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Considering a big extension on the house

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    #11
    Originally posted by wendigo100
    That's close to £40 per sft when I was looking a few years ago.

    Quotes for Scotland might be cheap as chips, but the final price always ends up 10 times that. How much was their parliament building?
    Mental note: do not engage same architect.
    God made men. Sam Colt made them equal.

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      #12
      Originally posted by King Cnvt
      Never had any major building work done. Any advice?

      Thinking of a 1st floor extension over the garage to create a very large master bedroom and on-suite.

      Do I get builders in to quote first, or do I get plans drawn up first? What about planning permission?

      No point getting plans drawn if the cost is huge.

      Can you get this done under PD(permitted development)? If less than 15% by volume increase on original volume. I used this recently for a loft convertion - meant getting planning permission for rear extension was easier.

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        #13
        Originally posted by wendigo100
        That's close to £40 per sft when I was looking a few years ago.

        Quotes for Scotland might be cheap as chips, but the final price always ends up 10 times that. How much was their parliament building?
        Nearly as much as your Dome...but at least we get to keep ours...didn't you sell the Dome for £1???Then there is Wembley...massively over budget...then don't even get me started on the footbridge across the Thames that had to be redone due to "not designed for large amounts of people wlaking on it"...

        You guys are the masters at budgetary numptiness....

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          #14
          Originally posted by angusglover
          Nearly as much as your Dome...but at least we get to keep ours...didn't you sell the Dome for £1???Then there is Wembley...massively over budget...then don't even get me started on the footbridge across the Thames that had to be redone due to "not designed for large amounts of people wlaking on it"...

          You guys are the masters at budgetary numptiness....
          You mean the government and the English FA. I could not agree more.

          Just wait until "we" get the final bill for the Olympics!

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            #15
            Originally posted by andrew_neil_uk
            Can you get this done under PD(permitted development)? If less than 15% by volume increase on original volume. I used this recently for a loft convertion - meant getting planning permission for rear extension was easier.
            PD is not always available my hose (11 years old) was built without any PD

            although it won;t help the OP one way around this that is often used is to knock down your garage build your extension and then apply for planning permission for a garage, the council can;t refuse
            Your parents ruin the first half of your life and your kids ruin the second half

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              #16
              You don't need an architect for most jobs. We used a structural engineer who was a lot cheaper and was very good at pushing the plans through the council. As has been hinted already, "special" relationships exist between the planning departments and some builders.

              The architects we spoke to were all very keen on pushing what they wanted to build rather than what we wanted.

              Get the quotes for the builders tied down and agreed up front though as they will try their hardest to add "extras" if you don't. Even little things like the number of power points all add up.
              It also helps if you can keep your neighbours happy.

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                #17
                Good god I can see some people get royally ripped off on this forum. "get your architect to PM it" for gods sake it's an extention not a new build mansion. Get yourself down to the local new build site, ask for the foreman and if anyone does 'foreigners'. You will save a packet and get a job done by someone who builds houses for a living to the latest regs rather than some dodgy self trained builder.
                I remember the good old days of this site when people used to moan about serious contractor related issues like house prices and immigration. How times have changed!?

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by PRC1964
                  You don't need an architect for most jobs. We used a structural engineer who was a lot cheaper and was very good at pushing the plans through the council.
                  How did you select your SE?
                  How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

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                    #19
                    Originally posted by MrsGoof
                    PD is not always available my hose (11 years old) was built without any PD

                    although it won;t help the OP one way around this that is often used is to knock down your garage build your extension and then apply for planning permission for a garage, the council can;t refuse
                    Unless you really are planning an extension to your hose. I'm sure there's something about that in my in-box.

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                      #20
                      You don't need an architect or a structural engineer mate - you're having an extension, not building a shopping centre. A decent builder will be able to do the lot for you without some tw@t wearing a suit and hardhat faffing around with a clipboard.
                      Call the cops

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