Difficult Times Require Caution: Building Your Home

If you have come to the conclusion, like many other buyers in the Sequim and Port Angeles areas, that the perfect home does not exist in the current inventory of homes for sale, and you have decided to shop for a good quality home builder, this is a time to be very careful.

Many builders around the country have been struggling to survive.   This isn’t front page news, but it does have serious implications for you.   The first obvious implication that is playing itself out is that some builders are determined to provide the lowest bid, even if it means they might only work for minimum wage or less, and even if it means they might bid too low to finish your home.

The old maxim that, “Buyers hire the builder who provides the lowest bid” has gone to entirely new levels with this recession.   Now there are builders who work out of the back of a pick-up truck and do all the work themselves without subcontractors in order to come up with a bid that is so low, no established or credible custom home builder can compete.

This is a potential disaster for the home owner.   There are so many things that can go wrong, and do.   Cutting bids so low means compromise.   Remember the saying from your economics 101 class?   “There’s no such thing as a free lunch.”   Many builders are striving to survive, and if you don’t do your due diligence in selecting a good one, you may end up paying much more than you planned.

I strongly recommend that you go with an established custom home builder with a high customer satisfaction rate, and one who is financially strong and has been around for many years.   Don’t be fooled by a lower bid, if you have not given a strong builder the opportunity to compare his bid, apples to apples.

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Mortgage Rates Climbing as Predicted

Mortgage rates are starting to climb as predicted here and by many experts around the country.   Two weeks ago a client of mine obtained a 30-year fixed rate mortgage at 4.5%, but during the one week of negotiation on the property, his points increased by $1,500 to keep the interest rate locked in at 4.5%.

But this week the interest rate is already starting a steady long climb (4.91% today), which is to say, “If you intend to build your home and get a loan, you really cannot afford to wait for months.”   If you wait too long, your monthly payments will be hundreds of dollars more, and over 30 years, that can amount to a large sum of money.

Call us to get started on your house and building plans.   We’ll be glad to help with all the details.

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Sequim Home Builders: Custom Home Quality in Sequim

Sequim custom home builders–how many are there, and are they all the same?   There are many, including some one-man shows, but they are most certainly not building the same quality of homes.   Here’s what is interesting.   The average couple that walks through two homes, one that is a high quality custom home and the other a mediocre custom home, will have a predictable response. Approximately 85% of good people who walk through both homes will not be able to differentiate the quality.   They will walk through both homes and say in each of the homes the same thing, “This is nice.   Very nice.”   I learned it takes a trained eye to recognize the differences, but one you see the differences, they are glaring.

Why do I say this?   Because in 30 years in the real estate business this is what I have observed.   And as a real estate attorney for 20 years, I saw many clients who came to see me about the same problems with their builder.   I write articles like this to help good people avoid the nightmare of having to hire attorneys and spend money and live with high stress for one to two years.   Building a home should be an exciting experience with a happy ending, but for most it is not.   Ask 100 people who had their homes built by a builder, and you will find out this is true.

By the way, every builder has at least one happy client, but one should not extrapolate from one or a few happy clients that a builder is the best or the one you should hire.   There is so much more to the story of finding the right builder.

I have a passion to help people make good decisions and avoid nightmare scenarios, and part of that is to help people realize there is a gigantic difference between home builders.   Many people are aware of this generally, but then they don’t know how to select a builder and they pick the wrong one.   By the time they realize that, it is far too late to get off the bucking bronco.

I heard a man who works at a bank say recently that “such and such a builder” is well known as being the top premier builder in the area.   I didn’t correct him, but as a local attorney and Realtor I knew of many clients who had hired that builder and now say things like one did last week, “I would not have [such and such a builder] build me a dog house.”   That woman should know, because she hired that builder and she really regretted it.

There is a trail of devastation behind a number of builders, but there is one builder I know of who has no history of dissatisfied customers.   In fact, this builder has a higher percentage of absolutely ecstatic clients than any other builder in all of Clallam County.   Period.   There’s no builder who comes close in customer satisfaction.   None.   I’m a Realtor now, but for years I saw unhappy clients from other builders, but never from this one builder.

Who is the one builder who builds the highest quality homes in Sequim and Port Angeles and who has a higher percentage of truly happy customers than any other builder?   I guarantee it is Rick Anderson of Anderson Homes, LLC.   He’s been a home builder here since 1981 with over 400 homes under his belt.   The man is honest, has integrity, and will not compromise quality.   But what really surprises clients is how much they enjoy the process with Rick from the beginning of the planning all the way to completion and the walk-through.

Do not be fooled by slick words, a good looking smile, or promises of the lowest price per square foot.   Don’t be fooled by advertising or claims of awards.   I recommend you actually sit down with me and discuss your plans and how you want to work with a builder.   You will get absolute honesty and good information to help you make wise decisions.   Call me at 360-775-5424.   No charge.   No obligation.   You benefit from the additional information.   What’s the downside?   There isn’t one, but there is a downside if you chose the wrong builder.   I guarantee that.

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City Lot for Sale $69,900

Port Angeles City Lot For Sale
East 9th St. Near the Corner of Chase & 9th, Ready for a 3 Bedroom Home
Price:   $69,900
[To make an offer on this lot, call Chuck Marunde at 360-775-5424]

You won’t find many lots like this in the City of Port Angeles.   If you want to be in a peaceful neighborhood and at the same time in the epicenter of city shopping and facilities, you should drive by this lot now.

This lot is approximately 140 feet by 50 feet (precisely 49.98′ on 9th Street and 139.92′ deep), and as you can see from the site plan below (already done for you), there is plenty of room for a 3 bedroom home with 1,545 square feet and a garage with 475 square feet.

You are about midway between a modern Safeway and an Albertson’s that is getting remodeled right now.   You’re a short distance to elementary, middle, and high schools, a short drive to the city swimming pool, the senior citizen’s center, and a pet store.   Of course, Port Angeles has a gourmet coffee shop nearby with free Internet wireless, and if you like to go hiking, you’re about a 15 minute drive to the entrance to the Olympic National Park.   Want to take a walk on the dock along the waterfront downtown?   That would be about a five minute drive or a five minute bicycle ride.   Even the Hospital is less than two miles away.

At $69,900 you’re not likely to find a great city lot like this at a better price.

Much further from this central location, you can find lots for sale, but the prices are much higher.   For example, a search of the local MLS will reveal prices ranging from $83,500 to $99,900 to $215,000 and up.

From 9th Street, you can see this lot sits between two nice older homes. The neighborhood is attractive, and you’ll be proud to build your home here.

If you’re wondering, you don’t have to park on the curb.   There is an approved access easement on the back side of the lot entering through the alley easement.

This lot had more planning for a home site than normal, because the owner, a developer and builder in Port Angeles and Sequim, had detailed site plans drawn up, and those plans are available for your viewing.   We have scanned in some of the site plan, so you could get an idea of what you can build and where you could built it on this lot.

Here is part of the site plan and house plan that was prepared earlier:

What Can You Build on This Lot?   You could build this:

View the Plat here (lot 17)

View the Site Plan here for the house that was designed as a spec home

View the Floor Plan here

View the Front and Rear view of the house as planned

View the East side of the house as planned and View the West side of the house as planned

Lot 17 is the second lot west of Chase Street on the Northern side of East 9th Street.   Since there is no home yet built, a street address has not yet been issued.

Call Chuck Marunde at 360-775-5424

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Buying Beautiful Land – Avoiding Junk

Are you buying Sequim real estate, an existing home or a vacant lot? If you are searching for the ideal property, I recommend being careful about the neighborhood, and I’m talking about junk freaks. They live in every city and town in America. They’re typically nice people: they just happen to be junk freaks.

The problem isn’t the junk freak–it’s what he does to his property that will adversely effect your property. Who wants a disaster of a junk yard next store or even down the street. Many buyers have told me as we drove around looking at homes that they would not consider a particular listing because there was a grotesque junk yard nearby.

Driving around the block is important, but drive a larger radius and see just what is out there. You may not have to look over or through the fence at broken down cars, rusty barrels, and refrigerators from the 1960′s, but if you ever plan to sell your home (or your children do), consider that buyers either won’t buy a home near a disaster zone, or they will pay a lot less.

Even when you do buy a lot or home in an attractive area, does the neighborhood have CC&R’s (covenants) that prohibit junk yards and pig farms?

If you are moving to Sequim or Port Angeles from California or Arizona, I recommend that you do what many of my clients do before they arrive here. Email with me while you gather information to make a wise decision, search the MLS on my website, ask me about particular listings, the neighborhood, schools, recreation, and covenants. By the time you get here, you and I will already have a sweet list of good prospects, and you’ll feel like you have a good feel for the area.

Right now is the best buyer’s market for lots we’ve seen in this area for decades, and there hasn’t been a better time to build your own home with your own floor plan.   Interest rates will be rising soon, and so will building costs.

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Finding that Perfect Home

Retirees moving to Sequim from southern California and Arizona are finding out that the “perfect home” is not necessarily an existing home listed for sale.   Sure there are many homes for sale, but it’s amazing how many of these homes are just not exactly what buyers are looking for.

Sometimes the kitchen is perfect, but the floor plan of the rest of the house is not.   Sometimes the garage or “man cave” is perfect, but there’s no den or sewing room.   The house might be amazing, but the location of the lot and the placement of the house on the site is all wrong.   The water view from the lot might be great, and the house plan might be great, but the workmanship leaves something to be desired.   At $250 per square foot for a custom home that is not quite right, no thank you.

What can a buyer do?   Buy the ideal lot in the right location with a great site location for the house, and have the house built by a custom home builder who does the highest quality work.   Now you have the perfect home, and it is not someone else’s idea of a dream home–it is your dream home.

This is what Rick Anderson does.   Email for more information or call 360-452-4641.

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Building a Home? Be Wise. Be Careful.

A couple move to the Sequim area from California and plan to build their retirement home.   They’re excited about it, but it proves to be stressful just finding the right architect and the right builder.   How do they select their builder?   (Be careful of architects who try to lock you into “their” builder.   That’s another story for another time.)

They meet with three builders and get bids from all three.   The first builder they go to is Rick Anderson of Anderson Homes, LLC.   Rick has built over 400 homes here since 1981, and has a solid reputation for honesty and the highest quality of homes, but he also has extremely competitive rates when you compare apples with apples.   Rick plays no games and doesn’t boast.   He shows them exactly what he will do for them and gives them the honest-to-God truth about the true cost per square foot, and he is willing to guarantee that price in a written contract.

The second builder they go to looks at Rick Anderson’s bid, because the owners share that information with him.   He says, “Oh yea, I can beat that bid.”   Of course he can.   Shave here, shave there.   Use lesser material, don’t install this or that, cut this out.   That was easy.   But the nice clients don’t realize how this works, and they think, “Oh, good he beat Rick’s price.   Rick must have given us a high bid.”   (Not true.)

The third builder they go to looks at Rick Anderson’s bid and at the second bid.   He says, “Oh yea, I can beat both those bids.”   Of course, he can.   He just takes the second bid with those lesser specifications, and since he works out of the back of his pickup truck and plans to do ALL the work himself at what will work out to minimum wage, his bid is lower than the cost of the other two builders.

They select the builder who gave them the lowest bid.   He seems like a nice guy.

So what happens?   Let’s play this out with two possibilities.   First, what could happen if they choose the lowest bidder?   Well, he may not be able to finish the house as a one-man show who is struggling financially to survive and cutting every possible corner to get the cheapest materials.   He may not have the experience of a more experienced and financially stable builder, so this is also the kind of scenario you may have read about where the house only gets partially built and the builder bails.   Can you say, “nightmare scenario.”   That was the lowest bidder.   Do you really want to the lowest bidder?   I know.   Seemed good at the time.   How much stress would you like to add to your life when a different decision could have saved you a lot of money, stress, and time?

So what happens if you are wise enough to avoid the one-man lowest bidder?   You hire the middle bidder.   Okay.   Here’s how that plays out many many times. When the house is completed, three months past its completion date, you calculate that you have paid more than the original guaranteed bid that Rick Anderson gave you.   There were extras, change orders, and surprises during the entire construction process, starting with the excavation and concrete and all the way through to the end.   You’re tired of fighting with the builder.   You feel like he has misrepresented the construction process and costs from the get go, but once you had signed the contract and work began, you felt you were in too deep to go back.

You talk to your neighbors who had their house built by Rick Anderson.   You ask them how it went, and they start smiling and chatting enthusiastically about how much they love their home, about how enjoyable it was working with Rick, and how their home was finished on time and at the original guaratneed contract price.   You look at the quality of their home inside, and you can’t help comparing the trim and the cabinets and the flooring, and the doors and hardware to your own home.   You end up saying what a lot of people say, but they hate to admit it.   “We should have hired Rick Anderson.”

I kid you not.   This is an honest and real scenario.   This happens all the time.   This is not sales hype or exaggeration.   I’ve written this bold honest article to try to break through to good people moving here from California and Arizona who make the two mistakes above.   Do you know the biggest mistake these folks made?   They never brought those two lower bids back to Rick Anderson to have him do a honest apples verses apples comparison.   He would have been absolutely honest about the comparison, and he never pressures anyone to sign a contract.   Anyone who wants to make fully informed and wise decisions about building their retirement home ought to do a true comparison.   They could have and should have brought those bids back for another meeting with Rick Anderson.   Then they could have made intelligent and fully informed decisions.   Now they know that.   Now you know this.

So, what are you going to do?

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Interest Rates Bottom Out: Now is the Time to Build

Click on Image to Enlarge

In the early 1960′s a loaf of bread was 35 cents, a dozen eggs 50 cents, a gallon of milk 75 cents, and a postage stamp was only 5 cents. A 30 year fixed rate mortgage was in the 5% range. Today that same mortgage interest rate is 4.78%, the lowest it has been in 50 years.

No wonder there is a spurt of buyer activity in California,   Nevada, and from Bellingham to Port Angeles.   It has become apparent to even the average person that now is the time to pull the trigger and buy a house or have one built.

There’s a unique convergence of circumstances right now that makes this an extraordinary buyer’s market.

First, interest are the lowest they’ve been in 50 years.   Does anyone think for a second that interest rates are going any lower?   No, but they will go back up.

Second, real estate prices are dragging rock bottom and have been for a while.   Many homes have been selling for less than the mortgage balance. It is just not likely there is much room, if any, for real estate prices to go lower, especially with buyers stepping back into the market so suddenly.

Third, the inventory of homes for sale is the best it has been in my three decades in the business, although I do think buyers are cherry picking the best homes on the market.

In a market where you had one or two of these circumstances, you would have a buyer’s market.   Now we have all three, which I call an extraordinary buyer’s market.   Soon this opportunity will be gone. There is no doubt about this.

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How to Save Money and Stress Building Your Home

Many people plan to build their home in Sequim or Port Angeles, but do not know how to select a good builder. The following is a true story. The names have been changed. I have to be careful about slander or defamation, so I don’t mention anyone or any companies. I heard many stories just like this during 20 years of law practice, and I’ve written extensively about builders who misrepresent the cost of construction. Unfortunately, the majority of good people still think the lowest bidder is the contractor to hire. Only after great stress and a lot of extra money do they ever begin to admit to themselves that they chose the wrong builder. Why do people keep going down that path like sheep to the slaughter? After all these years I think I now know why. People simply don’t believe articles like this. They don’t believe I’m telling the truth. Well, you decide for yourself if you think this true story is relevant to you. I have inserted some relevant comments where appropriate.

Question:

Hello, My name is Tom Jones. Last year my wife and I purchased a lot in [city deleted] in hopes of building our retirement home. After interviewing and dealing with several contractors in the area, we were not convinced that they could build our home as we wanted it, since we do not live in Washington. We needed them to communicate effectively and constantly with us about the project and budget.

We went to our real estate agent (and friend) for advise and to suggest a builder. He did suggest one and we made contact with the builder. He seemed friendly and honest [they all do, and some of the slickest ones are extremely good at winning you over], was willing to work closely with us on communicating and about budget. [Of course they'll all say they will do this.] He did seem to have some unconventional estimating methods [red flag] and at times a bit headstrong [red flag, your builder is working for you, not the other way around] and vague [red flag] when confronted about the pricing. [You should have walked away right then. Seriously. Vague on pricing means he intends to jack up the costs without your agreement in the beginning, but once he has your John Henry on that contract, he's got you. And he knows that.] At one point, a $3000.00 16′x8′ insulated garage door finally got reduced to $1600 after I told him I refuse to pay the $3,000 and the company that makes the door would do it for $2,000. I have done some related work to contracting in my lifetime, so I do understand some of the “quirks” each contractor has. ["Quirks" are not acceptable. Honesty does not require quirks of any kind.]

Anyway, During our meetings we would discuss other parts of the project, like landscaping, concrete work, interior trim finishes, and so on. One area of discussion was regarding a driveway. His suggestion was to put in gravel, however the CC&R’s state that you can only have concrete or asphalt. [This lack of attention by the builder could have gotten you into an expensive problem, since the builder would have put you in violation of the CC&R's.] On our last contact, we discussed getting a price for concrete and signed a contract. [Never sign a contract with a builder without knowing the exact price to build the home with everything included, and only sign with a builder who guarantees the contract price in writing.]

Being a few weeks away from closing on my construction loan, I kept inquiring about the driveway cost. Finally, the day before I was to sign loan papers, I received an email stating that the driveway would be a minimum of $4,000, but could be as little as $1500. That didn’t make sense. [Of course, it didn't. Red flag, red flag. Folks, this nice person who is apparently honest and was trying to get a good builder for his home, has had many red flags. These red flags don't keep popping up with a builder who has integrity and is absolutely honest with you from the first email or the first meeting.]

After this huge discrepancy on the driveway costs, my wife and I discussed our options and decided that we were not comfortable with all this and decided not to sign the loan papers. The next day, we received a phone message from the builder and he wants to start digging for foundations tomorrow. I informed him that there are no funds, as we did not sign loan docs and there is not enough money in our personal account to cover the driveway, moving expenses, window coverings and any other expenses that would be necessary to move in.

We ended up paying $1,800 to settle or what I assume made the contract null and void. My wife and I are not sure what we can do now. Can we try to hire another contractor to build our home without any repercussion from this one? [That depends on your contract and whether your builder signed an agreement with release language and with no other rights to sue or be sued.] What happens to the building permit, is it in his name, Can we change that? How long do they last? [Again, that depends on the builder and how he applied for the permit, but if he did it right the permit should be in your name on the application and he should only be listed as the contractor.] I am sorry for rambling on in this email, however we are both upset about the turn of events and are not sure that [city deleted] is right for us to retire in. [Wait a minute. You are going to decide whether or not this area is the right place to retire for the rest of your life based on a bad contractor you hired? You got stuck with a bad builder, but I will shout from the mountain tops that there are more wonderful and kind people in this area than any place I have ever lived, and probably more than where you live now. Don't make an irrational decision on where you retire based on one bad person. My goodness, find a place in these United States where everyone is perfect and absolutely honest, and you are in another galaxy my friend.] Any help or advice will be greatly appreciated.

Answer:

I read your email. I’m sorry to hear you had such a nightmare with a builder. I’m not sure who your builder was, but believe it or not, this is a very similar story to what I’ve been hearing for 20 years. One of my passions is trying to help people who are planning to build their next home connect with a good, honest, and competent builder. While that seems pretty simple, it is a process that is full of traps, and there are many wolves in sheep’s’ clothing out there who will say anything to get customers to sign a contract. The checklist of little tricks and deception is very long. I’m sorry you had such a bad experience like this. [See my notes as part of this answer inserted in brackets inside the question above.]

On the other hand, I think it is good that you are out from under that contract, so you can move on, even if the builder did extort a fee from you. As far as moving on to a new builder, I have a couple of thoughts.

Many professionals in my business are asked for referrals to a builder, and for some odd reason they think they have to give three names, including the one they know is the best and two others they don’t really want to recommend. Why do they do this? Well, some are thinking they have to because of liability reasons. They don’t want to be responsible if a builder does something wrong, and they think it could come back to bite them. Poppycock! If I know the best dentist, I’m not recommending two others who don’t deserve the referral. If I know the best doctor, lawyer, accountant, or auto mechanic, I will recommend that one. I owe that kind of honesty to the person who asked for my opinion. So I will boldly recommend a builder here. So what if I offend other builders. You’re reading this article to get the truth, not some watered down version of what I think is “safe” to share.

A builder I love to refer people to because of his absolute integrity and because he never ever mistreats clients is Rick Anderson. Let me be absolutely honest and share a small frustration. Rick has lost clients that I know of because they got a lower bid from someone else who made promises that sounded good, but what the customer did not know is that comparing Rick’s estimate or project manual with one of these other builders is not comparing apples with apples. It’s very easy for a builder to generate a lower bid. In fact, they will do it every time. It’s easy to do by just cutting something out or using an inferior material. So if it is a lower bid you’re shopping for, I can guarantee you will find it. But Rick has never misrepresented the true cost of work just to get a client to sign a contract and then keep sucking more money out of the client like so many builders do. By the way, Rick never talks this bold about himself or his company, but I will–for your sake. I can tell you after 20 years of law practice that the lowest bidder is often the most expensive builder by the time the house is completed, unless you’re building a cracker box with the cheapest material. Even most, if not all, of the builders who do build cracker boxes misrepresent their cost per square foot just to suck the clients in the front door. (A former employee of [name deleted] wrote on a Seattle blog that in the hundreds of homes that were built while he worked there, not a single home was ever built for the advertised $38 per square foot. Not one.) Rick guarantees his contract price and people always know what they are getting from the beginning.

I think it would be fair to say that some people who hired a builder with a lower bid often end up paying more than they would have if they would have hired Rick in the beginning. One other huge factor that is true, but again people don’t seem to know this, is that the process with Rick is almost always much smoother and happier for clients, AND the finished product is of a much higher quality. I could give you a lot of evidence on the quality issue, but not in this short answer.

If you have a house plan already, why don’t you email or send it to me, and I’ll ask Rick Anderson to go over it and see what he can build it for. He is very enjoyable to work with. By the way, don’t make the huge mistake some people make. They go to Rick Anderson and get an estimate, and then they go to a couple of other builders and get a lower estimate and immediatley hire that builder with the lowest bid WITHOUT going back to Rick for an honest comparison. Remember, you will always get a lower bid. That’s easy for them to generate. Don’t you want an honest comparison?

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New Home Construction Picks Up Pace

New home construction picked up in February and surprised economists. The Commerce Department said sales rose 4.7 percent to a 337,000 annual pace, the fastest increase since April last year. The inventory of homes available for sale in February was at 330,000, the smallest since June 2002. The February sales pace left the supply of homes available for sale at 12.2 month’s worth.   In Clallam County and Sequim and Port Angeles, it has been slow going for new home construction, but some are still building.

The news has focused lately on bad news, and no doubt there is plenty of bad news, but there is also a large contingent in our population who are financially doing just fine and are shopping for their next home. Some are looking at existing homes, but many are still planning to build their own dream home. For these people, the timing could not be better, and with careful planning and wise decisions, by virtue of timing and events, they have won the lottery.

I do have a concern for buyers who are ready, willing, and able, but who are in a waiting mode because they are thinking that somehow the future will be better than the present. The spending our federal government is doing to help the economy recover, including the injection of $1.2 trillion dollars is going to create inflationary pressure on two sides: interest rates will be pushed higher very soon, and price inflation on products and services (including lots and homes) will at some point gain momentum.   This will quickly end the perfect storm opportunity for buyers, and when it starts to happen, there will be no going back.

I recommend planning and moving forward, if you are in a position to buy or build, not rashly and not without good counsel, but in a way that allows you to take advantage of this extraordinary time we find ourselves living in.

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