『Our First Mailbag Episode!』のカバーアート

Our First Mailbag Episode!

Our First Mailbag Episode!

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

In our first mailbag episode, we answer four questions that come up all the time for homeowners who are trying to make smart decisions before starting a renovation or new build. We start with a question about whether a $300,000 renovation budget is realistic for a family hoping to update a kitchen, family room, and primary bath. We explain that there is no honest way to answer that without some level of professional input. A builder or architect needs real information before giving a meaningful number, and homeowners also need to understand that their total project budget is not the same as their construction budget. Fees, permits, furnishings, landscaping, financing, and hidden conditions all affect what is truly available for the work itself.

We then talk about who homeowners should hire first when they are deciding between renovation, addition, or building new. We make the case for talking to an architect first because that early conversation helps clarify priorities, explore options, and create a path forward before anyone is locked into a builder or delivery method. We also explain that architects are not just there to draw plans. We help homeowners think strategically, assemble the right team, and stay aligned with the goals of the project from the first conversation through construction.

From there, we take on the question of whether it makes more sense to renovate, add on, or move. We explain that many people assume they need more square footage- when the real issue is how their current home is being used. Sometimes the answer is a major renovation, but sometimes the better solution is reworking a few spaces, shifting furniture, or making targeted improvements. When a bigger change is needed, we talk through the factors that matter most, including neighborhood value, long term plans, emotional attachment, sustainability, and whether the house can realistically support the changes being considered.

We close with a question about contingency. For older homes, we recommend setting aside more because renovations reveal unknowns the moment demolition begins. Structural issues, outdated systems, water problems, and other hidden conditions are what usually consume contingency funds. The larger point is that contingency is not optional. It is part of responsible planning. Good projects do not avoid uncertainty by pretending it is not there. They account for it early so that homeowners can move through construction with less panic and better decisions.

(00:00) Intro
(00:48) Q1: Is our budget realistic?
(06:15) Construction budget vs total project budget
(09:03) Hidden costs, systems, and phasing
(13:07) Q2: Who do we hire first?
(16:01) Why architects serve as a third party
(23:41) Q3: Renovate, add on, or move?
(24:25) Identifying what the house is really missing
(28:07) When renovation makes sense financially
(31:16) Time horizon, resale value, and neighborhood limits
(41:41) Q4: How much contingency do we need?
(43:12) Recommended contingency for old homes
(46:01) Ways to reduce unknowns before construction
(52:57) Final thoughts and outro

Have questions? Want to be on our show? Email us! admin@htsspodcast.com

Learn about our hosts:

Marilyn: Runcible Studios: https://runciblestudios.com

SherI: Springhouse Architects: https://springhousearchitects.com


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