Is this (building work) quote realistic?

Is this (building work) quote realistic?

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TonyHetherington

Original Poster:

32,091 posts

251 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
Hi all

My girlfriend's had a quote from a builder familiy friend of hers for some work on her ground floor. Oooo er. Anyway, supposedly excellent "mate's rates" have come back over double what she was expecting (and had told the guy how much money she had) and we're genuinely surprised - so wanted to run by you lot to see if his quote is normal builder type pricing, very excellent, or something different?

Please excuse the shoddy drawings; you're looking at half of the ground floor - lounge on left, dining room on right. The kitchen goes off to the bottom right and currently has a door from kitchen to garden.

Before;


After;


The work is....

Knock down wall in centre of lounge/dining room. Leave floor unfinished. Create wide archway where wall once was.

Put wall alongside stairs (currently open)

Knock through window (top right of picture) and put in patio doors.

Block up kitchen door (kitchen is to bottom right of picture with door going outside, so that's getting blocked up and more worktop space added).

Walls created will be plastered over, but not decorated.

So, that work (which doesn't seem like much to me, especially as there's no supporting walls) comes in at

Patio door where window is; £856
Kitchen door blocked up; £500
Knock down lounge wall £1500
Extend lower wall to run along side stairs; £900

So nearly £4k seems an awful lot for what (in my totally uneducated head) seems relatively simple and not time consuming?

Just after a second opinion really...next step is to get a different builder in to price up the work!



dirty boy

14,717 posts

210 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
Check it's not a supporting wall and knock it down yourself.

Great fun.

Can't help on prices unfortunately.

V8mate

45,899 posts

190 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
That's not expensive!

In fact, I'd be concerned how he could do the patio door where the window is for as little as £850. Can't be a high quality door. Will he be making good round the door too?

TonyHetherington

Original Poster:

32,091 posts

251 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
Actually I should have mentioned the £850 for patio door I thought was ok (no idea on cost of door out of that, but he will be making good around outside), it was the other bits - particularly the wall along side stairs and knocking down in lounge.

Thinking about it now - he did say he would need to put a (very wide) arch in - i imagined it was to hide something, but thinking further that could be to support the floor above which could explain why it's more than I imagined.

Plotloss

67,280 posts

271 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
Have you got a time and materials breakdown?

TonyHetherington

Original Poster:

32,091 posts

251 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
Alas no - the "family friend" nature of it means her dad got the quote over the phone and scribbled it on a piece of paper for her.

It doesn't seem mega bad, but it certainly doesn't seem mega good either, which is what I really wanted to check.

robinhood21

30,789 posts

233 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
TonyHetherington said:
Thinking about it now - he did say he would need to put a (very wide) arch in - i imagined it was to hide something, but thinking further that could be to support the floor above which could explain why it's more than I imagined.
Yup! That wall will require a lintel as it will be a supporting wall.

Oh, and I don't wish to appear an alarmist, but, someone has nicked the TV.

TonyHetherington

Original Poster:

32,091 posts

251 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
Ah that will explain the cost for that - thanks!

Made me laugh about the TV hehe - planning on putting a flatscreen on the wall somewhere I think (or rather planned) - the cost is so much more than anticipated that might not do the knock-through and just have the patio door put in I think.

mechsympathy

52,982 posts

256 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
robinhood21 said:
TonyHetherington said:
Thinking about it now - he did say he would need to put a (very wide) arch in - i imagined it was to hide something, but thinking further that could be to support the floor above which could explain why it's more than I imagined.
Yup! That wall will require a lintel as it will be a supporting wall.
If the plan is to open it up full width it may need a steel + 2 uprights + new footings.

robinhood21 said:
Oh, and I don't wish to appear an alarmist, but, someone has nicked the TV.
The mexican took it when he leftyes

shirt

22,683 posts

202 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
i needed a wall knocking through in my lounge. it needed an RSJ putting in [free from work] and making good. the builder i used did that, put a lintel in a chimney breast so i could fit a range oven in the kitchen, and dry lined/skimmed my 4m x 2.5m kitchen. all for £680 + VAT.

i snapped his hand off at that price, though i suspect i got it cheap as he knew i needed the whole house replastering, work which went to him.


VxDuncan

2,850 posts

235 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
mechsympathy said:
robinhood21 said:
TonyHetherington said:
Thinking about it now - he did say he would need to put a (very wide) arch in - i imagined it was to hide something, but thinking further that could be to support the floor above which could explain why it's more than I imagined.
Yup! That wall will require a lintel as it will be a supporting wall.
If the plan is to open it up full width it may need a steel + 2 uprights + new footings.
Exactly, plus structural engineer and building control probably.

pikey

7,700 posts

285 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
Tony,

You need to get some other quotes to compare and get a feel for what's realistic, but from my experiences I would veer away from using a friend of the family.

Actually, I would go further than that and say don't do it! If the builder feels the price is too low, expectations will be set incorrectly and bad feelings will emerge. If the client thinks the price is too high.. well, it's the same - expectations set incorrectly. Mates rates don't really exist. Builders are businesses like any other and they have material and labour cost just like anyone else. The guy's got a mortgage and has to have money to buy beer and steak. The only way the price can really come down is to do something dodgy.

Not only that; friendly deals/mates rates come with verbal agreements.. that later both parties have a different recollection of. And then the extras - are they included extras or not? There's a friend/formality boundary that is difficult to close in on at agreement, but it can go wrong in a you may find essential later. If she does go with the friend, there MUST be a written contract (ie. what's he doing / what's included / how much). This informal friendly approach is awful when it bites.

My advise would be to get 3 other quotes. Don't be afraid to ask for a T & M breakdown and then talk to the builders about it - the first price is never the one they expect you to take!

The best way your builder friend could help is to provide guidance on the quote and the work in progress.

Ben

PS. Tell Gina the dust will be airborne and EVERYWHERE! Believe me - I've hardly any original walls left in my house!

TonyHetherington

Original Poster:

32,091 posts

251 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
Ah, sound words I think Ben. Thanks, I'll pass that on to her it may give her an entirely different out look (for the good!)

Thanks thumbup

JonRB

74,839 posts

273 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
You could demolish the wall by increasing your velocity in a vertical direction until you have attained an equilibrium between the earth's gravitational pull and your angular velocity, and make use of a device that converts matter to energy by the equation E = MC^2

Oh, never mind. hehe

Qcarchoo

471 posts

194 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
It seems like a fair price to me. I would be pricing slightly higher.
I presume there would be some alterations to the electrical layout aswell.

Adam T

1,300 posts

207 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
TonyHetherington said:
Hi all

My girlfriend's had a quote from a builder familiy friend of hers for some work on her ground floor. Oooo er. Anyway, supposedly excellent "mate's rates" have come back over double what she was expecting (and had told the guy how much money she had) and we're genuinely surprised - so wanted to run by you lot to see if his quote is normal builder type pricing, very excellent, or something different?

Please excuse the shoddy drawings; you're looking at half of the ground floor - lounge on left, dining room on right. The kitchen goes off to the bottom right and currently has a door from kitchen to garden.

Before;


After;


The work is....

Knock down wall in centre of lounge/dining room. Leave floor unfinished. Create wide archway where wall once was.

Put wall alongside stairs (currently open)

Knock through window (top right of picture) and put in patio doors.

Block up kitchen door (kitchen is to bottom right of picture with door going outside, so that's getting blocked up and more worktop space added).

Walls created will be plastered over, but not decorated.

So, that work (which doesn't seem like much to me, especially as there's no supporting walls) comes in at

Patio door where window is; £856 - I would ask, as others have commented, for a mterials and labour price, then you can see what he is getting the patio door for, which, if i am honest, doesnt seem too bad. If he is getting the upvc door direct from factory, it wont be more thanc.£400 in my experience, he may even be getting them to come and fit it. I would just double check with him that he has allowed for making good all the reveals of the newly kncoked about window opening, and isnt planning on covering everything up with mastic against brickwork and is aplanning on pinting where neccesary.

Kitchen door blocked up; £500 seems in round figures to be a ball park cost - and as he has only done it over the phone it is all it can be - he needs to see it. Ask what bricks he has allowed for, and if the bricks are going to be properly tiued in, and matching bricks, and pointed correctly to match. he needs to splice the brickwork properly, not just " fill in "the opening.

Knock down lounge wall £1500 - seems really, really expensive - IF, it is a Non load bearing. skip, and half a day. If it is a loadbearing, he needs to alow for fitting a proper RSJ, skip for blockwork removal, labou, and the neccesary propping/making good to all surrounding plasterwork etc. certainly an area to question.

Extend lower wall to run along side stairs; £900 - has he allowed for blockwork and neccesary plaster finish, or is it a timber framed and boarded system?

So nearly £4k seems an awful lot for what (in my totally uneducated head) seems relatively simple and not time consuming?

Just after a second opinion really...next step is to get a different builder in to price up the work!

If I were you, I would get two, or even three more quotes, and ask for full breakdowns of labour, and materials, and agreed timescales. Compare them, and dont be bullied in to agreeing anyting without first cinsulting PH...

Oh, and make sure that they are FULLY Insured. Home insureance will often Null and Void should anything happen whilst they are working, and are not insured. Imagine the issues should the first floor collapse and you find out the builder is un insiured, and the home insurance does not pay out....

V12Les

3,985 posts

197 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
On the face of it 4k seems a very fair price, if carried out correctly.
Generally builders dont/wont like breaking down the price into labour & materials, you like the quote pay it, if you dont...go else where.
No need to sign contracts, just get the quote (not estimate) in writing and agree an hourly rate/price for any unforseen extras before if & when they they arise.
Could also ask if theres any of his recent work that you could look at.

jon.nic

6 posts

212 months

Friday 17th April 2009
quotequote all
To add to the door question...

Have just had new patio door put in, replacing a window. The builder took out the window, removed all the brickwork (extremely neatly) and fitted the new UPVC double glazed window. Was not desperately fancy design, but well made.

All up cost was £950 inc. VAT - I was advised by others this was a good price, and quite a bit less than 6 months ago (volume of work, and all that).

Jono

Slagathore

5,824 posts

193 months

Saturday 18th April 2009
quotequote all
£500 to block up a door?

That seems to stick out a bit!

As has been said, without knowing the full details, it's hard to tell, really.

Blocking up a kitchen door really shouldn't take that long, and I can't see the materials needed for it being particularly expensive.

Did he say how long it would take, and is that a cash price, or proper through the books and insured job?