Homeowners often begin with finishes because they are exciting. A smoother project begins with goals, constraints and scope. This guide puts the decisions in the order that makes construction easier.
Write the problem statement
Describe what is not working today. Is the room too small, dark, difficult to clean, poorly laid out or outdated? Separate the problem from the solution. âWe need better storage and two people to cook comfortablyâ is more useful than âWe want an island.â
Set priorities
Create three lists: must have, strongly prefer and optional. Share them with the designer and contractor. When tradeoffs appear, this list protects the decisions that matter most.
Set a complete budget
Include design, permits, construction, selections, temporary living, storage and contingency. Do not assume the contract amount represents every project-related expense.
Document the existing home
Photograph rooms, mechanical equipment, access routes and areas adjacent to the work. Gather prior plans, surveys, HOA rules and known permit information. Existing information reduces assumptions.
Interview contractors consistently
Give each contractor the same information and ask for the same level of detail. Compare communication, process, exclusions and schedule assumptionsânot only price.
Finalize before demolition
Approve layouts, major fixtures, appliances and materials that affect rough construction. Confirm lead times and inspect delivered items. The cheapest time to change a decision is before work begins.
Prepare the household
Plan parking, pets, valuables, dust-sensitive items, work-from-home needs and communication. Establish who can approve decisions and how urgent questions will be handled.
ADELIE perspective
Planning is not delay. It is the work that allows construction to move with fewer interruptions. A clear plan usually saves more time than rushing into demolition.