two bath addition. After
receiving rather high bids from professional GCs, we decided to head
down the GC path alone, notwithstanding that both of us have full-time
jobs.
The Planning
Process
At the outset, it is important to know that the best thing about being
your own GC is that you control the process. You can choose your own
subcontractors, control the timeline of the project, and have things
the way you want them. Whats the worst thing? Its that
you control the process. You have to find subs, develop a workable
timeline, and have to figure out what you want before you begin. Proper
planning is an essential part of the job and involves no less than
20 hours working with project management software. I finally came
up with what I considered to be an efficient yet realistic plan for
getting the project completed in four months. At the same time, in
order to get the project off the ground, we were designing a workable
floor plan and meeting with architects in order to develop a set of
blueprints that would get city approval.
Our first major
blunder was a lack of familiarity with the City of Portlands
love of shear walls. Unfortunately, the low-cost designer who drew
our blueprints was similarly clueless about shear walls, which led
to a severe delay in the permit approval process. Plans went to the
city, to our designer, to the engineer, back to the designer, to the
city, back to the designer... well, you get the idea. My conservative
estimate of six weeks for plan approval was woefully inadequate.
Another crucial
part of the planning process was finding suitable subcontractors.
In discussing our project with friends, we consistently received two
pieces of advice: get at least three bids for each task and dont
always accept the lowest bid. We didnt follow this advice, although
we should have. While we got more than three bids for some tasks,
we only got one for some tasks, mainly due to laziness on our (well,
my) part. This proved to be a mistake.We later found that we could
have gotten a much better deal on some parts of the project. This
takes me to the second piece of advice that we failed to heed: dont
automatically accept the lowest bid. Well, we usually did that, as
we were GCing the job ourselves in large part to save
money. In two instances, the lowest-priced subs were cheap for a reason,
and what we saved in price we paid for in lack of craftsmanship.
The Construction
Process
After two months of planning, the project got underway. We were pleased
with how quickly the framing went, in part due to a provision in our
framing contract that gave the contractor an incentive payment for
finishing ahead of schedule (and a penalty for delay). One thing we
failed to realize at the outset was that the general is responsible
for scrapping out, or site clean up, which meant that
most of my weekends were spent taking a utility trailer to the dump.
Of course, we could have subbed out this task, but remember
we were saving money, right? Because I was also doing the wiring and
the plumbing supply lines, this meant that I was working every night
from when I got home from my real job until midnight and all weekend
long. This put further stress on our relationship.
Because demolition
was involved, the obligatory pains of living in a construction zone
were present the dust, the lack of a kitchen roof, and gallons of
water pouring into the kitchen after a compression fitting was kicked
off a toilet stub-out in a wall being removed (well, perhaps this
last one is not obligatory). Oops! If you ask Kelly what the low point
of the project was, she would almost surely say that this was it (unless
she says that it was when I attempted to fix the offending water line,
only to turn the water on to test my soldering job to find the cap
was not soldered well enough, which caused more water to pour into
the kitchen).
Another memorable
low point was realizing at 9:00 pm the night before the drywall was
to be hung that the plumber forgot to cap a test pipe in the DWV system
and I forgot to put in the outdoor hose bib we wanted. Off I went
to the home improvement center and was up much of the night finishing
these tasks so I did not have to delay the dry wallers for a third
time!
My
conservative
estimate of six
weeks for plan
approval was
woefully
inadequate.
|
Of course, there
were high points as well coming home from work to see the progress.
Often a high point is immediately followed by a low point, such as
when beautiful tongue and groove cedar siding is installed one day,
only to have careless roofers the next severely damage the siding
by tossing concrete tiles onto the roof (apparently, these clowns
did not realize that when the guy on the roof misses, the tile crashes
into and gouges the cedar. What was more frustrating was that it took
them no less than 10 missed tiles before they stopped!) Fortunately,
due to good contract provisions, we were able to deduct the cost of
replacing the siding from the roofing bill and protect ourselves from
a construction lien in the process.
Should You
Do It?
While we learned many things while serving as our own GC,
the top three lessons are as follows: first, if you are looking to
save time, dont be your own general. We can easily say that
the project took twice as long due to our lack of experience and limited
time. Second, be sure that you and your spouse can work together and
are like-minded when it comes to what you are looking for in a finished
product. Last, what we saved in money we paid for in sleepless nights
worrying about what needed to be done before the next subs arrive,
lack of free time, and lots of other unforeseen costs.
With that said,
however, I am thankful for the experience. We followed the addition
with the long-awaited kitchen remodel, which was a cakewalk to manage
compared to the addition. I also learned a ton about construction
and the construction project, knowledge that serves me well with even
the smallest of projects. In addition, I also acquired many nifty
power tools. Last, and perhaps best of all, we can tell our friends
that the answer to that old age question is yes you can
serve as your own general and live to tell about it.
Jonathan Norling
is a partner in the Portland law firm Nelson Lovinger Norling Kaufmann
LLP. He specializes in business law, including construction contracting,
dispute resolution, and litigation. He can be reached at 503-230-8311
or norling@nlnk.com. |