Roof Posted July 29 Posted July 29 Hello everyone just seen a plot of around 270m was just wondering if there is someone who has built the same sort of size house and what sort of costings I’m looking at. The design of the house is red brick with timber cladding and a lot of glass thanks
BotusBuild Posted July 29 Posted July 29 More detail required. Are plans already approved? They should stipulate, but you say red brick, timber and glass. Is that what you want, or is that what's on the plans? Is the plot 270m2, or is the proposed house 270m2? Any pictures of proposed building to share. Can you share anonomised plan drawings (no names, no addresses)?
Roof Posted July 29 Author Posted July 29 So it’s on a 0.5 plot the house is going to be 270m it just has full planning permission
Kelvin Posted July 29 Posted July 29 Yep. It will need some mitigation. You’ll need to do that anyway. Personally I think there’s too much glass just from an aesthetic perspective. 1
Roof Posted July 29 Author Posted July 29 I think the way it’s been designed like this as it’s open fields I’m sure I’ll have to get the correct glass
Mr Punter Posted July 30 Posted July 30 Turnkey including all fees, main contractor £1M, you as full time project manager £750k. 1
Nickfromwales Posted July 30 Posted July 30 5 hours ago, Mr Punter said: you as full time project manager £750k If you 'can' PM it, that is
Nickfromwales Posted July 30 Posted July 30 18 hours ago, Roof said: I think the way it’s been designed like this as it’s open fields I’m sure I’ll have to get the correct glass We've done solar reflective glazing for a few clients builds, works far better than I first thought it would. Part O compliance will be a big thing for this design, if you want to keep all the glazing for the views/personal preference etc, but it is a LOT of glass tbh. Defo look at installing an ASHP so you can get cooling via chilled water > UFH and air handling. Either that or you're likely to need air conditioning in the upstairs rooms to make them tolerable during the peak of summer. Heating a well insulated, airtight house is a doddle in comparison to keeping it cool
Mr Punter Posted July 30 Posted July 30 2 hours ago, Nickfromwales said: If you 'can' PM it, that is It would not be an ideal first self build and unless you were skilled and experienced you could get your fingers badly burnt.
Pocster Posted July 30 Posted July 30 (edited) 12 minutes ago, Mr Punter said: It would not be an ideal first self build and unless you were skilled and experienced you could get your fingers badly burnt. 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄😃 or ….. You are da man ! Edited July 30 by Pocster
Stratman Posted July 30 Posted July 30 Is the most glazed elevation (by m2) south or west facing? If so you're more likely to get in trouble with Part O.
Nickfromwales Posted July 30 Posted July 30 3 minutes ago, Roof said: Thanks for the advice very helpful the main glass is east That's not so bad, you'll have wonderful breakfasts! Great roof for an E/W split solar PV array then.
Roof Posted July 30 Author Posted July 30 Yes so shouldn’t be to hot in afternoon and solar for morning and afternoons just got to get some rough quotes on windows and doors as that’s where a lot of budget will go also is it worth going down the timber framed or stick to a traditional build
Stratman Posted July 30 Posted July 30 If East and assuming you are in a moderate risk location, you can have no more glazed area than 18% of your internal floor area. That's using the simplified method.
saveasteading Posted July 30 Posted July 30 Normally my hunch is that if you want brick facing, then build cavity walls. But with all that glass you need beams. Plus the first floor is timber clad. So I think stick build.
Nickfromwales Posted July 30 Posted July 30 1 hour ago, Roof said: So you don’t recommend timber framed for this You can put anything you like as the external rain screen with TF.
saveasteading Posted July 31 Posted July 31 5 hours ago, Roof said: timber framed The proper term for stick build. So yes timber I think, but tell more please. Are there big rooms that will need beams? Confirm is brick facing on GF intended and timber clad FF?
Benpointer Posted August 2 Posted August 2 (edited) Too much glazing imo. Overheating, heat loss, where to place furniture, privacy, structure (how's that east corner actually going to be built?), aesthetics... But... Surely the joy of self-build is that within reason we each get to have the house we want, not the house some builder thinks we might want? Just make sure it is the design you want, not just the one that happens to be approved for that plot at the moment. Project management: I was a PM for 20+ years before I retired (in finance, not building, admittedly) but I am finding PMing our own self-build reasonably stressy and challenging. Fortunately the buzz is outweighing the worries for me at the moment but if you aren't used to managing complex projects with a lot riding on them, think very carefully before diving in. Finally, this thread is very interesting - from people who have been there: Edited August 2 by Benpointer 1
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