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- This topic has 455 replies, 19 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 4 months ago by ocrenter.
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June 24, 2011 at 2:07 PM #707070June 24, 2011 at 4:49 PM #705897ocrenterParticipant
[quote=briansd1][quote=ocrenter]
haha, hit the nail right on the head. contractors are like teenagers that never grew up. they do need constant and close supervision. and if you end up with a new house on 1/2 acre of dirt, that’s a whole lot of supervision.[/quote]That’s why you pay the big bucks to the General Contractor. His job is to supervise.
If you contract to typical workers, then you have to do the designing, conceptualization and supervising yourself.
I find that cheap price does not mean bad work, but the cheaper the price, the more the supervision required. It’s part of sweat equity.
I believe that’s true in any field. Well-paid professionals will do better work and require less supervision. The question is: what’s your budget?[/quote]
The big problem with contractors is this is a field with very low barrier of entry. Therefore, competition is fierce, and the quality in general poor. I was actually referring to General Contractors. They too need a lot of supervision. I don’t dare get into sub-contractor level, they are more like toddlers.
June 24, 2011 at 4:49 PM #705992ocrenterParticipant[quote=briansd1][quote=ocrenter]
haha, hit the nail right on the head. contractors are like teenagers that never grew up. they do need constant and close supervision. and if you end up with a new house on 1/2 acre of dirt, that’s a whole lot of supervision.[/quote]That’s why you pay the big bucks to the General Contractor. His job is to supervise.
If you contract to typical workers, then you have to do the designing, conceptualization and supervising yourself.
I find that cheap price does not mean bad work, but the cheaper the price, the more the supervision required. It’s part of sweat equity.
I believe that’s true in any field. Well-paid professionals will do better work and require less supervision. The question is: what’s your budget?[/quote]
The big problem with contractors is this is a field with very low barrier of entry. Therefore, competition is fierce, and the quality in general poor. I was actually referring to General Contractors. They too need a lot of supervision. I don’t dare get into sub-contractor level, they are more like toddlers.
June 24, 2011 at 4:49 PM #706591ocrenterParticipant[quote=briansd1][quote=ocrenter]
haha, hit the nail right on the head. contractors are like teenagers that never grew up. they do need constant and close supervision. and if you end up with a new house on 1/2 acre of dirt, that’s a whole lot of supervision.[/quote]That’s why you pay the big bucks to the General Contractor. His job is to supervise.
If you contract to typical workers, then you have to do the designing, conceptualization and supervising yourself.
I find that cheap price does not mean bad work, but the cheaper the price, the more the supervision required. It’s part of sweat equity.
I believe that’s true in any field. Well-paid professionals will do better work and require less supervision. The question is: what’s your budget?[/quote]
The big problem with contractors is this is a field with very low barrier of entry. Therefore, competition is fierce, and the quality in general poor. I was actually referring to General Contractors. They too need a lot of supervision. I don’t dare get into sub-contractor level, they are more like toddlers.
June 24, 2011 at 4:49 PM #706742ocrenterParticipant[quote=briansd1][quote=ocrenter]
haha, hit the nail right on the head. contractors are like teenagers that never grew up. they do need constant and close supervision. and if you end up with a new house on 1/2 acre of dirt, that’s a whole lot of supervision.[/quote]That’s why you pay the big bucks to the General Contractor. His job is to supervise.
If you contract to typical workers, then you have to do the designing, conceptualization and supervising yourself.
I find that cheap price does not mean bad work, but the cheaper the price, the more the supervision required. It’s part of sweat equity.
I believe that’s true in any field. Well-paid professionals will do better work and require less supervision. The question is: what’s your budget?[/quote]
The big problem with contractors is this is a field with very low barrier of entry. Therefore, competition is fierce, and the quality in general poor. I was actually referring to General Contractors. They too need a lot of supervision. I don’t dare get into sub-contractor level, they are more like toddlers.
June 24, 2011 at 4:49 PM #707107ocrenterParticipant[quote=briansd1][quote=ocrenter]
haha, hit the nail right on the head. contractors are like teenagers that never grew up. they do need constant and close supervision. and if you end up with a new house on 1/2 acre of dirt, that’s a whole lot of supervision.[/quote]That’s why you pay the big bucks to the General Contractor. His job is to supervise.
If you contract to typical workers, then you have to do the designing, conceptualization and supervising yourself.
I find that cheap price does not mean bad work, but the cheaper the price, the more the supervision required. It’s part of sweat equity.
I believe that’s true in any field. Well-paid professionals will do better work and require less supervision. The question is: what’s your budget?[/quote]
The big problem with contractors is this is a field with very low barrier of entry. Therefore, competition is fierce, and the quality in general poor. I was actually referring to General Contractors. They too need a lot of supervision. I don’t dare get into sub-contractor level, they are more like toddlers.
June 24, 2011 at 5:33 PM #705910familyguyParticipantAgain ocr, you hit the nail on the head.
June 24, 2011 at 5:33 PM #706007familyguyParticipantAgain ocr, you hit the nail on the head.
June 24, 2011 at 5:33 PM #706606familyguyParticipantAgain ocr, you hit the nail on the head.
June 24, 2011 at 5:33 PM #706757familyguyParticipantAgain ocr, you hit the nail on the head.
June 24, 2011 at 5:33 PM #707122familyguyParticipantAgain ocr, you hit the nail on the head.
June 27, 2011 at 2:26 PM #706186kcal09Participant[quote=ocrenter][quote=sunny88]I think that the high MR still deters many buyers from buying at Stonebridge. The MR adds at least another $150k to the home prices and for that price you can buy a much nicer home in Poway.[/quote]
I just did the calculation, the MR actually adds $100k to the price. Would be nice to see a recent closed sale that is much nicer in Poway for 100k over a comparable Stonebridge home.[/quote]
MR is a 30 year bond which would add 30 x $5,000=$150,000 total.
June 27, 2011 at 2:26 PM #706283kcal09Participant[quote=ocrenter][quote=sunny88]I think that the high MR still deters many buyers from buying at Stonebridge. The MR adds at least another $150k to the home prices and for that price you can buy a much nicer home in Poway.[/quote]
I just did the calculation, the MR actually adds $100k to the price. Would be nice to see a recent closed sale that is much nicer in Poway for 100k over a comparable Stonebridge home.[/quote]
MR is a 30 year bond which would add 30 x $5,000=$150,000 total.
June 27, 2011 at 2:26 PM #706882kcal09Participant[quote=ocrenter][quote=sunny88]I think that the high MR still deters many buyers from buying at Stonebridge. The MR adds at least another $150k to the home prices and for that price you can buy a much nicer home in Poway.[/quote]
I just did the calculation, the MR actually adds $100k to the price. Would be nice to see a recent closed sale that is much nicer in Poway for 100k over a comparable Stonebridge home.[/quote]
MR is a 30 year bond which would add 30 x $5,000=$150,000 total.
June 27, 2011 at 2:26 PM #707032kcal09Participant[quote=ocrenter][quote=sunny88]I think that the high MR still deters many buyers from buying at Stonebridge. The MR adds at least another $150k to the home prices and for that price you can buy a much nicer home in Poway.[/quote]
I just did the calculation, the MR actually adds $100k to the price. Would be nice to see a recent closed sale that is much nicer in Poway for 100k over a comparable Stonebridge home.[/quote]
MR is a 30 year bond which would add 30 x $5,000=$150,000 total.
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