Obed
Elite Member
Tight time deadlines can significantly affect quality in the build process. When we were getting ready to build our house, the county had evicted us from the lot on which we were living in our camper. I personnally believe the lot was properly zoned properly for living in a camper but that's another story. We had a hard deadline to move our camper off the rented lot so we were feeling pressure.
Early into our build, we saw signs that the guy we hired as a construction manager and framer was not going to be great. My wife and I discussed firing him early on. However, we did not fire him at that time. Firing him would cause delays which could prevent us from moving our camper onto the new property, ie. no electricity yet. If we didn't move the camper off the rented lot, the fines could be up to $500/day based on the letter sent to us from the county. Thus we kept the guy and paid dearly for it in stress and money for redoing stuff he messed up.
Looking back, we should have just rented a house to take the time pressure off of our building project. Having plenty of time to pick quality contractors/subcontractors can make a big difference. In our project, the quality of workers increased significantly after we fired the initial construction manager/framer. By then, we were living on our land in our camper and had less pressure to build at a fast pace. We got better at picking subs and also at firing them early if needed.
However, if you have tight deadlines like Pete has had, you may not have the option of picking the best high quality contractor but have to limit your search to contractors who are available. Often, the best people are busy so you have to get in line for their services. If you need to start NOW, the better workers may not be available.
Obed
Early into our build, we saw signs that the guy we hired as a construction manager and framer was not going to be great. My wife and I discussed firing him early on. However, we did not fire him at that time. Firing him would cause delays which could prevent us from moving our camper onto the new property, ie. no electricity yet. If we didn't move the camper off the rented lot, the fines could be up to $500/day based on the letter sent to us from the county. Thus we kept the guy and paid dearly for it in stress and money for redoing stuff he messed up.
Looking back, we should have just rented a house to take the time pressure off of our building project. Having plenty of time to pick quality contractors/subcontractors can make a big difference. In our project, the quality of workers increased significantly after we fired the initial construction manager/framer. By then, we were living on our land in our camper and had less pressure to build at a fast pace. We got better at picking subs and also at firing them early if needed.
However, if you have tight deadlines like Pete has had, you may not have the option of picking the best high quality contractor but have to limit your search to contractors who are available. Often, the best people are busy so you have to get in line for their services. If you need to start NOW, the better workers may not be available.
Obed