Should have my permit in about a 10 days for 1600sq ft house with walkout basement and attached 2 car garage. Also 30 x 40 detached garage. Thinking about schedule and want to be closed in by winter. November average low here is 37F so would be nice to be done with most except outside by then, especially concrete.
I threw this schedule together. It's a rough first cut but I wanted to get some feedback on it - things missed or out of order or unrealistic time allowed. On the current house we lost a lot of time between contractors so I need to do a much better job of scheduling this time around.
Task Start date Duration
Survey 12-Sep 1d
Excavation 16-Sep 3d
Survey
Foundation 23-Sep 5d
Framing 30-Sep 5d
Under slab plumbing/conduits 30-Sep
interior slabs 7-Oct
Trusses on framing
Roofing 7-Oct 5d
Backfill/rough grading 7-Oct
Doors/windows 14-Oct 5d
Outdoor patio/porch/ driveways 14-Oct
Install main electric panel 21 oct
siding 21-Oct 5d
Deck and stairs 21-Oct
Interior framing 21-Oct 5d
wiring 28-Oct 2w
rough plumbing 28-Oct 2w
insulation 4-Nov 1w
drywall 11-Nov 1w
Interior finish carpentry 18-Nov
This was approx. my time frame on building the same size house, as I stated above, it took me 7 months:
Excavation- 1 day to dig my basement
Foundation-1 day to form and pour (all the forms were delivered on a Friday, rained and a wall partially fell in, cleaned that up and set wall forms, rained again, no concrete delivery that day, finally got walls poured, roughed basement plumbing / sump pump in on Saturday, framers showed up one evening and put basement poles and beam up.
Poured the basement floor.
I Had the framers scheduled in advance, they started at the end of the next week, it took them 3 weeks to get my house under roof, there were 4 sometimes 5 guys, they did an excellent job. Framers installed my windows, me and my buddy installed my doors, he is a small GC.
Roofer took about 3 days, lumber company messed up on quantity of shingles and I had to jump through hoops to get 7 more squares of shingles late on a Friday, so they could finish Saturday (Be prepared to do this)
HVAC rough in was a week
Plumbing rough in was about 1 1/2 weeks
I did my electrical after HVAC was done.
My plumbing buddy dug the gas line trench and my electrical service trench, that was about a 1/2 day.
Fireplace company came and installed FP
I had spray foam insulation done, that took a day.
I thought I had my T's crossed and i's dotted but fireplace company didn't like spray foam in the FP cavity, neither would talk to each other, No one wanted liability, so it took me 5 hours to scrape the spray foam out of the FP cavity, the insulators did come back one evening and put batts up in the FP cavity, FP company lined it with Durarock concrete board, they both did a great job. I had 13 contractor bags of spray foam insulation that I tore out.
House set for about a week waiting on drywall guys, also drywall supply company busted a window sliding drywall through it, I had to order a new window, that took two weeks.
Stone guys showed up, they were here about 2 full weeks.
Drywall guys were here about 2 weeks.
Poured front porch and back patio, poured garage floor, poured concrete driveway and 2 weeks later
Me and my buddy did the interior trim and doors, kitchen cabinets, we had a company come in and do the quartz counter tops, none of his measurements were good, it was kind of a mess., no big deal
We changed kitchen sink base late and had to wait a few weeks on a farm style sink base
Painter came in and primed and painted ceilings, walls and trim
I got my electric and gas on inside the house.
Septic System, Oh the Septic System
they showed up a month late, installed 2 -1000 gallon tanks on a Thursday, plumbers hooked up house plumbing to tanks on Friday, waiting on inspection (It had not rained in 3 months at this time, Saturday night we got 4" of rain, about 9:00am Sunday morning both tanks popped up out of the ground, it was a mess, a lot of blame
Did the tile in bathrooms and kitchen back splash, glass co. did the shower door.
HVAC co came back and finished
plumbers came back and finished, I had to make a few trips to change out wrong plumbing trim parts
I got all my electrical fixtures in and set all my appliances (Someone forgot to order the range hood?) that took a couple extra weeks
Insulators came back and sprayed 2" foam lid in attic and then blew in R38 ontop of that. My gas/electric bills are averaging $100 so far, highest one was $120
I got my Plumbing and electrical inspections and then building, HVAC and got my COO, we were living in the barn I built a few years back, so we were on site, which helped a lot.
All in all, it was a lot of work, I saved a lot of $$ and had some help from good friends.
If you are in St. Louis, check out if you have to have a silt fence put up? Me and my wife put up 600' of it, I kept my street clean out front. I had to post a $2500 builders bond with a city dept, they came out and did weekly inspections, (Clean Water Act) I did get all my bond $$ back after I was finished.
I ended up doing an asphalt driveway out to the street, I just did that back in May
I already have my drywall in my basement, I will probably finish it in a year or so, I want to make sure that I don't have any water issues down there.
I did run a 2" pvc conduit from my basement to attic (for future), I have a 4" pipe for Radon (If needed) that is under my basement floor and runs up thru to the attic. I have 2 pvc conduits running under ground that go out to my barn, if needed, I have my septic conduits running underground where they can be seen entering the house.
Good Luck, its a lot of work but definitely worth it.