We love our gas fireplace in the winter. Also, heated bathroom floor tiles.
I've seen garage bathrooms before that are in the house footprint but accessible only from garage.
We’ve built twice and are moving and starting our third. Agree with a lot of what has been said. Here are the things we’ve done that are helpful.
1. Think about where your router and modem will go. Set up the closet with necessary outlets.
2. We wired this current house with Cat5 cable to the TVs.
3. We installed a whole-house antenna. When we originally did it, we were streaming PlayStationVue for TV and didn’t get locals. Now YouTube TV has them so this is less important but we can get TV is the Internet is down.
4. If you have a toilet room in your master bath, a light up switch or an outlet with a light is nice. Otherwise you have to turn on the light to pee in the middle of the night and blind yourself.
5. Where will you plug in devices to charge? Put an outlet in the drawer or cabinet so they are out of sight.
6. I’m a big fan of dual-zone HVAC systems so each level of your house is comfortable.
7. I would also recommend a whole-house dehumidifier. There is a lot of moisture in a new house - lumber, drywall, etc. Plus basements are often damp. Again, helps with the live-ability.
8. The quality of the carpet pad is more important than the actual carpet. Went with cheap pad on our first build and the carpet wore terribly. Put in a quality pad on this build and the carpet feels so much better on your feet.
9. We insulated the interior walls of this current build. We didn’t in our first build and you could hear a fart in the next room. It is so much better now. We put sound deadening insulation in our mechanical room which makes a huge difference.
10. Most contractors will glue and nail subfloor. That leads to floor squeaks in the future. Glue and screw the subfloor. I would also screw the bottom wall plate to the subfloor.
11. If you are going to cover your deck, I would encourage you to screen it in if you can afford it. We did and sit out there all the time in the fall. I would also consider if you would put a TV on your deck and wire an outlet for it. I would also think about if your put up outdoor party lights on your deck and have an outlet for that.
12. We actually went with luxury vinyl flooring in this house and I love it. Much cheaper than tile and more durable than hardwood floors.
13. Most tile their master shower. We did onyx in this one and like it much better. More expensive than tile but cheaper to install so we saw a slight savings. But maintenance is dramatically easier. No grout to worry about. Looks great.
14. We insulated our garage which is nice. Rarely gets colder than 30 degrees in there.
15. Most contractors put on 8ft or 16ft garage doors. Depending on what you drive, that can be tight. We went with 18ft on our double and 9ft on our third stall on this build. So much nicer.
16. Sounds funny but think about the height of your shower heads. I’m 6’2” which isn’t that tall but often find shower heads that are too low.
17. Undercabinet lighting is pretty much a given anymore. We also put in above cabinets lights in this one and really like it. In our first build, cabinets went to the ceiling. Didn’t do that in this one (those high ones were impractical to use and didn’t justify the cost to us).
18. Think about where you will put your Christmas tree. Make sure there is an outlet nearby and no heating vent if you get a real tree. Dries it out. Also an outlet in your mantle if you might be nice if you want to decorate it with lights. Also agree with the post about outlet under soffits for Christmas lights.
Hope some of this helps! If I think of anything else, I will post. Good luck!
We’ve built twice and are moving and starting our third. Agree with a lot of what has been said. Here are the things we’ve done that are helpful.
1. Think about where your router and modem will go. Set up the closet with necessary outlets.
2. We wired this current house with Cat5 cable to the TVs.
3. We installed a whole-house antenna. When we originally did it, we were streaming PlayStationVue for TV and didn’t get locals. Now YouTube TV has them so this is less important but we can get TV is the Internet is down.
4. If you have a toilet room in your master bath, a light up switch or an outlet with a light is nice. Otherwise you have to turn on the light to pee in the middle of the night and blind yourself.
5. Where will you plug in devices to charge? Put an outlet in the drawer or cabinet so they are out of sight.
6. I’m a big fan of dual-zone HVAC systems so each level of your house is comfortable.
7. I would also recommend a whole-house dehumidifier. There is a lot of moisture in a new house - lumber, drywall, etc. Plus basements are often damp. Again, helps with the live-ability.
8. The quality of the carpet pad is more important than the actual carpet. Went with cheap pad on our first build and the carpet wore terribly. Put in a quality pad on this build and the carpet feels so much better on your feet.
9. We insulated the interior walls of this current build. We didn’t in our first build and you could hear a fart in the next room. It is so much better now. We put sound deadening insulation in our mechanical room which makes a huge difference.
10. Most contractors will glue and nail subfloor. That leads to floor squeaks in the future. Glue and screw the subfloor. I would also screw the bottom wall plate to the subfloor.
11. If you are going to cover your deck, I would encourage you to screen it in if you can afford it. We did and sit out there all the time in the fall. I would also consider if you would put a TV on your deck and wire an outlet for it. I would also think about if your put up outdoor party lights on your deck and have an outlet for that.
12. We actually went with luxury vinyl flooring in this house and I love it. Much cheaper than tile and more durable than hardwood floors.
13. Most tile their master shower. We did onyx in this one and like it much better. More expensive than tile but cheaper to install so we saw a slight savings. But maintenance is dramatically easier. No grout to worry about. Looks great.
14. We insulated our garage which is nice. Rarely gets colder than 30 degrees in there.
15. Most contractors put on 8ft or 16ft garage doors. Depending on what you drive, that can be tight. We went with 18ft on our double and 9ft on our third stall on this build. So much nicer.
16. Sounds funny but think about the height of your shower heads. I’m 6’2” which isn’t that tall but often find shower heads that are too low.
17. Undercabinet lighting is pretty much a given anymore. We also put in above cabinets lights in this one and really like it. In our first build, cabinets went to the ceiling. Didn’t do that in this one (those high ones were impractical to use and didn’t justify the cost to us).
18. Think about where you will put your Christmas tree. Make sure there is an outlet nearby and no heating vent if you get a real tree. Dries it out. Also an outlet in your mantle if you might be nice if you want to decorate it with lights. Also agree with the post about outlet under soffits for Christmas lights.
Hope some of this helps! If I think of anything else, I will post. Good luck!
Mission accomplished when spouse built his detached garagemahal...The garage needs to be at least twice the square footage of the house...![]()
When I do my new garage in the spring, it will have a nice "garage" sink with a big cleaning station, and a urinal.
I've found that the more storage space we have the more stuff we buy. Big closets and pantries are good, but extra storage for crap can sometimes lead to buying more stuff just to fill it.
In that same vein, give thought to a generator. Power outages like we experienced post-derecho (one week plus) suck. And if there's weather and your sump pump or furnace needs to run to avoid flooding or freezing pipes you'll be in good shape.
This is my largest regret as wellRelated to all of the garage comments. Builders and architects always seem to make garages too narrow. I am talking the space between cars and the space to the walls from their sides. I added space to the drivers side when looking at plans. I have plenty of room for the door to swing open even with **** along the wall. And space for two big garbage roll out containers. I might only be adding 18" but makes a big difference. Neighbors garbage cans all sit out in their driverways because theirs no room to roll them in.
re #16 - If you get a fixed shower head and set it for the person who is over 6', the altitudinally challenged folks end up with a very diffuse spray by the time it reaches them. No bueno...We’ve built twice and are moving and starting our third. Agree with a lot of what has been said. Here are the things we’ve done that are helpful.
1. Think about where your router and modem will go. Set up the closet with necessary outlets.
2. We wired this current house with Cat5 cable to the TVs.
3. We installed a whole-house antenna. When we originally did it, we were streaming PlayStationVue for TV and didn’t get locals. Now YouTube TV has them so this is less important but we can get TV is the Internet is down.
4. If you have a toilet room in your master bath, a light up switch or an outlet with a light is nice. Otherwise you have to turn on the light to pee in the middle of the night and blind yourself.
5. Where will you plug in devices to charge? Put an outlet in the drawer or cabinet so they are out of sight.
6. I’m a big fan of dual-zone HVAC systems so each level of your house is comfortable.
7. I would also recommend a whole-house dehumidifier. There is a lot of moisture in a new house - lumber, drywall, etc. Plus basements are often damp. Again, helps with the live-ability.
8. The quality of the carpet pad is more important than the actual carpet. Went with cheap pad on our first build and the carpet wore terribly. Put in a quality pad on this build and the carpet feels so much better on your feet.
9. We insulated the interior walls of this current build. We didn’t in our first build and you could hear a fart in the next room. It is so much better now. We put sound deadening insulation in our mechanical room which makes a huge difference.
10. Most contractors will glue and nail subfloor. That leads to floor squeaks in the future. Glue and screw the subfloor. I would also screw the bottom wall plate to the subfloor.
11. If you are going to cover your deck, I would encourage you to screen it in if you can afford it. We did and sit out there all the time in the fall. I would also consider if you would put a TV on your deck and wire an outlet for it. I would also think about if your put up outdoor party lights on your deck and have an outlet for that.
12. We actually went with luxury vinyl flooring in this house and I love it. Much cheaper than tile and more durable than hardwood floors.
13. Most tile their master shower. We did onyx in this one and like it much better. More expensive than tile but cheaper to install so we saw a slight savings. But maintenance is dramatically easier. No grout to worry about. Looks great.
14. We insulated our garage which is nice. Rarely gets colder than 30 degrees in there.
15. Most contractors put on 8ft or 16ft garage doors. Depending on what you drive, that can be tight. We went with 18ft on our double and 9ft on our third stall on this build. So much nicer.
16. Sounds funny but think about the height of your shower heads. I’m 6’2” which isn’t that tall but often find shower heads that are too low.
17. Undercabinet lighting is pretty much a given anymore. We also put in above cabinets lights in this one and really like it. In our first build, cabinets went to the ceiling. Didn’t do that in this one (those high ones were impractical to use and didn’t justify the cost to us).
18. Think about where you will put your Christmas tree. Make sure there is an outlet nearby and no heating vent if you get a real tree. Dries it out. Also an outlet in your mantle if you might be nice if you want to decorate it with lights. Also agree with the post about outlet under soffits for Christmas lights.
Hope some of this helps! If I think of anything else, I will post. Good luck!