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My parents house burnt down, rebuilding?

jhazel3 | Posted in General Discussion on February 12, 2008 11:45am

My parents house burnt down a week and a day ago. http://www.battlecreekenquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2008802050312

I built my own house, now i would like to rebuild theirs. But my father can barely walk now due to nerve damage in his legs and arthritis. So I want to build a house that has everything on the main level and a attached garage  so he can walk from his car to the house with no steps. Barrier free bathrooms etc… Now the hard part as you can see from the photo of the burning house it is a split level and the reason is that the water table is high here and while it is sandy you hit water at about four feet. So I am not sure if a full basement is a good idea or what method to use to make it a good idea. Using four foot footers with crawlspace seems like a waste. Should I look for a way to waterproof a full basement use a crawl space or build on a slab?  Should I build a ranch with double the sq ft or build a twostory with an elevator? Looking for the most cost effective way to handle this. I used ICF to build my house and like the idea of making it very efficent also.

Thanks Jim Hazel III

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Replies

  1. User avater
    BossHog | Feb 12, 2008 11:51pm | #1

    Sorry to hear about the house.

    If you're looking for accessability, I'd lean more towards slab on grade. That would make it much easier to get in and out with no steps.

    I'd stay away from a basement unless you can be certain that you can keep it dry.

    Volunteering doesn't pay
  2. User avater
    DDay | Feb 13, 2008 12:12am | #2

    We had a similar thing, the split level destroyed by the fire and all. The area also had a water table about 5 feet below grade. We trucked in fill and set the house up higher than it was before. Don't know if you have that option. You could always sell the lot and buy another.

    Are there other houses in the area with full basements? Talk to them and see what types of issues they have if any.

    1. MikeSmith | Feb 13, 2008 12:38am | #3

      jim.... pretty big house to try to get on one floor

      View Image

      but , unless they wanted to scale back

      i'd be thinking slab-on-grade... radiant floor heating .. super insulated

      with conventional 2d floor for guests

      all living / entertainment requirements on the first floor

      usually the garage HAS to be minimum of 4" below finish floor of house

       a straight stair to the 2d floor requires about 4'x10' .. other than that all the other space on the first floor can be devoted to their  needs and wishes

      think they could live in say...... 36'  x  60' .. that would give them about  2100 sf

      say two BR's  ( master & caregiver )  2 - 3 baths

      kitchen / living /dining   open plan

      library / study

      sitting room

      2d floor  could have two BR's & 2 baths

      but ... if the extended family is close ... then you don't need   the additonal  br's

      and the other consideration is  (resale)  but with our aging population .. there will always be lots of people who would like a single-family detached retirement home

      all on one levelMike Smith Rhode Island : Design / Build / Repair / Restore

      1. FastEddie | Feb 13, 2008 03:16am | #7

        pretty big house to try to get on one floor

        Thye house we moved out of in San Antonio was one floor 2600 sf slab on grade (plus two car garage).  I think it would be a function of the lot size."Put your creed in your deed."   Emerson

        "When asked if you can do something, tell'em "Why certainly I can", then get busy and find a way to do it."  T. Roosevelt

  3. Jim_Allen | Feb 13, 2008 12:55am | #4

    I second what Mike is suggesting.

    I'd also contact a lawyer to start and end the "negotiations" with the insurance company. I wouldn't bother talking to them at all.

    Bob's next test date: 12/10/07

    1. frammer52 | Feb 13, 2008 02:12am | #6

      I agree.

  4. timkline | Feb 13, 2008 01:32am | #5

    i guess i will third mike smith's suggestion of keeping the master suite on the first floor and putting additional bedrooms upstairs.  this reduces your need for a major foundation expansion and makes the house more appealing once your parents move.

    i'm sorry for their loss, this is a tremendously tramatic thing to go through.  i really don't understand why your local paper feels the need to print photos of your parents on the worst day of their lives.  truly thoughtless.

    are you going to prepare an estimate for the replacement cost of their home ?

     

    carpenter in transition

  5. User avater
    DDay | Feb 13, 2008 03:38am | #8

    I forgot about getting a private adjuster to rep you in dealing with the insurance company. They will do all the inventory, value everything and they work on a percentage so they get more as you get more. They know how everything works, without them you'll get screwed over every way possible. Plus it will be a huge headache and take a long time.

  6. JeffinPA | Feb 13, 2008 03:48am | #9

    I have nothing more to add other than wish your family well!  Loosing so much history must be difficult but something good will come from the embers.

    All the contributors have great ideas!

  7. User avater
    Matt | Feb 13, 2008 04:45am | #10

    Sorry to hear about the situation   I too say a slab house is the best way to build something accessible.  For older people I'd say definitely the radiant heating and extra thick carpet padding - definitely no tile floors.   Or if slick floors are desired - glue down pre-finished hardwood.  Google ADA.  There is a document that gives all the particulars of accessibility.  Even if you don't want to do everything accessible - you can pick and choose what seems to fit the situation.  Unfortunately, more often than not older people who have mobility problems generally have greater needs as time goes on.  I recently built a house with the garage slab flush with the main house as it had to be accessible.  I checked with the local inspections dept first and I had it inspected - A-OK.

    Here's a little different spin on things though...  Sometimes building for family members adds drama to an already complicated process...  Do you do this full time?  If not are you sure they can wait a year or more?  Are they going to be OK with budget overruns?

    BTW - I'm getting permits for 2 homes that burned down right now....  One of those parities had the insurance arbitrator - I think that is what they called it...

    Is that Battle Creek Michigan?  One of our regular contributors here lives in Battle Creek.   Maybe he can help by providing some info...  I won't volunteer his name though... :-)

    1. jhazel3 | Feb 13, 2008 08:58pm | #11

      Thanks for all the kind comments. We are in michigan and it is on a 13 acre lot. I will do a complete est before starting down to the boxes of nails. I have considered bringing the lot up it would give it a more dramtic look for sure. I would have to bring it up just four feet . There is a pond in the front yard with a large paved circle driveway around it so I would have to take that into consideration.  The house outside dimensions are only 28' x 44' =1232 sq ft the part to the right  is a two car garage

      1. User avater
        Matt | Feb 14, 2008 02:32am | #12

        13 acres... Could the new house be placed in another location besides the current one?  It would probably save a lot in earth work. 

        Re raising the lot 4' - that could be cost prohibitive, depending on the availability of compactible fill.  Start by figuring out how many yards would be required.  BTW - I've got about 100,000 extra cubic yards here in NC.... Hehe :-)

        1. jhazel3 | Feb 14, 2008 05:57pm | #13

          Has anbody installed an elevator in a residence

           

          1. Jim_Allen | Feb 14, 2008 11:38pm | #14

            I just spoke with a company that installs them. A basic unit would cost about 25k including the unit and framing accommodations. I believe these types of installations will bode well for resale value in the near future. Bob's next test date: 12/10/07

      2. Danno | Feb 15, 2008 04:35am | #20

        Drama or not, bringing the lot up is a good idea for a slab "on grade." My ex- had a house on a slab on grade and it had lots of sliding doors and every time it rained it seemed that water was leaking in. A nice, wheelchair friendly slope up to the house would help keep it dry.

    2. User avater
      BillHartmann | Feb 15, 2008 12:28am | #16

      Why no tile?.
      .
      A-holes. Hey every group has to have one. And I have been elected to be the one. I should make that my tagline.

      1. User avater
        Matt | Feb 15, 2008 05:16am | #22

        Tile on concrete is not compadible with old feet, ankles, knees, etc.

        One of the things my company does is build unassisted retirement communities.  The old folks always complained about the hard concrete floors and wanted to move upstairs.  First we found that if we installed thicker carpet padding it helped with the problem.  Now we do gypcrete covered floors and it's almost a non-issue.

  8. User avater
    nater | Feb 15, 2008 12:05am | #15

    I'll warn you that their insurance company may throw a fit. I've known cases where the house has to be rebuilt exactly as before, down to # of doors windows, and floorplan. Double check with the insurance company before you start making too many plans.

    1. User avater
      BillHartmann | Feb 15, 2008 12:32am | #17

      I would be surprised of any insurance policey that had such terms.The insurcance company has to be for the loss. Not for replacement.Now in figuring the loss they might want to use the existing house to use in figuring the value."I've known cases where the house has to be rebuilt exactly as before, down to # of doors windows, and floorplan."What if codes won't allow that house to be built with the exactly has it was.Egress windows, size of halls and stairs, dimensions around toilets are just a few examples..
      .
      A-holes. Hey every group has to have one. And I have been elected to be the one. I should make that my tagline.

      1. Jim_Allen | Feb 15, 2008 01:44am | #18

        I agree with you Bill. I still advise getting the attorney involved at the very beginning though. It'll cost $2500 and net $25,000. Bob's next test date: 12/10/07

        1. frammer52 | Feb 15, 2008 03:45am | #19

          a public adjuster may be the best way to go.  most attornys don't have the experience working with insurance companies.  I belive the poster was correct. the insurance co. with replacement  insurance require to be built the same, with accomidations of change in building code.  this comes into play if you want to collect the final 10%.  insurance co. are only looking out for themselves

           

      2. User avater
        DDay | Feb 15, 2008 04:51am | #21

        With our situation that I explained in an earlier post, same type of house and a pretty much total loss, they could care less what you wanted to even do with the money. They will fight you for the value of the house and the contents but once you reach a settlement, if you want to go to Vegas they don't care, its your money. My grandmother had a split level ranch that burned down and the replacement was a sprawling cape style, and it was quite a bit larger. If you don't rebuild the exact house, unless you do work yourself or get great pricing, you'll be short on money. The foundation will not be called a lose, so right there you'll have costs for demo, excavation and the new foundation and slabs.

        1. jhazel3 | Feb 15, 2008 08:04am | #23

          My family is very close friends of our insurance agent who runs a large firm. He said since the house is an obvious total loss that the insurance company will have to pay the maximum that it is insured for. The contents are a total loss so they pay the maxium on that ,the third thing they pay is for loss of use. So you have to pay a private adjuster 10 percent that comes out of the money you would recive. So if you have a partial loss sure get a private adjuster but if a total you are just losing 10 percent 

          I plan to do it myself it will be much simpler than my house and any subs i use here in michigan will be easy to come by in our crappy economy. but when you ask if i do it full time I will just go back to my old schedule of leave work at 5 and work till midnight 5 days a week and 12 hour weekends. I am going to build a rectangle with maybe a covered entrance and try to figure a way to make the roof interesting with dormers. proable will use polysteel icf walls ( shop made assy) I am concerned about a cement floor because it is hard on your feet but my mom would just as soon have carpet in ever room in the house. In here house that burnt she had beautiful maple floors that she covered in carpeting, she even put it the kitchen and bathrooms :).

          Thanks Jim III

          1. Jim_Allen | Feb 15, 2008 11:58am | #24

            Jim, I would shop the job to a General Contractor or builder instead of automatically taking on those hours. You might save a lot of money and not have any of the hours to put in. It sounds crazy, but it's very possible.The reason it works that way is that GC's or builders get much better pricing out of their subs. If you contract with Acme Plumbing, it is very likely that you will pay more for your plumbing than if you had Acme Plumbing do the job through a GC. The trades discount their services to GCs and Custom Builders because of the volume and familiarity factor. You will not be able to negotiate the same discount because you are building only one, not six a year, every year. Bob's next test date: 12/10/07

          2. jhazel3 | Feb 15, 2008 09:35pm | #27

             I am sure that is true but in michigan right now nobody is building, residental builders are leaving the state in droves. It is easy to get the "deal" and I do almost all of it myself anyway. And I do good work show up on time stay till done :)

            What I am interested in is either good way to  raise the level   a better way to do the foundations so no leaks  or make the house a reverse walk out so the back of the house is filled in with dirt or make an elevator stuff like that  I appreciate all theideas so far. I am curouis why gypcrete would be easier on you than concrete thought. I was also wondering you thought of those squares that have the plastic base with a wood top they use to remodel basements.

             

          3. Jim_Allen | Feb 15, 2008 11:27pm | #32

            "It is easy to get the "deal""
            Don't say I didn't warn you. Last fall, in MI, we put a bid in on a project for 305k. We would have made about 60k. The guy opted to do it himself and save the big bucks. He spent 300k using some of our subs. Bob's next test date: 12/10/07

          4. jhazel3 | Feb 16, 2008 12:53am | #34

            Jim  I will remember and your advice is good I will check for sure.  but the thing you dont know about me is that i will use very little in the way of subs I like to do it all. I find it hard to belive they can do it cheaper when my labor is free.

          5. User avater
            Matt | Feb 16, 2008 07:23pm | #38

             Do you have siblings?

            And... is there a mortgage on the house?

            Edited 2/16/2008 11:26 am ET by Matt

          6. jhazel3 | Feb 16, 2008 08:08pm | #39

            My sister died from cancer 18 years ago and yes  there is a Mortgage.

             

          7. User avater
            Matt | Feb 16, 2008 08:48pm | #40

            Sorry to hear about your sis.  Mine is very dear to me.

            Regarding the mortgage - I think above I mentioned that I was involved in a similar circumstance.  In these 2 instances the disbursal of money is being controlled by the mortgage companies.   First thing my company had to do was submit signed and notarized documents stating information about the building company, builders licence number, liability and workers comp insurance info. etc.  Wasn't a big deal for us but still necessary items.  This could have a significant impact on your plans for building back... especially the DIY part of it.  Maybe if the mortgage is fairly small the mortgage co could be paid off to get them out of the picture.

            Also, in both cases the amount of reimbursement for temporary housing is limited.  I think I mentioned either in this or another thread one of the HOs is getting very antsy because the plans development, engineering and permitting processing is taking some time... it's been about a month since they signed their contract and still no permit and they say they are afraid that they will end up in a situation where they have to make their mortgage and rent payment simultaneously - which will be my fault...

          8. User avater
            Matt | Feb 16, 2008 07:17pm | #37

            Seems like the only way to find out what it would cost to replace the house is to get a few bids....  I wouldn't go what some insurance adjuster says or by what some tax appraiser had put the value at. 

            BTW - tax appraiser came by some houses I was building.  Asked me if they had central heat....  She seemed like a nice enough lady, but I nearly laughed in her face... :-)

          9. User avater
            BillHartmann | Feb 15, 2008 06:23pm | #25

            "My family is very close friends of our insurance agent who runs a large firm. He said since the house is an obvious total loss that the insurance company will have to pay the maximum that it is insured for. The contents are a total loss so they pay the maxium on that ,the third thing they pay is for loss of use. So you have to pay a private adjuster 10 percent that comes out of the money you would recive. So if you have a partial loss sure get a private adjuster but if a total you are just losing 10 percent "Not exactly.First thing is that you need to go over the policy and see EXACTLY what the terms are. There are several standard levels of coverage and variation from company to company.They won't automatically payout the max face amount. Specially if it appears to be way over insurred. Probably not in your case. But they will still check. And do you have replacement cost? In that case they can pay a certain amount over the face value.And do it have code/ordance coverage. I don't know if it will pay for a total loss. But say you have a partial loss that require rebuilding bedroom and the changes for egress windows require restructuring and electric is too small by current code and the service needs to be upgraded. That would nto be covered by a basic policy, but would be by the rider.And contents the the will only cover the DEPRECIATED VALUE of the contents and you need to list all of the contents and when and where it was obtained and what it's value is.And if you have replacement value they will pay the depreciated value and then the difference when replaced.And you might have coverage for demolition, for landscaping, and outbuildigns that might pay more.It might happen in some case, but don't expect them to knock on the door in a week or two and hand you a check for the full amount.LOTS AND LOTS of paper work and documentation will be needed..
            .
            A-holes. Hey every group has to have one. And I have been elected to be the one. I should make that my tagline.

          10. frammer52 | Feb 15, 2008 06:50pm | #26

            bill, I agree with you.  The agent even though a friend probably didn't tell him that he gets paid extra with fewer claims and dollars.  The hiring of a public adjuster will get him the maximun dollar amount.  You should never take the word of an insurance co..  The public adjuster may find that the insurance agent underinsured the house.  In this case it may pay to go after the insurance agents, error and omission policy.  Always hire a public adjuster in a total loss.  It will pay off.  I have been screwed by my insurance co. enough to know that they will try to get you to settle for less than owed.  always!!!!!

          11. User avater
            BillHartmann | Feb 15, 2008 09:44pm | #28

            I don't know that he needs to automatcially get a public adjuster.But he does need to be aware of all of the options and possibilities and not automatically think that they are going to drop a bundle of cash in their lap.But on the other hand, contrary to some opinion, I don't think that they are out to get him either.It is like anyother business deal. Whether buying a car, buying a house, contracting to build a house, buying a business, negotiate a job, etc, etc you need to be knowledgable and in some cases bring in specialists..
            .
            A-holes. Hey every group has to have one. And I have been elected to be the one. I should make that my tagline.

          12. timkline | Feb 15, 2008 09:54pm | #29

            Always hire a public adjuster in a total loss. 

            I can't emphasize enough how wrong this statement is.

            I have seen so many people taken with this thinking.

            If it is a total loss, all that you can get is the limit of the policy.

            Period.

            Sue your agent for improperly insuring your house after a major loss ?

            Good luck.

            It is the homeowner's responsibility to properly insure his/her home.  The agent can make a recommendation but it is the HO that is ultimately responsible.

            This process can delay getting on with your life for months or years at great personal expense with little or no gain.

             carpenter in transition

          13. User avater
            BillHartmann | Feb 15, 2008 10:14pm | #30

            "If it is a total loss, all that you can get is the limit of the policy."But you can get less.And as I pointed out there can be adders above face value.And for CONTENTS you need show what the losses are..
            .
            A-holes. Hey every group has to have one. And I have been elected to be the one. I should make that my tagline.

          14. timkline | Feb 16, 2008 12:05am | #33

            yes, bill you are correct.

            i was trying to keep it simple.

            5% of policy limits can be an add for demolition expenses.

            10% of policy limits for code upgrades is another common add

            ie   if your policy limit is $200,000 you may be able to receive an additional $10,000 for demo and $20,000 of code upgrades.

            this is a maybe and is determined by your policy language.  the code upgrades must be required by an official and put in writing and then each item must be priced individually

            but as i said, it is what it is.   our phrase for these types of files is

            "You can only get it all."  when we talk about PA's signing people that have had total losses.

            your words to the poster were right on.  the homeowner's contractor will have to prove the rebuild cost with a detailed estimate.  the carrier will not just pay the limits without proof.

            same with contents.  the whole house must be itemized.  the carrier will again NOT pay based on policy limits just because the house is totaled

            contents itemization is a tedious and time consuming process. especially in a total.

             

            carpenter in transition

            Edited 2/15/2008 4:07 pm ET by timkline

          15. jhazel3 | Feb 16, 2008 01:05am | #35

            The insurance company is having a crew pull everthing out the are doing the itemising with a crew the adjuster said they will stop when they hit the policy limits and we will have to keep doing it after that if we want to document the total loss for tax purposes. I will ask for a policy so I can read it myself. to see about the demo but the said they will pay to count the items and charge it as an expense. I like the details keep those coming.

            Thanks Jim III

          16. jack_bogard | Feb 16, 2008 09:50pm | #42

            the agent is not the one actually handling the calim either. it will be processed through the "claims department" not the sales department.

             

            there is a reason the ins companies broke that apart a long time ago.

      3. jack_bogard | Feb 16, 2008 09:46pm | #41

        what they owe / pay for and what you rebuild are totally seperate things.

  9. User avater
    SteveInCleveland | Feb 15, 2008 10:55pm | #31

    What an awful thing to happen (the fire).  Our family will certainly keep your whole family in our prayers.

     

     

     

    "Preach the Gospel at all times; if necessary, use words."  - St. Francis of Assisi

  10. bobbys | Feb 16, 2008 03:16am | #36

    This is very upsetting as your folks seem like very nice people, You are a good son to be helping them, Im sure there very proud of you. My folks are in there 80s They have a bilevel a slab below with a garage downstairs, All there living is upstairs and the stairs go halfway up with a landing, They love it, They only go down for the laundry and into the garage



    Edited 2/15/2008 7:19 pm ET by bobbys

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