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Be Your Own House Contractor: Save 25% without Lifting a Hammer

Be Your Own House Contractor: Save 25% without Lifting a Hammer
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Be Your Own House Contractor: Save 25% without Lifting a Hammer

 
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This book should be required reading for anyone who is thinking about building or renovating a house. The savings involved can make the difference between just dreaming about that dream house and actually building it.

The primary message behind Be Your Own House Contractor is “You can do it!” According to construction expert and author Carl Heldmann, anyone can oversee the building of a house and save up to 25 percent by acting as the main contractor. This popular book has sold over 268,000 copies since it was first published in 1982.

Written for those with little or no experience in the building trades, Be Your Own House Contractor clearly and simply lays out the steps involved in home construction and answers the many questions that arise. Concise chapters deal with:
•Locating and purchasing land
•Procuring financing
•Estimating costs and staying within a budget
•Hiring subcontractors and finding suppliers
•Building the house
•Restoring an existing structure

An extensive appendix contains examples of the forms, certificates, and permits that are required, as well as sample contracts and plans.

The 5th edition has been fully updated and includes Carl Heldmann’s new Web site, where readers can get loan information, daily updates on interest rates, and cost estimate worksheets for planning and tracking building expenses. Other new features include new chapters on renovating and restoring an older house and a Spanish glossary of common building terms.

 
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Product Details
Author:Carl Heldmann
Paperback:176 pages
Publisher:Storey Publishing, LLC
Publication Date:April 01, 2006
Language:English
ISBN:1580178405
Product Length:8.4 inches
Product Width:6.24 inches
Product Height:0.45 inches
Product Weight:0.64 pounds
Package Length:8.9 inches
Package Width:6.0 inches
Package Height:0.5 inches
Package Weight:0.65 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 11 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.0 ( 11 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

28 of 28 found the following review helpful:


4Be Your Own House Contractor  May 10, 2008 By Oly Joe II
Very up-to-date publication. Author's web site provides much additional information. I plan to build using ICF's and Geothermal heat source. Good information available through both the book and the web portal. Clearly the best and most current of the 4 similar books purchased at the same time.

17 of 17 found the following review helpful:


5Very Helpful book....  Aug 28, 2009 By Tami L. Rosengren "TamiRose"
This was a great purchase that I made based on other reviews. I am using this as a template for our new construction. I would recommend this to anyone interested in building with or without a general contractor. It gave me the confidence (this and 2 other books-see my other reviews) to general our home. Make sure you order the latest edition (5th, I think). I read the reviews and all the reviews were under both the 1st and 5th edition. I have both...dont make that mistake.

6 of 8 found the following review helpful:


4Great Book!  Sep 04, 2008 By J. Kinsey "JLK"
Be Your Own House Contractor: Save 25% without Lifting a Hammer
I have read several books on this subject. This one offered the best information for the beginner. I would recommend this book for anyone considering building their own home.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:


2Reads like a 30 min TV slot  Mar 28, 2012 By MR Cart "Cart"
I expected this book to be more helpful, but it is really a few vague suggestions spread out across as many pages as the writer could manage.

In fact I can save you the money and tell you the entire book in just a few words

1 Hire good people that know what they are doing and trust them to do a good job, the city will ensure they do it to legal spec.
2 make sure you like your house plans before you start
3 don't pay ahead of schedule Have a budget and stick to it

Of course the problem with this advice' is finding good contractors and trusting them. That is exactly what general Contractors do for a living they spend time developing relationships with contractors. It does not happen overnight, GCs also hire bad contractors they just stop using them after one or two jobs. We don't have that luxury the owner builder needs to get the right ones first time out and that is hard

Carl's big idea is to go to a lumber yard and ask for help, this is great if you happen to get lucky. The lumber yards loyalties are not to some walk in that is only buying lumber for one house it is to the guy who builds houses 365. So sure he might suggest someone, and that guy might talk a great fight and he might be great. But he might also be the next "up" or the guy struggling to pay his lumber yard bills.

These kinds of books are suitable if you just want a very hazy outline. But it fails completely to deal with the real issues of acting as your own GC. Schedules, build orders inspections etc are all huge deals that are hardly addressed at all.

If you want solid building advice there are a number of very strong sites that give strong detailed accounts of owner builder construction.

I strongly suggest skipping this book. And if you want a cheap lightly used copy.....

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:


2very disappointing  Mar 07, 2012 By wrenn
Taking on the general contractor role is a huge task, and there is a lot at stake. I was looking for a realistic guide, but failed to get it from this author. He does not mention any downsides, instead claiming it is easy to do the work without interfering with one's existing job and not even necessary to make more than a couple site visits. This defies common sense and the experience of anyone I have talked to. Look elsewhere for practical advice.

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