View Full Version : Home improvements?
madmax
06-23-2008, 11:47 PM
What kind of improvements can you add to a house to make it something special. Some of the ones I can think of are:
*Towel warmers
*Hot water dispenser in the kitchen
*Creek with pond to drain into
*Concrete treatments to make the walkways and driveway something special
*Internet wiring system
*Massive fireplaces
*Automation devices for drapes and lighting
*???
McLoki
06-24-2008, 12:03 AM
What is the point of your improvements? To make the house a little more yours, just to personalise things, etc?
Most of the improvments you mentioned, you will not get your money back out of when it comes time to sell your home. (if that is important to you)
Things I really like (that also do not really add any value compared to money spent putting them in)
Home theater. (duh)
Rear deck (multi-level) with built in Jacuzzi.
outdoor accent lighting.
Michael
SKsolutions
06-24-2008, 12:05 AM
Have you closed yet? :D
If you want any of those things, do them for yourself. I doubt you'd see much return on any of those, and in some cases, depending on execution, you may create negative equity with your 'improvements', by narrowing your future buyer pool. If you are looking to invest in your home, use the cost/benefit approach. I'd almost always put money into fixtures, appliances, tile, granite, feature lighting, custom windows, vaulting, hardwoods, crown, built-ins, pavers and landscaping. You can also over improve for your area if you exceed the current price threshold. Gizmos and gadgets aren't selling features, and are a distraction to most. A trapeze in the bedroom. . . . probably a push.
disneyjoe7
06-24-2008, 12:21 AM
I need pictures to help me decide. ;)
Heater element in the driveway=No shoveling.
candyliquor35m
06-24-2008, 01:28 AM
My brother in colorado built this creek down the hill the entire length of his house and then around halfway to the front of the house. It has 2 small fish ponds stocked :D with goldfish. It takes maintenance and upkeep like pulling out the algae, feeding the fish, etc.
Do whatever you're passionate about or it will fall into disrepair.
madmax
06-24-2008, 08:42 AM
What is the point of your improvements? To make the house a little more yours, just to personalise things, etc?
Just to make a list of things people do, nothing more. A lot of times you see something someone else does that you never even considered. Besides, I'm getting bored with no system to listen to... :D
Nice stream Candy.
No, I haven't closed yet. A few more weeks until the present owner moves out. I did get to go through the house again with the owner. She gave me a good long tour of the place. BTW, thats a great thing to do if you hit it off. Lots of stuff to be learned about the neighbors, area, house etc.
madmax
polktiger
06-24-2008, 10:22 AM
I enjoy stepping up the trim work. If you go in a lot of majestic old houses (200, 300 years old) you will notice the sheer volume of trim work in those houses. Unlike today where all the houses use stock 1 piece casings and baseboards, I enjoy adding more advanced multipiece casements, railing etc. It has to be tasteful and you should not clash your styling, but I think good trim work really finishes a house. It is not as common today becuase it takes time and attention to detail, and really it is lost on most people since they can't tell the difference between quality and crap. We have too many people that think painting a room constitues a home improvement. No, painting on the inside is called decorating, and painting on the outside is called maintenance.
m00npie
06-24-2008, 10:52 AM
stepping up the trim work.
+1 for trim work. I just recently purchased a new home and the 2nd thing that was ripped out after the flooring was all trim work minus a few 6 panel doors. It's a lot of work, but in the end, it will be completely worth it.
Chair rail, crown molding and wainscoting are nice features to add.
shack
06-24-2008, 11:19 AM
Stripper pole and a rotating mirror ball?
Then you can change your name to Pacman (since Adam is no longer going to be using it).
Jstas
06-24-2008, 11:35 AM
Um, about the creek and pond, check the local laws. Many places have rules about them because they change the ecosystem and can introduce species that are not native and can turn into pests and destructive species. Also, if you do it without permits and inspections, the EPA will fine you and keep fining you until you take it out. So do it right if you are going to do it.
amulford
06-24-2008, 12:30 PM
*#1 - Towel warmers
*#2 - Hot water dispenser in the kitchen
*#3 - Creek with pond to drain into
*#4 - Concrete treatments to make the walkways and driveway something special
*#5 - Internet wiring system
*#6 - Massive fireplaces
*#7 - Automation devices for drapes and lighting
#1 - Never had them and I doubt any kind of return. I have seen timed infrared heat lamps in the bath that were nice.
#2 - I had them and they are nice. Easy to install. Spend the extra and get the SS tank and larger capacity. That makes them more useful and they will last a little longer. They do go bad...
#3 - Nice idea, as long as you keep scale in mind. It will involve alot of work and ongoing maintenance, but I would stay away from the fish. Water gardens can be very appealing. Add some drops/water falls to get more sound, very relaxing. Ditto what Jstas said...
#4 - Short of tearing out existing and going stamped I don't see that going well. I've yet to see concrete staining that looked all that good to me. How about accenting with planting and low voltage accent lighting?
#5 - Wireless, wireless, wireless. The new wireless-N will be all you need to do...
#6 - Not unless you have an existing, and only to dress it up. What about an outdoor on a nice patio/outdoor kitchen? I have seen some VERY nice outdoor entertaing spaces.
#7 - Good Idea and energy efficient.
Jstas
06-24-2008, 01:20 PM
#5 - Wireless, wireless, wireless. The new wireless-N will be all you need to do...
Actually, wired networking always has value. 100BaseT won't get you much value anymore because of the advent of gigabit to your door with fiber optics. As that technology and service grows, it's going to leave 100BaseT networks in the dust. But if you go with an upgradeable solution for fiber optic gig networks, you will, without a doubt, add value to your home. Mainly because gigabit networking has such a large amount of bandwidth that you can disperse high speed Internet access around the home but you can also stream CD, SACD, DVD and HDTV quality media all over the home.
Wireless is still far, far behind where hard line networking is in performance. Wireless basically allows you the freedom to have a mobile computing network for laptops, cellphones and whatever else. It's good for people not looking to go whole hob and wire a house for networking but if you want to add value, wireless networking adds none. Mainly because you can take it with you. It's hard to rip cabling out of the walls.
MikeC78
06-24-2008, 01:46 PM
Wired internet is nice, but do not plan on it adding extensive value to your house. I would believe the expenses would far out weigh the value when you sell. Expecially if it's not done before the dry-wall is laid, would be something to look into on a new build.
I use a wireless-N Linksys router and get full bars throughout the my house, I do all my downloading and whatever on the main computer, everything else is wireless.
unc2701
06-24-2008, 02:34 PM
A key question is whether you can do it yourself and do a good job of it.
Example:
Molding/ trim work costs about $5 a LF installation, plus materials*1.15, plus some times you see a per cut charge. I've put in about $1000 of materials in molding in my house, but it would have cost $20,000 to get someone else to do it. It'll add maybe $5,000-$10,000 to the selling cost. So doing it yourself, it's profit, having someone else do it, you'll never see the money.
Same thing with my B&K distributed A/V system and networking cable. I'd guess an installer would want about $30,000 to do what I've done (six independent zones, with full 1080p bandwidth for the video, cat5e everywhere) but it's only cost me $3,000. I'll probably only break even on it.
As for the networking, I'm not sure why anyone is talking about 100baseT vs gigabit... You can run both over Cat5e and I honestly don't know the last time I saw just plain Cat 5. If you were going to put in wiring, I would say to go for Cat 6, just to cover your bases and the material cost is nothing compared to the pain in the ass of pulling it.
Wireless/wired. The fastest residential internet connections are all slower than wireless N, so don't pull Cat 6 thinking that it'll speed up your internet connection- only pull it if you plan on moving data within you house- audio, video, etc... and moving it on a network that hasn't been invented yet.
disneyjoe7
06-24-2008, 03:08 PM
I agree some improvements are nice and worth while it's really what you like to see, and what you can do yourself. I can't see myself putting any heart into it if I couldn't see the benifit myself in the end.
Jstas
06-24-2008, 03:35 PM
Gigabit is not limited to copper. If you are going to run cabling, get fiber optic. The materials aren't as cheap as copper and require a more delicate touch but glass has much larger levels of potential and expansion than copper.
The difference is in the type of switch you need. Most home users cannot get their hands on gig switches and routers because they cost alot and barely anyone, even professionals, have any clue what they are looking at anymore. However, those of us who do know, know which used equipment to snap up on eBay. I have a fiber optic network with a gig switch and a SCSI bridge going in to a fiber channel array at home. I did the whole thing for less than $2 grand. The walls aren't wired with glass but if I did do that, I could run the lines without breaking drywall any more than putting a wall receptacle in. If anyone thinks you can't do it without cutting trenches in drywall then you have no business running wires in a house.
Now, wireless N is nice and all but wireless N cannot perform as fast as a fiber optic connection. Wireless N gets it's performance from MIMO to provide multi-path performance. While it is nice and the 40 MHz frequency make it stable enough, it is still subject to current 802.11g and b issues concerning signal blockage and integrity. Then again, your data speeds are limited by the number of antennas your transmitter has and how they are broken up on the transmission and reception sides.
In reality, the only real benefit that you get out of the N standard is aggregation. Again, that goes back to how the Tx and Rx sides of the router are configured. But, add legacy or 802.11g devices to that network and your performance drops because not only are you now transmitting in a 40 MHz range but also a 20 MHz range and in that 20 MHz transmission is an embedded 802.11n transmission. That embedded transmission detracts from the already limited bandwidth available in the 20 MHz transmissions. But to add extra insult to injury, any a, b or g devices require the necessity of CTS protection on both 20 MHz sides of the 40 MHz signal. That also helps drag performance down.
So honestly, if you want to go wireless N, the only way to realize full benefit is to change every device you have over to wireless N, if that is entirely possible because some stuff is so old it can't be upgraded anymore. That's a big cost and you still aren't going to perform nearly as well as a wired network nor will you have the stability.
There are benefits that add value to the house from the network that are unrelated to Internet access. Security systems, surveillance systems, home automation systems, entertainment systems and even your Internet access can all benefit from a high speed home network. THAT is where you can garner added value with a home network. Adding extra drops and receptacles near things like windows and doors for possible security measures and such add value because even if you don't do it, the next owner that comes in might add, say, a security system and the added bonus of network infrastructure already put in and thoughtfully placed can reduce costs associated with an alarm system thereby making it attractive to a home buyer looking to have home security, surveillance and automation. It's also beneficial for a person looking to support telecommuting. The world has changed and home networks are not just for surfing pron and playing games. People actually do real work with them and they do bring value, even if it's old 10 or 100BaseT. The biggest problem lies in "future-proofing" and planning ahead. It pays to plan. The more stuff you plan to do with your home network, the more bandwidth you will need to maintain a certain level of performance across the board. As technology and software progresses, it requires higher levels of resources and infrastructure support. Installing a network that looks far enough ahead to support that kind of progress is not easy but in the end, even if it's a slightly losing financial venture just for your own use, the value is quite high.
Yes, this is a home but as more and more distributed technology becomes available to the consumer market, the more people need to start looking at how to run and manage a fairly small but complex network infrastructure. For the average guy looking surf the net, read email and play World of Warcraft online, a Wireless-N router will work fine. If you want to do more, it ain't gonna cut it. But bottom line, "Home network" listed in the house description will likely not detract from a home value. Might not necessarily add but it probably won't hurt it.
Jstas
06-24-2008, 03:39 PM
I agree some improvements are nice and worth while it's really what you like to see, and what you can do yourself. I can't see myself putting any heart into it if I couldn't see the benifit myself in the end.
Ed Zachary.
I never saw any point in make changes and/or improvements to a house if I was going to find some benefit to it. Otherwise, why spend a ton of money and time putting is something for the next guy to use. Especially when the housing market can turn in to such a gamble that might actually lose money on the proposition. When you start talking about worth and value of a change to a property, you start losing the point of personalizing your property to begin with.
If I don't benefit from my hard work and money, I won't do it. If I want a pond, I'll put a pond in. If I want a deck, I get my hammer and nails and start building. If I want a home network, I start buying equipment and running wires. I don't care what kind of value it puts into the property, I care what value I get out of it.
disneyjoe7
06-24-2008, 04:08 PM
Gigabit is not limited to copper. If you are going to run cabling, get fiber optic. The materials aren't as cheap as copper and require a more delicate touch but glass has much larger levels of potential and expansion than copper.
The difference is in the type of switch you need. Most home users cannot get their hands on gig switches and routers because they cost alot and barely anyone, even professionals, have any clue what they are looking at anymore. However, those of us who do know, know which used equipment to snap up on eBay. I have a fiber optic network with a gig switch and a SCSI bridge going in to a fiber channel array at home. I did the whole thing for less than $2 grand. The walls aren't wired with glass but if I did do that, I could run the lines without breaking drywall any more than putting a wall receptacle in. If anyone thinks you can't do it without cutting trenches in drywall then you have no business running wires in a house.
I say what you did is a bit over kill, and may never get that out of the house. For most people I feel Cat 5e cable or above is fine and well add value to a home nothing like new flooring or something. I my self added a network system with wall jacks around the house have 4 areas / ports, that all goes to a closet which I built a shelf for. This closet I call my "IP closet" I also have my DSL line go there alone with 3 phone lines so they could be converted to Voip if needed. But now find I may add 2 others ports as its alway changing. New refrigerators can use a network, I found out the an home security can use a network I'm not sure where it will end. If devices like my toaster wishes to talk to the net it better come with a wireless gizmo, thats all I'm going to say.
unc2701
06-24-2008, 04:10 PM
If anyone thinks you can't do it without cutting trenches in drywall then you have no business running wires in a house.
I'm guessing you've never had to do it in a contemporary house on a slab- Total f-ing nightmare :eek:...
But we killed 2 birds w/ one stone- got around this giant LVL that kept us from dropping the lines where we wanted by putting in crown and running behind that. Had to be super careful to not hit it w/ the nails. Still, I'll agree that 99% of houses can be done w/ nothing more than a hole for a wallbox- just a matter of finding the right place to run the lines.
MikeC78
06-24-2008, 04:14 PM
Have fun running fiber in your house, that stuff is very fragile and would be very difficult to run behind dry wall since you can not makes bends with it. Most people own a house, not an office complex. IMO, not worth the expense and hassle, and like DJ stated, overkill. 99.9% that the next homeowner isn't going to give two shits about fiber ran in the house, and you'd never get much value out of it, besides your own.
bobman1235
06-24-2008, 04:26 PM
Have fun running fiber in your house, that stuff is very fragile and would be very difficult to run behind dry wall since you can not makes bends with it.
Sure you can. The fiber cables we use at my work is very flexible, and gets walked all over every day on the floor and has never broken. It's not the same as copper but I wouldn't go so far as to call it fragile.
MikeC78
06-24-2008, 04:35 PM
I've guess the stuff I seen was different(older?), you could never make a 90 with it.
amulford
06-24-2008, 04:36 PM
Whoa!!! Networking was JUST ONE of the options, folks. Now back to our regularly scheduled program....
My likes:
I like nice trim treatments, too. It gives statement.
I also like outdoor entertainment. Has the added benefit of easy cleanup after the party/dinner (hose it down...)
A mosaic entry/inlaid floor.
A turkish sauna.
A well done fence or some other outdoor structure. Something out of the ordinary, not your typical picket. I built a pergola over the entrance to the front sidewalk from the street. Looks nice.
Accent lighting.
A well done library, be it for books or music.
MikeC78
06-24-2008, 04:42 PM
Yeah, I think a nice tidy garage is a nice touch. A nice garage work area, organization and an epoxy finish on the concrete looks very nice. Also, get rid of the brass hardware throughout the house...
amulford
06-24-2008, 04:46 PM
^^^Definitely. I don't know 'bout neatness;), but it does help out to have a place to work out of...
Damn, I'm surprised I didn't think of a workshop:rolleyes:
Jstas
06-24-2008, 04:48 PM
A nice tidy garage with at least 1 lift and a 50 gallon compressor with at least 2, preferably 4 240 V service outlets. A parts washer, press, tire machine and wheel balancer are all necessities too. A tubing bender and a chop saw would be cool too. Add a fridge, a stereo and a network drop, whether wireless or wired and enough room for at least 3 cars and now you're talkin' garage!
Then again, I'd use that, not many others would.
You know what? Just build me a garage and put a small apartment on the back with some living space and I'll be happy!
Jstas
06-24-2008, 04:51 PM
I say what you did is a bit over kill, and may never get that out of the house. For most people I feel Cat 5e cable or above is fine and well add value to a home nothing like new flooring or something. I my self added a network system with wall jacks around the house have 4 areas / ports, that all goes to a closet which I built a shelf for. This closet I call my "IP closet" I also have my DSL line go there alone with 3 phone lines so they could be converted to Voip if needed. But now find I may add 2 others ports as its alway changing. New refrigerators can use a network, I found out the an home security can use a network I'm not sure where it will end. If devices like my toaster wishes to talk to the net it better come with a wireless gizmo, thats all I'm going to say.
Mine isn't overkill for what I'm doing with it. I'm working on a distributed media system to share media across a network to multiple computers. Added benefits include large, network attached storage space and shared resources. If I can make it easy and viable, I might be able to turn it in to something.
Jstas
06-24-2008, 04:55 PM
Have fun running fiber in your house, that stuff is very fragile and would be very difficult to run behind dry wall since you can not makes bends with it. Most people own a house, not an office complex. IMO, not worth the expense and hassle, and like DJ stated, overkill. 99.9% that the next homeowner isn't going to give two shits about fiber ran in the house, and you'd never get much value out of it, besides your own.
I have run fiber, not in my house but in a friend's house. It was quite simple. We pulled the cable all the way up from the basement into the attic. We then ran lines to the various walls and did drops straight down the walls. Worked out peachy.
If he had a slab or a crawl space, I'd have mounted the network equipment in an upstairs area and still ran it into a closet.
Aside from the value other than my own, what other value should I be looking to recover? If I run it and use it, I got all the value I need out of it. If I sell the house and get value out of it, great. I doubt I would lose value though.
Jstas
06-24-2008, 04:57 PM
I'm guessing you've never had to do it in a contemporary house on a slab- Total f-ing nightmare :eek:...
Not every "contemporary" house is built on a slab and honestly new construction is way easier than trying to run wires in a house 150 years old with plaster walls.
2 trampolines set at 22.5 degree angles 10 feet apart.
You could get one of these..
http://www.blackmarketbikes.com/uploaded_images/mob-done-799161.jpg
and then build one of these..
http://byfiles.storage.live.com/y1pUpHG1Kcrc-0WWoxEkOJX2ncnNp4fFoUm6JpBg-lAUzEGS-E9IfW2VCEy3D2cvJec5BNV43CW0Bw
to ride it on !!
oh man I have tons of ideas!
If there is a skating rink near by you can get the scrapings from the zambone and have a year round snowboard park!
dorokusai
06-24-2008, 05:20 PM
I've guess the stuff I seen was different(older?), you could never make a 90 with it.
Yea, that's older. You could tie a knot in some of the fiber we use at work.
unc2701
06-24-2008, 05:26 PM
Not every "contemporary" house is built on a slab and honestly new construction is way easier than trying to run wires in a house 150 years old with plaster walls.
Contemporary, referring to the housing style... aka modern. They tend to have a lot of joined, open spaces and bigass LVL's with things cantilevered out... As in no place to run wires :rolleyes: Throw in a slab first floor and it's a logisitical nightmare. I've done two houses of that style and both times it was a major hassle. Got lucky on the one and found an empty space where I could put in an access panel, cut a hole in the subfloor and run the wires on top of the ceiling over to a centrally located wall on the first floor. The other house took putting in crown, but his wife was happy.
Totally agree on the recent vs old house. Helped my boss put in some wiring on plaster & lathe walls. If that wasn't enough of a pain in the ass, there was blocking all in the stud space.
I've only pulled fiber once in a house- only had one "oops", but it was costly.
bruss
06-24-2008, 05:30 PM
I am curious as to how you terminated all those runs.. A switch capable of handling more than say 4 Fiber runs would start pushing the price point too high for home use... Maybe I am wrong..
I have run fiber, not in my house but in a friend's house. It was quite simple. We pulled the cable all the way up from the basement into the attic. We then ran lines to the various walls and did drops straight down the walls. Worked out peachy.
If he had a slab or a crawl space, I'd have mounted the network equipment in an upstairs area and still ran it into a closet.
Aside from the value other than my own, what other value should I be looking to recover? If I run it and use it, I got all the value I need out of it. If I sell the house and get value out of it, great. I doubt I would lose value though.
Jstas
06-24-2008, 05:58 PM
I am curious as to how you terminated all those runs.. A switch capable of handling more than say 4 Fiber runs would start pushing the price point too high for home use... Maybe I am wrong..
Does it matter how it was terminated? You think that gear is out of reach?
Here, Brocade Silkworm switch, 8 port fiber channel, for $499 Buy It Now. How much stuff is listed in the Flea market here for 3 times that and you're going to tell me that it is out of reach for the average home user?
http://cgi.ebay.com/BROCADE-SILKWORM-3250-8-PORT-FIBRE-CHANNEL-SWITCH_W0QQitemZ180255195301QQihZ008QQcategoryZ802 21QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
Here is another one for $300 BIN.
http://cgi.ebay.com/Brocade-3250-8-Port-2Gb-Fibre-SAN-Switch-w-SFP_W0QQitemZ160252730913QQihZ006QQcategoryZ80221Q QssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
The listings change daily. You can also go to any number of liquidator sites where resellers buy up gear coming off of leases or from companies folding up shop, refurb and sell equipment that is less than 3 years old in most cases for a song. I got an HP ProCurve switch with dual gig modules for about $300 shipped. My Cisco equipment (router and switch) I picked up for just over $600 total. I picked up an older Compaq storage array, just like this one:
http://cgi.ebay.com/Compaq-RA4100-Fibre-Channel-Storage-Array-146013-001_W0QQitemZ180257102880QQihZ008QQcategoryZ80217Q QssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
for about $450 shipped to the door and it was chock full of good clean drives and the liquidator even wiped the array and restored the RAID before they shipped.
My SCSI bridge came from Crossroads and it was a $148 shipped to my door as a factory refurb. Only has one module in it but that was all I needed. That was a SCREAMING deal on a $900 piece of equipment!
There is a ton of stuff you can do on the cheap. You don't necessarily need new stuff. Fiber optic stuff has been out for a long while now in computer years and stuff that is 3 years old is already in to the newer standards and generations of equipment. Do the research, take a look around. Bargains and deals are everywhere and you can put together some real powerful systems for pennies compared to new.
bruss
06-24-2008, 07:10 PM
lmao
disneyjoe7
06-24-2008, 07:23 PM
Mine isn't overkill for what I'm doing with it. I'm working on a distributed media system to share media across a network to multiple computers. Added benefits include large, network attached storage space and shared resources. If I can make it easy and viable, I might be able to turn it in to something.
What I'm saying is that if you where to sell your house tomorrow... Would this add to the sale? I say not overkill how would this connect to my TiVo, AVR, Voip, Alarm panel, Refrigerator, other computers, printers. If you need to be a super greek to understand it that's hard to sell as an improvement, what that is a improvement to you and no one else. Is that wrong no, but I say if its hard to get your money out of it if sold, its overkill.
george daniel
06-24-2008, 07:29 PM
Stripper pole and a rotating mirror ball?
Then you can change your name to Pacman (since Adam is no longer going to be using it).
add a trapeze and some lighting and you're good to go.
Jstas
06-24-2008, 08:05 PM
lmao
If it's so funny then why not enlighten us? You made a claim that was untrue and instead of backing it up, you're going to "laugh". If it's the "termination" question, it honestly doesn't matter. The fiber optic switch a friend and I installed in his house and then ran fiber optic cable for came in on a lease return. It was a $5500 switch new with 8 ports on it. It was from SMC I think. I think it was a Tiger. I don't remember for sure. He got a screaming deal on it because he works for a smaller networking company that supplies gear. Kinda like a CDW. It came in on an end-of-lease deal and wasn't in inventory. So he gave them $1100 for it and walked out the door. Has 8 ports and the fiber optic cables were terminated at shrouded wall plates to protect the ports with ST Single Mode Simplex style connectors. He sourced all of his equipment through his company. But you don't need to pay that much for a switch to do fiber to a room or two. A 3 year old unmanaged switch can be had quite cheap.
Jstas
06-24-2008, 08:13 PM
Is that wrong no, but I say if its hard to get your money out of it if sold, its overkill.
It honestly depends on what you are doing with your network. If you are going to put something together that is going to tax a Linksys WRT54G then you need what you call "overkill". But again, like I said before, it may not add value in the amount you put in to it but it certainly won't detract from the value.
But a "networked house" does not necessarily come with network equipment. It just already has all the cabling and terminations in place to allow the next owner to do what they wish. Fiber optic or copper, doesn't matter, as long as it is laid, it has the potential to add value.
But if I was setting up an extensive network in a house and I dumped thousands into hard core networking gear and ran my own fiber, I sure as hell would NOT leave that gear there. The cable, yes, 'cause that's fairly cheap. The gear, no. Especially if the guy who was buying the house had no clue what he was looking at. No perceived value, no perceived use, it then becomes a hard sell. But nerds like me need houses too and to me, that kind of network in a house is a selling point. It takes all kinds and just because you don't think it's worth it doesn't mean someone else won't. But I have a cousin that is a Realtor and she has yet to tell me that anyone has turned down bidding on a house or lowered a bid because of networking installed. She has called me to ask for a description of what is in houses she has sold.
madmax
06-24-2008, 11:24 PM
I'm not going deep into the pc wiring. This house already has a massive setup that I won't understand for a long time.
I've always liked built in vacuums. One thing I will certainly do is a mouse hole in the kitchen. That is a hole in the cabinet molding in a corner with a shop vac (downstairs somewhere) attached to it. Basic operation is flipping a switch then sweeping the kitchen floor towards the hole which sucks in all the debris.
madmax
disneyjoe7
06-24-2008, 11:41 PM
Well a vacuum mouse hole in the kitchen... Ok that's about as non greek improvement. You're you sure you don't need a toaster to get information from the web to toast your bread to the beautiful toast color?
Jstas
06-25-2008, 12:35 AM
Well a vacuum mouse hole in the kitchen... Ok that's about as non greek improvement. You're you sure you don't need a toaster to get information from the web to toast your bread to the beautiful toast color?
You really need to work on your spelling and sarcasm there because you edited that post and it still doesn't make any sense.
amulford
06-25-2008, 12:40 AM
Whole house vacs are pretty cool. There's a few different brands.
madmax
06-25-2008, 12:48 AM
Could I get an image of Jesus toasted into my bread if I choose the right optical cable with super fast data transfer and let my fridge handle the control? :)
amulford
06-25-2008, 12:58 AM
Can you imagine the highbeams associated with internet porn posted to the fridge???;)
Jstas
06-25-2008, 01:18 AM
Whole house vacs are pretty cool. There's a few different brands.
Yeah, I heard they really suck!
HAAAAAA! :D
disneyjoe7
06-25-2008, 02:16 AM
You really need to work on your spelling and sarcasm there because you edited that post and it still doesn't make any sense.
Sorry on the misfiring.
disneyjoe7
06-25-2008, 02:18 AM
Whole house vacs are pretty cool. There's a few different brands.
Have you seen the ones which go on when you hit the little mouse vacuum door?
markmarc
06-25-2008, 02:24 AM
1. Crown molding is a terrific touch.
2. Interior paint, personalizes the space.
3. Changing to raised panel doors
4. Gazebo or arch in the backyard with seating.
5. Full auto sprinkling system, including plant areas, and a fountain.
6. Upgrade the room lighting
7. Cornices over the windows
SCompRacer
06-25-2008, 02:39 AM
I've always liked built in vacuums. One thing I will certainly do is a mouse hole in the kitchen.
AKA toe kick vacuum pan. Ironing centers built into the wall are also convenient.
madmax
06-25-2008, 10:16 AM
Always wanted one of those plasma lifts (cabinet with remote control lift). Something like that might be cool in the bedroom.
I'm thinking moldings and other types of woodwork might be a pretty reasonable and fairly cheap upgrade if I can do it myself. Usually with the right tools its not real hard to cut properly if you are not afraid to mess up a few times.
madmax
exalted512
06-25-2008, 10:23 AM
Dude...I'm in the process of buying a new house...and there is an absolute perfect spot for a TV lift...I don't know how I didnt think of that before...only problem is I'm not sure theres enough depth to do it.
-Cody
exalted512
06-25-2008, 10:24 AM
On second thought...I just saw how expensive they are...ouch.
Theres some cheaper ones on ebay in the $400 range...a lot more affordable than the $1-3k range at the website i was looking at.
-Cody
Squidmon
06-25-2008, 10:40 AM
Crown moldings and thick, high baseboards are in right now.
For return on money, its always the kitchen and bathrooms.
Tumbled marble in the shower is really cool. Another thing is to match your cabinetry n countertops throughout the home. Don't go cheap on your countertops, solid surface at the least.
madmax
06-26-2008, 10:15 AM
On second thought...I just saw how expensive they are...ouch.
Theres some cheaper ones on ebay in the $400 range...a lot more affordable than the $1-3k range at the website i was looking at.
-Cody
Yea, the one I saw at a furniture store was $3200. Although nice I had to think if I had $3200 to spend I'd buy a projector instead.
madmax
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