Homes Manual

How to Build Your Dream Home


Building your dream home is a process that takes some individuals a lifetime. Hardly anyone knows early in life what exactly constitutes "dream home" in her eyes. Pinning down the details that you want may take years of "starter" homes and building mistakes to learn what truly works for you. It is helpful to keep a list of likes and dislikes about each house that you live in. Consider everything from major aspects like size and layout to minor details like cabinet space and tile coloring. It is hard to remember everything that you have learned from previous living situations when faced with the stress and endless choices involved with building a new home. Keeping detailed records is a good way to stay level headed under pressure.

One good way to get good ideas for your dream home is to do active research. Any time you see a house for sale, stop and take a walk through to add to your likes and dislikes list. Steal ideas- it is allowed! Model homes are another great way to check out floor plans and housing designers. Home shows are one of the best ways to get ideas. These homes are fully decorated, and decorating the house well is almost more important in creating a dream home that the actual layout. Often these homes provide great inspiration for wall coloring, wood color, counter tops and furniture ideas. Be open minded, and home shows may provide a whole new perspective.

The next step is choosing a location for the building of the dream home to take place. The whole atmosphere of the house depends on whether you are located in the woods or a subdivision, on lots of acres or in a city. Work with your atmosphere instead of against it. Once your have ideas for what type of home you want, consider what type of backdrop makes the most sense for your tastes.

Choosing a builder is one of the hardest steps in choosing a dream home. Get recommendations from friends whose homes you admire and visit several projects completed by the builder.

Before any contracting takes place, you and the builder should have extensive conversation to be sure your ideas and his skills will coincide. Take your time with decisions. Make initial choices, but allow two weeks to think about your choice before it is finalized. It is important to visit your work-in-progress dream home frequently in order to be sure you and the builder are on the same page. Sometimes mistakes get made in the funneling of messages from builder to crew heads to crewmembers. Staying in close contact with the builder and crews helps ensure that your home is erected according to plan.

Keith Kingston is a professional web publisher offering advice and tips on house plans, and choosing real estate agents


MORE RESOURCES:
Meet the real estate broker’s interns: an ambitious group willing to do anything, earn nothing and wake up early on a Sunday to fluff the couch cushions at open houses.


In Manhattan, parking lots and garages are making way for all sorts of development, especially luxury condominiums.


Gray Burton lives in a 250-square-foot space he furnished with antiques he’s been collecting for years.


MacKenzie Thompson’s plan to buy a multifamily house in foreclosure did not pan out. She decided to buy a home in Westchester County.


A photogenic Westchester suburb with high-profile residents is also known for its art museum and a performing arts center.


A Ditmas Park co-op, Upper East Side co-op and an Upper West Side condo.


A 10-year-old house with six bedrooms in Montvale, N.J., and a renovated four-bedroom in Bronxville, N.Y.


Wealthy investors are wiring millions of dollars to New York to snatch up a piece of 157 West 57th Street - what will be New York City's tallest residential building, with 90 floors overlooking Central Park.


An apartment at the Trump International Hotel and Tower, opposite Central Park, was bought anonymously through a limited liability company.


The anchor of a proposed historic district will surely be a clutch of four mansions at Riverside Drive and 72nd Street.


Success in challenging property taxes means not having to put as much money aside in the escrow account.


Taking responsibility for a roof leak; a bank loan for capital repairs; lender says no to co-op sublet; next time, don’t forget the key.


Summerview Square is a town-house-style apartment project going up in Norwalk after a previous developer walked away, leaving squalor in his wake.


A drop in prices and low interest rates means many buyers on the Island can afford to wait.


In Hudson County, developers are working on several projects that would add thousands of units in waterfront communities like Hoboken, Jersey City and Weehawken.


A development in Austin, Tex., is an ambitious attempt to upend the conventions of the American subdivision.


A town house in New Orleans, a penthouse in Baltimore and a ranch house in Washington.


Housing prices continue to fall nationwide, with Atlanta earning the distinction as the weakest performer.


The financial crunch has been felt in Aruba, but not severely enough to cause large numbers of foreclosures and short sales.


A new law that allows businesses in Philadelphia’s Market East district to draw revenue from large digital signs has drawn attention from developers.


With its concentration of pharmaceutical giants and academic powerhouses, the region could be a major center for life sciences businesses, developers say.


The president of the New York Building Congress, which represents professionals in the construction industry, has been running the nonprofit association since 1994.


A frenetic little industry has taken root in New York City based on finding and publicizing the once-and-future homes of just about anyone with name recognition.


The plan for a business improvement district in SoHo would help with the trash problem, but some residents don’t want to cede more ground to tourists and real estate titans.


A Ditmas Park co-op, Upper East Side co-op and an Upper West Side condo.


A 10-year-old house with six bedrooms in Montvale, N.J., and a renovated four-bedroom in Bronxville, N.Y.


Properties in New Orleans, Baltimore and Bellevue, Wash.


You want them, you need them, and these power tools will pay for themselves.


One man’s discovery of the vast powers of the drill.


An abandoned log house with a sinister air, the Smith Mansion in Wyoming is the stuff of legend.


Chris Hacker, the chief design officer at Johnson & Johnson, shops for hot water bottles that can come out from under the covers.


Should I remove the family photos hanging on my wall before listing my apartment?


An architect and an interior designer have created an online database of hazardous building materials.


The handmade house, doughty and particular, is being celebrated in three new books.


Beginning Friday, the NoLIta store Haus Interior will host Wood Shop, a pop-up store created by David Stark.


Compare the cost of renting and buying equivalent homes.


home       | site map |       Disclaimer |       Privacy Policy
© 2006