Have you gone to the mall and started to wash your hands and feel sooo uncomfortable? Maybe the space between the faucet and the lavatory is too narrow or small - you can't move your hands too well. When washing your hands, you hit the walls of the lavatory and feel like you you are actually getting the germs from other people's whashing? Maybe the splash of water is not right that splatter gets into your clothes? Are the designer faucets a work of art and good to look at but is not practical when brushing or washing?
Here are the principles to the Perfect Match of a faucet and Lavatory:
1. When you open the faucet in its maximum opening, splatter will not get in to your clothes.
2. You can freely move your hands while washing them and not touch the walls of the lavatory.
3. When you open the faucet half way, the water hits the drain in the middle or a little behind it. Not in front of it.
4. Its big enough that when washing your face, most of the water will go in the lav.
Have you bought the Perfect Match? Let me know..
Keep on Dreaming..
Emil M.
4.
Do you want the complex process of building your home be brought to a minimum? Do you want to know how to build your house the right way and save money for your future needs? Here at Your Home, Your Dream Philippines we have PRACTICAL tips for home building and renovation. A Coaching Program that can be customised just for you that can possibly save you Millions! Very easy & helpful. Very Practical! Enter your e-mail below so you can get updates on the posts.
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Saturday, December 31, 2011
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Don't Waste that Space under your Bed! Tips from Your Home Your Dream Philippines
Hello again Dreamers!
Sorry i was not able to post the past few weeks. terribly busy at work and had a lot of personal stuff to work on.
Image: http://www.gowfb.ca/4-PC-Nevis-Platform-Bedroom-Furniture-Set-by-Modus-Furniture-International-p-3951.php?products_id=3951
Here is the tip of the day!
When planning your space for a small home, Get a bed that has a clear open space at the bottom about 400 milimeters. the under side of the bed is a very big space to store your stuff like ironing board, shoes (there are shoe racks that are designed to fit under the bed), collapsible bags, narrow boxes for books and old magazines! Just make sure you cover the openings with either bed linings that is cloth or a solid cabinet type door with recessed handles.
Now you have a second cabinet. There are plastic containers that are now specifically designed to fit under the bed. so dust wont get into your things.
Small space or big space, the more stuff you can neatly keep near your bedroom, the less time you will spen in the attic to look for stuff you need.
Think big for your small space...
Emil M.
Sorry i was not able to post the past few weeks. terribly busy at work and had a lot of personal stuff to work on.
Image: http://www.gowfb.ca/4-PC-Nevis-Platform-Bedroom-Furniture-Set-by-Modus-Furniture-International-p-3951.php?products_id=3951
Here is the tip of the day!
When planning your space for a small home, Get a bed that has a clear open space at the bottom about 400 milimeters. the under side of the bed is a very big space to store your stuff like ironing board, shoes (there are shoe racks that are designed to fit under the bed), collapsible bags, narrow boxes for books and old magazines! Just make sure you cover the openings with either bed linings that is cloth or a solid cabinet type door with recessed handles.
Now you have a second cabinet. There are plastic containers that are now specifically designed to fit under the bed. so dust wont get into your things.
Small space or big space, the more stuff you can neatly keep near your bedroom, the less time you will spen in the attic to look for stuff you need.
Think big for your small space...
Emil M.

Thursday, November 17, 2011
Inspiration to go do what you want - To Get You Started in Building Your Home
Carey Casey Inspiration
Wow!
In one word, that is how i can describe the inspiring talk of Carey Casey in Ted.com.
In one word, that is how i can describe the inspiring talk of Carey Casey in Ted.com.
Before you read further, go to http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/caroline_casey_looking_past_limits.html
Its all about being free and what do you want to become. The interesting twist in her story is that she is legally blind and that did not make a difference in her pursuit of her dreams. She did not even know this up until her 17th birthday. Well, credit was given to her parents who did not pity her but was raised like any other daughter or child.
She was taught to be tough. No special needs in school just to survive. It was ingrained in her that "Believe that I could!"
Everything in her life was moving just fine but one day in 1999, her eyes just suddenly stopped working. as if all the stress in her professional life climbing the corporate ladder at a global consulting firm just poured in and cause her eyes to shut down.
The turning point in her life was when her doctor asked her "why are you fighting to be what you are not?.. What what do you want to be when you are little?"
"Time to stop fighting and do something different.. something that you want to be.."
She explained that at that point it was "Game's up" the fact that her eyes shut, was a time of dispair. She was angry, broken, did not understand what was going on.
With the advice from her doctor, which was not medical advice, she was to pursue her dream and live a different life.
She wanted to become her childhood hero in Mogley, the elephant handler.
She wanted to go to India and handle an elephant to raise awarness for those with challenges in their eyesight! Carey made it all happen in 9 months.
Make change happen in your life.
Be the very best of one's self.
Remove all labels.
Be extraordinary and wonderful.
Its all about being free and what do you want to become. The interesting twist in her story is that she is legally blind and that did not make a difference in her pursuit of her dreams. She did not even know this up until her 17th birthday. Well, credit was given to her parents who did not pity her but was raised like any other daughter or child.
She was taught to be tough. No special needs in school just to survive. It was ingrained in her that "Believe that I could!"
Everything in her life was moving just fine but one day in 1999, her eyes just suddenly stopped working. as if all the stress in her professional life climbing the corporate ladder at a global consulting firm just poured in and cause her eyes to shut down.
The turning point in her life was when her doctor asked her "why are you fighting to be what you are not?.. What what do you want to be when you are little?"
"Time to stop fighting and do something different.. something that you want to be.."
She explained that at that point it was "Game's up" the fact that her eyes shut, was a time of dispair. She was angry, broken, did not understand what was going on.
With the advice from her doctor, which was not medical advice, she was to pursue her dream and live a different life.
She wanted to become her childhood hero in Mogley, the elephant handler.
She wanted to go to India and handle an elephant to raise awarness for those with challenges in their eyesight! Carey made it all happen in 9 months.
Make change happen in your life.
Be the very best of one's self.
Remove all labels.
Be extraordinary and wonderful.
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Seminar for Your home Your Dream and Get Inspirations from Stumbleupon.com
Welcome back dreamers!
The past few days, I was collecting a lot of photos of kitchen and living rooms. Boy did I get a lot of wonderful and beautiful pictures!! So INSPIRING! If you happened to miss my latest post (Just scroll down to see it, what a BEAUTIFUL room..), the article came from the site Stumbleupon.com. This website is such a powerful tool. you get to be directed to websites or articles that people already gave their thumbs-up. Meaning they like it so much, they vote for it. Its like the "Like" button at facebook although I do not know who got the idea first.
The idea is to go to Stumbleupon then change the category to Architecture or Design. then "Go Stumble"!
I mentioned this technique to all you dreamers to get inspiration for your home. No need to buy those magazines for now. You can do that later if budget permits. For me, The internet is just full of resources especially pictures- wonderful and great shots.
As for most pictures, just "right-click" the photo and save it into your computer. I suggest you put them all in one file. Just go crazy saving all the pictures. no need to look for your specific designs yet. You never know, some designs may be better than what you previously conceived. you can just edit , rename and transfer to new folder the ones you pick out for your home as inspiration later.
Look at this design concept:
This came from 1 Kind Design. The house is a super narrow house. and the living room concept is very different. Its a long living room with no furniture. Very radical but practical for such a narrow house. It has lots of seating and creative and stylish storage. You can make it a flexible dining or a very long living room.
Be inspired. Check the internet, Stumbleupon, and other great sites.
Be inspired some more..
As for the Seminar part of this Post, I am starting to conceive a seminar for all you dreamers out there. I am looking at February or March 2012 this year at Taguig City, Metro Manila for this Learning Event. I am hoping to connect with people wanting to build their dream home the RIGHT way. Its going to be a seminar on the basics and a lot of Question and Answer portions. Learn from me and other home building veterans. This will be one of a kind. Spread the word for this seminar. Its not too late to build the right way.
Keep on dreaming.
Emil M.
The past few days, I was collecting a lot of photos of kitchen and living rooms. Boy did I get a lot of wonderful and beautiful pictures!! So INSPIRING! If you happened to miss my latest post (Just scroll down to see it, what a BEAUTIFUL room..), the article came from the site Stumbleupon.com. This website is such a powerful tool. you get to be directed to websites or articles that people already gave their thumbs-up. Meaning they like it so much, they vote for it. Its like the "Like" button at facebook although I do not know who got the idea first.
The idea is to go to Stumbleupon then change the category to Architecture or Design. then "Go Stumble"!
I mentioned this technique to all you dreamers to get inspiration for your home. No need to buy those magazines for now. You can do that later if budget permits. For me, The internet is just full of resources especially pictures- wonderful and great shots.
As for most pictures, just "right-click" the photo and save it into your computer. I suggest you put them all in one file. Just go crazy saving all the pictures. no need to look for your specific designs yet. You never know, some designs may be better than what you previously conceived. you can just edit , rename and transfer to new folder the ones you pick out for your home as inspiration later.
Look at this design concept:
This came from 1 Kind Design. The house is a super narrow house. and the living room concept is very different. Its a long living room with no furniture. Very radical but practical for such a narrow house. It has lots of seating and creative and stylish storage. You can make it a flexible dining or a very long living room.
Be inspired. Check the internet, Stumbleupon, and other great sites.
Be inspired some more..
As for the Seminar part of this Post, I am starting to conceive a seminar for all you dreamers out there. I am looking at February or March 2012 this year at Taguig City, Metro Manila for this Learning Event. I am hoping to connect with people wanting to build their dream home the RIGHT way. Its going to be a seminar on the basics and a lot of Question and Answer portions. Learn from me and other home building veterans. This will be one of a kind. Spread the word for this seminar. Its not too late to build the right way.
Keep on dreaming.
Emil M.
Friday, October 14, 2011
Complete Renovation Article
I saw the article below from Stumbleupon.com
Amazing apartment renovation! I wish i has the same opportunity to renovate like them. It looks pretty expensive though.. What an inspiration.. Here is the article (Click on the link below to see the "Before" Photos and see the finished product in the pictures below)..
http://www.desiretoinspire.net/blog/2010/8/13/a-completely-renovated-first-apartment.html
CLICK on the picture to make it bigger.. WOW!!!
Amazing apartment renovation! I wish i has the same opportunity to renovate like them. It looks pretty expensive though.. What an inspiration.. Here is the article (Click on the link below to see the "Before" Photos and see the finished product in the pictures below)..
http://www.desiretoinspire.net/blog/2010/8/13/a-completely-renovated-first-apartment.html
CLICK on the picture to make it bigger.. WOW!!!
Living Room and Kitchen
Kitchen up-close
Living/ TV Room with Dining Set for two.. Nice Clock..
Study / Office with Cabinets and Shelves
Small but beautiful Toilet and Bath Combo
Simple Bedroom - See the accent Green walls.. Nice combination!
Keep on being inspired by wonderful homes and room design ideas. Who wants to build one?
Keep on Dreaming..
Emil M.
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Starting to build your Dream Home
I was consulting with someone needing my advice on house construction just today. We have been exchanging some e-mails already but basically, the house is already finished.. and nothing more we can do about it.. its just sad to know there are still some people getting bad advise and not getting their money's worth on the house they are building.
I would like to stress the importance of having your construction manager / consultant/ coach at the START of the project. Even way ahead of time. Starting the build right, before getting a contractor, before the contract is signed and before the loans are made, is removing many headaces that will arise from starting the build poorly.
Just a tip, some banks do not release the full loan amount outright. They release it depending on the accomplishment of the house. They do not want to risk that the whole loan can be just defaulted and not paid without the collateral of a partially built house. Some banks also do not relase a loan without a construction contract with a contractor.
What if at the begining, you already purchased materials that were supposed to be supplied by your contractor, how do you subtract them?
Do not be at the losing end of the contract just because you do not know better.
Start right , build right.
Emil M.
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Home Construction - Contract and Contractors
Tips for the day..
1. Have a Construction Contract - Always.. Always.. Always. Never have a hand-shake contract with your builder. You are going to spend hundreds to millions of pesos or dollars for your home and you will not have a contract? No way. You should know what you are getting at the very start.
2. Never have someone act on your behalf to coordinate with your builder (Assuming you are out of the country) who is not an expert in the home construction business. Don't go in and build blind and not knowing what to do.
Lets expound on item 1 and assume you are dealing with a builder who is also your designer.
There are many of those around who will build your house and they will give you "free design". They say they have an in-house architect who will do it for them. Hhmm.. Sounds convincing. Really, nothing is absolutely free in the construction business.
For this you need the following as an end product:
The blue prints of the house
A visual sketch or perspective of the finished house (one or two views) – colored.
A Materials Specification booklet (Like what type of wood to be used and where. How thick the glass will be for the windows, how thick the aluminum window frames will be, brand of tiles, thickness of the roof.. and so many more.)
The construction contract (With the following: Cost to build the whole project, Detailed bill of materials and bill of quantities and Construction duration)
These will form part of the contract. The builder will sign each page (yes each page) and if you accept, you will also sign each page (yeas again.. each page). That’s how it is in business and home construction.
Think about it like a new car sales brochure. The image of the car is in the front, the details of the engine, brakes, suspension, leather seats, backing sensors, auto-alarm system, fog-lamps and the like are at are at the back. And to think this is not the contract yet. This is to not deceive the buyer on what they are getting and not getting and how much.
Build your home the right way. Have a contract and have an experienced professional guide you along the way. Your dream home will hopefully have happy memories while building it.
Keep on Dreaming.
Note: for all these, consult a licensed professional engineer who is knowledgeable in the home construction business and legal counsel.
1. Have a Construction Contract - Always.. Always.. Always. Never have a hand-shake contract with your builder. You are going to spend hundreds to millions of pesos or dollars for your home and you will not have a contract? No way. You should know what you are getting at the very start.
2. Never have someone act on your behalf to coordinate with your builder (Assuming you are out of the country) who is not an expert in the home construction business. Don't go in and build blind and not knowing what to do.
Lets expound on item 1 and assume you are dealing with a builder who is also your designer.
There are many of those around who will build your house and they will give you "free design". They say they have an in-house architect who will do it for them. Hhmm.. Sounds convincing. Really, nothing is absolutely free in the construction business.
For this you need the following as an end product:
The blue prints of the house
A visual sketch or perspective of the finished house (one or two views) – colored.
A Materials Specification booklet (Like what type of wood to be used and where. How thick the glass will be for the windows, how thick the aluminum window frames will be, brand of tiles, thickness of the roof.. and so many more.)
The construction contract (With the following: Cost to build the whole project, Detailed bill of materials and bill of quantities and Construction duration)
These will form part of the contract. The builder will sign each page (yes each page) and if you accept, you will also sign each page (yeas again.. each page). That’s how it is in business and home construction.
Think about it like a new car sales brochure. The image of the car is in the front, the details of the engine, brakes, suspension, leather seats, backing sensors, auto-alarm system, fog-lamps and the like are at are at the back. And to think this is not the contract yet. This is to not deceive the buyer on what they are getting and not getting and how much.
Build your home the right way. Have a contract and have an experienced professional guide you along the way. Your dream home will hopefully have happy memories while building it.
Keep on Dreaming.
Note: for all these, consult a licensed professional engineer who is knowledgeable in the home construction business and legal counsel.
Thursday, August 4, 2011
Peace of mind and no more guessing in Home Construction
Imagine yourself just starting to build your dream home. All the concepts and the house plans are finished. Now you just need to build it. How do you start? Do you have bidding from 3 different contractors? Do you get the contractor that your close friend got when they did their home? What to do next…?
Imagine yourself already building your dream home. You are in the middle of the construction and the walls are starting to come up and the roof is already there. The exterior walls are stable but not finished or painted yet. Then you decide you think you can afford to add another room for storage and a future bedroom. You ask your architect to lay it out where you want in the house plans. Perfect you say to yourself. You show it to your builder and ask how much it will take to add this room. After a day, he gives you the estimate- 265,000 pesos. Is this the right price for the room?
What is the value or advantage of having a construction coach in building your home?
(1) Peace of mind that you are only paying for what you need and at the right price.
(2) Someone technically knowledgeable about construction will back you up and have your best interest in mind.
(3) Guessing will be put to a minimum if not completely removed.
(4) You will not do the mistakes of other people by getting good advice and opening up options that you are confident in making.
Do you want peace of mind and not make the same mistakes other already did? Do you want to save money and quit guessing if the price is right? Having a home construction coach will be the best option.
Dream big always...
Emil M.
Monday, July 4, 2011
Tips that YOU WANT from Your Home, Your Dream
Hey guys! Anyone out there busy building their dream home? Helpful tips are all over the place in this blog.. just click at any of the posts to get INSTANT and FREE advice on how to build your home.
If you did not find any helpful tip here.. I will answer it the best way i can if you just type it in your comment just under this blog post! ANYTHING so that i can help.
I have seen countless houses being built the wrong way and i do not want you to make the same MISTAKE!
Glad i can help..
Let's start building!!!
- Emil M.
If you did not find any helpful tip here.. I will answer it the best way i can if you just type it in your comment just under this blog post! ANYTHING so that i can help.
I have seen countless houses being built the wrong way and i do not want you to make the same MISTAKE!
Glad i can help..
Let's start building!!!
- Emil M.
Friday, June 10, 2011
Tips for choosing Paint Colors
Before reading the post below, i would like to share a Color Visualizer software from the website below. Try it NOW (You may need a fast internet connection to fully appreciate the visualizer)
https://www.sherwin-williams.com/visualizer/__________________________________
Tips for Choosing Interior Paint Colors
Written by: Chris BibeyChoosing an interior paint color can be a lot of fun. But this fun can turn to disaster if you make the wrong decision. It is very important that you choose a color that you are going to be happy with for many years to come. The last thing you want to do is find yourself painting the same room over and over again. Not only is this a waste of money, but it can take up a lot of time as well. The good thing is that choosing an interior paint color can be an easy process with these five tips:
1. What works with your current décor? You need to consider all details of your current color scheme including your furniture, wall art, flooring, trim, and much more. You may be redoing your entire room. In this case, you do not have to worry too much about matching everything up. That being said, some people just paint – they are not buying everything else.
2. Lighter colors will make your room look bigger. This is something that you may or may not be concerned with. It all depends on the size of your home and the room that you are painting. But as a general rule of thumb, if you want a room to appear bigger you should opt for a lighter color.
3. Don’t forget about the flow from one room to the next. Depending on the layout of your home, you may have one room that flows directly into another. This means that you have to choose a paint color that suits both. The last thing you want is for a clash of colors.
4. Trim counts. There is a good chance that your home has baseboards, door trim, crown molding, etc. Most people opt to keep their trim white, but you do not have to fall in line with everybody else. It is your job to decide what you want your trim to look like – just make sure you consider this color before you start on the walls.
5. Neutral for selling your home. If you believe that you may sell your home in the future it is a good idea to opt for neutral paint colors. Not every prospective buyer will love neutral paint, but the majority of them will. On top of this, neutral colors are the easiest to match with any décor.
If you are in the process of selecting interior paint colors for your home, follow the five tips listed above.
The tips just mentioned are so simple they can be applied right away! don't just imitate the colors of your neighbor or the celebrity house you just saw on TV. Choose it based on your taste and personality.
Get it right the first time!
Lets start building..
Emil M.
Disclaimer: I am not affiliated or in anyway connected to the author of the article or the Color Visualizer program maker and its marketers. For appreciation purposes only. Thanks!
1. What works with your current décor? You need to consider all details of your current color scheme including your furniture, wall art, flooring, trim, and much more. You may be redoing your entire room. In this case, you do not have to worry too much about matching everything up. That being said, some people just paint – they are not buying everything else.
2. Lighter colors will make your room look bigger. This is something that you may or may not be concerned with. It all depends on the size of your home and the room that you are painting. But as a general rule of thumb, if you want a room to appear bigger you should opt for a lighter color.
3. Don’t forget about the flow from one room to the next. Depending on the layout of your home, you may have one room that flows directly into another. This means that you have to choose a paint color that suits both. The last thing you want is for a clash of colors.
4. Trim counts. There is a good chance that your home has baseboards, door trim, crown molding, etc. Most people opt to keep their trim white, but you do not have to fall in line with everybody else. It is your job to decide what you want your trim to look like – just make sure you consider this color before you start on the walls.
5. Neutral for selling your home. If you believe that you may sell your home in the future it is a good idea to opt for neutral paint colors. Not every prospective buyer will love neutral paint, but the majority of them will. On top of this, neutral colors are the easiest to match with any décor.
If you are in the process of selecting interior paint colors for your home, follow the five tips listed above.
The tips just mentioned are so simple they can be applied right away! don't just imitate the colors of your neighbor or the celebrity house you just saw on TV. Choose it based on your taste and personality.
Get it right the first time!
Lets start building..
Emil M.
Disclaimer: I am not affiliated or in anyway connected to the author of the article or the Color Visualizer program maker and its marketers. For appreciation purposes only. Thanks!
Friday, June 3, 2011
Bathroom Furniture - Bright Ideas
Hi Dreamers!
I came accross the website http://www.homebuilding.co.uk/feature/bright-ideas-bathroom-furniture . Its a UK site with great bathroom furniture. Great Ideas and Great Pictures! Here is the article below..
BRIGHT IDEAS FOR BATHROOM FURNITURE
Utilising the space beneath the basin is a growing trend, with double vanity units or those designed to accommodate wide contemporary basins particularly popular. Choose vanity units with dividers and/or removable drawer organisers – which can be taken out and cleaned in the dish washer in the event of a leak – to help separate out the toilet rolls from the shampoo bottles.
Other clever ideas include units with space to hang clothes, dressing gowns and towels. A large vanity which doubles as a full-length mirror, or as a mirror above the basin, is another good solution.
Following on from the trend for wall-hung sanitaryware, wall-hung bathroom furniture is the perfect solution for sleek, contemporary bathrooms. On a more practical note, wall-hung units provide clearance below — making them space enhancing, and the floor beneath easy to clean. This will, however, mean that renovators replacing old free-standing or built-in units (around which the existing flooring was cut to fit) with wall-hung ones, may have to replace the flooring too.
You will also need to consider the wall construction. Design consultant Alan Stanford, from the Kitchen Bathroom Bedroom Specialists Association (kbsa.org.uk), explains: “The one thing to remember about wall-hung products is that they are only as secure as the wall to which they are fitted. In other words, if the wall is a plasterboard partition with little strength, it’s probably best to avoid wall-hung fixtures.” Free-standing furniture on legs is a good alternative where wall-hung is not an option.
Ample storage, including dedicated space to store away bath toys, is key to the success of family bathrooms. Mobile storage units are particularly good for this purpose. Yet, layout is also important: vanity units which will hold medicines and/or cleaning products
should, for example, be positioned out of easy reach. Locked cabinets (right) are another good alternative.
Soft-close doors and drawers are increasingly being introduced as standard, which is good news for young families — preventing doors slamming shut on little hands. While handleless doors will prevent young children from banging their heads against protruding door furniture.
Your furniture will need to withstand the additional knocks, bumps and splashes that a family bathroom is likely to come up against — so choose a material up to the job. “For front finishes, look out for solid acrylic doors from Parapan — the high-gloss finish runs all the way through the material and is impervious to water,” says Alan Stanford from KBSA. “So too is Corian and other similar mineral-based man-made materials.”
For furniture with an MDF, chipboard or plywood core, Alan recommends specifying pre-assembled units. “The ideal construction is a traditional glue and dowel, rigid construction, delivered to site as a complete finished article. Having said that, a good, conscientious fitter can make a perfectly reasonable job of fitting flat-pack furniture with a few extra precautions.” Alan also suggests that “all exposed edges should be sealed with a suitable edging strip”, for a durable finish.
Small bathrooms and en suites require careful planning. Too little storage can result in cluttered surfaces, while over-sized cabinets and vanities will make the space look cramped. Built-in units, such as those which incorporate the WC and basin (and conceal the plumbing) with storage, can prove a good solution in small, boxy rooms (above). While small wall-hung under-basin vanities lend a compact, but contemporary feel.
Made-to-measure fitted furniture is often the best way of maximising on storage potential in awkwardly shaped small rooms. “Corner vanity units are especially suitable for smaller bathrooms, making the most of an unused area of the room,” suggests bathroom planning expert Geoff Wells from fitted bathroom specialist Dolphin.
Where possible, try to maintain a minimum comfortable circulation space of 400mm around furniture and sanitaryware.
Vanity units and cabinets do not just play a functional role, but are integral to the bathroom aesthetic. Needless to say, the furniture you specify should complement the style, finish and colour of your chosen sanitaryware. This is particularly key when renovating an old home or building a period-style house where you intend to recreate an era style, such as Regency or Art Deco. Mixing contemporary wall-hung units with a Victorian-inspired high-level cistern toilet, for example, will inevitably detract from rather than enhance a bathroom. Matched well, furniture is an asset which will help to create a timeless bathroom interior.
Bathroom furniture can also be utilised as an eye-catching room divide. This works particularly well in large bathrooms, helping to creates zones — with a practical space for getting ready for the day to one side, and relaxing and bathing to the other (as above). Add to the ambience with illuminated shelves or lit vanities to showcase your favourite products and lend a soft and relaxing background glow.
Furniture could also be positioned so as to hide the WC from view of the door or the bath. If the vanity will stand away from the wall and you intend to mount a basin on top, remember to plan in advance for the wastes.
Finally, bathroom furniture need not be square or rectangular: the current trend for curved kitchen units has seen curved bathroom furniture quickly follow suit. Vanities and cabinets are also beginning to be seen as pieces of well-designed furniture in their own right.
Lets start coming up with your own designs that fit your design taste!
Now your bathroom will look soooo unique.
Emil M.
Join the Truly Rich Club. Click the link below:
http://bosanchezmembers.com/amember/go.php?r=9494
Disclaimer: I am not affiliated or in any way connected to the site http://www.homebuilding.co.uk/
I came accross the website http://www.homebuilding.co.uk/feature/bright-ideas-bathroom-furniture . Its a UK site with great bathroom furniture. Great Ideas and Great Pictures! Here is the article below..
BRIGHT IDEAS FOR BATHROOM FURNITURE
More than just providing functional storage, your bathroom cabinets can make a real statement. Claire Lloyd takes a look at the latest trends and reveals her top design tips

Be clever with your storage
Bathroom vanities and cabinets should not be secondary to choosing sanitaryware — they are an integral part of the design. After all, it is the storage they offer – both for hiding away clutter and for displaying expensive-looking bottles – which will make a new bathroom the haven that it is supposed to be. “There are also cost benefits,” comments Peter Elson of Ellis Furniture. “Using furniture can reduce the cost of other materials such as tiles. Time and money can be saved on labour for boxing in pipes, for example, which are also unsightly.”Utilising the space beneath the basin is a growing trend, with double vanity units or those designed to accommodate wide contemporary basins particularly popular. Choose vanity units with dividers and/or removable drawer organisers – which can be taken out and cleaned in the dish washer in the event of a leak – to help separate out the toilet rolls from the shampoo bottles.
Other clever ideas include units with space to hang clothes, dressing gowns and towels. A large vanity which doubles as a full-length mirror, or as a mirror above the basin, is another good solution.
Make a statement with wall-hung units

Following on from the trend for wall-hung sanitaryware, wall-hung bathroom furniture is the perfect solution for sleek, contemporary bathrooms. On a more practical note, wall-hung units provide clearance below — making them space enhancing, and the floor beneath easy to clean. This will, however, mean that renovators replacing old free-standing or built-in units (around which the existing flooring was cut to fit) with wall-hung ones, may have to replace the flooring too.
You will also need to consider the wall construction. Design consultant Alan Stanford, from the Kitchen Bathroom Bedroom Specialists Association (kbsa.org.uk), explains: “The one thing to remember about wall-hung products is that they are only as secure as the wall to which they are fitted. In other words, if the wall is a plasterboard partition with little strength, it’s probably best to avoid wall-hung fixtures.” Free-standing furniture on legs is a good alternative where wall-hung is not an option.
Make storage family-friendly

Ample storage, including dedicated space to store away bath toys, is key to the success of family bathrooms. Mobile storage units are particularly good for this purpose. Yet, layout is also important: vanity units which will hold medicines and/or cleaning products

Soft-close doors and drawers are increasingly being introduced as standard, which is good news for young families — preventing doors slamming shut on little hands. While handleless doors will prevent young children from banging their heads against protruding door furniture.
Your furniture will need to withstand the additional knocks, bumps and splashes that a family bathroom is likely to come up against — so choose a material up to the job. “For front finishes, look out for solid acrylic doors from Parapan — the high-gloss finish runs all the way through the material and is impervious to water,” says Alan Stanford from KBSA. “So too is Corian and other similar mineral-based man-made materials.”
For furniture with an MDF, chipboard or plywood core, Alan recommends specifying pre-assembled units. “The ideal construction is a traditional glue and dowel, rigid construction, delivered to site as a complete finished article. Having said that, a good, conscientious fitter can make a perfectly reasonable job of fitting flat-pack furniture with a few extra precautions.” Alan also suggests that “all exposed edges should be sealed with a suitable edging strip”, for a durable finish.
Plan Small Bathrooms

Small bathrooms and en suites require careful planning. Too little storage can result in cluttered surfaces, while over-sized cabinets and vanities will make the space look cramped. Built-in units, such as those which incorporate the WC and basin (and conceal the plumbing) with storage, can prove a good solution in small, boxy rooms (above). While small wall-hung under-basin vanities lend a compact, but contemporary feel.
Made-to-measure fitted furniture is often the best way of maximising on storage potential in awkwardly shaped small rooms. “Corner vanity units are especially suitable for smaller bathrooms, making the most of an unused area of the room,” suggests bathroom planning expert Geoff Wells from fitted bathroom specialist Dolphin.
Where possible, try to maintain a minimum comfortable circulation space of 400mm around furniture and sanitaryware.
Turn furniture into a feature

Vanity units and cabinets do not just play a functional role, but are integral to the bathroom aesthetic. Needless to say, the furniture you specify should complement the style, finish and colour of your chosen sanitaryware. This is particularly key when renovating an old home or building a period-style house where you intend to recreate an era style, such as Regency or Art Deco. Mixing contemporary wall-hung units with a Victorian-inspired high-level cistern toilet, for example, will inevitably detract from rather than enhance a bathroom. Matched well, furniture is an asset which will help to create a timeless bathroom interior.
Bathroom furniture can also be utilised as an eye-catching room divide. This works particularly well in large bathrooms, helping to creates zones — with a practical space for getting ready for the day to one side, and relaxing and bathing to the other (as above). Add to the ambience with illuminated shelves or lit vanities to showcase your favourite products and lend a soft and relaxing background glow.
Furniture could also be positioned so as to hide the WC from view of the door or the bath. If the vanity will stand away from the wall and you intend to mount a basin on top, remember to plan in advance for the wastes.
Finally, bathroom furniture need not be square or rectangular: the current trend for curved kitchen units has seen curved bathroom furniture quickly follow suit. Vanities and cabinets are also beginning to be seen as pieces of well-designed furniture in their own right.
Lets start coming up with your own designs that fit your design taste!
Now your bathroom will look soooo unique.
Emil M.
Join the Truly Rich Club. Click the link below:
http://bosanchezmembers.com/amember/go.php?r=9494
Disclaimer: I am not affiliated or in any way connected to the site http://www.homebuilding.co.uk/
Saturday, May 14, 2011
Check the Roof of the House
Here is a simple tip for checking out old houses for sale. Check the roof! Check the gutters also.
It will tell you a lot about the house. If it looks very rusted, it may have already holes on it and the rain could have enterned the house.
If rain goes through the roof, it will touch your ceiling. your ceiling will moisten and affect the paint and be discolored.
You can actually just initially look at the ceiling. if there are dark spots or water mark spots, chances are, the hole in the roof is above it. but it is not always the case. you may need to hire someone to go into the roof and check if the water just crawled into the spot and remained there to cause the water marks.
The roof and ceiling is a bit expensive to replace and doing remedial work will usually be a temporary solution.
Now you won't be fooled!
Emil M.
It will tell you a lot about the house. If it looks very rusted, it may have already holes on it and the rain could have enterned the house.
If rain goes through the roof, it will touch your ceiling. your ceiling will moisten and affect the paint and be discolored.
You can actually just initially look at the ceiling. if there are dark spots or water mark spots, chances are, the hole in the roof is above it. but it is not always the case. you may need to hire someone to go into the roof and check if the water just crawled into the spot and remained there to cause the water marks.
The roof and ceiling is a bit expensive to replace and doing remedial work will usually be a temporary solution.
Now you won't be fooled!
Emil M.
Friday, May 6, 2011
Wrong Choices on Home Building
Its frustrating to see home builders that go into the project without a clue on how to go about it. They trust their builder or foreman to do the work hoping they will take their best interest in mind always.
An example of this is the house construction just at the back of the house. Here is what's happening:
1. The house is not yet complete after about 10 months. (Very long for a small bungalow house)
2. There are only 4 workers doing the construction. (Too little if you want to have an efficient and effective crew).
3. They seem to take their time. Doing small work here, then doing short work there.. all over the place. (The construction has no direction!)
4. No one familiar with the construction business is supervising the work.
5. The owner seem to have hired the workers on a daily wage. (This can only be ok if there is someone to supervise). This is probably the reason why the workers are moving soooo slow - the slower the work, the more money they get. And they get to be paid even if they are doing wasteful work.
6. Probably no milestones, no deadlines.
Add the fact that they wake me up every Saturday morning with their power tools noise at 8am. I still need to catch up on sleep but no can do.. Frustrating!!!
Did the owner really think the construction can take that long? Is he not getting good advice from someone besides the builder?
10 months is very long for a small house. A brand new one can only take 7 month to build (just make sure you have the cash to finance your building project). A full year is only good for mansions with intricate architectural details.
Only 3 or 4 workers doing the work? This is a disaster on efficient work especially in construction. They will only slack (tatamarin) doing small work here and there. There is no motivation. There is no accountability. for every skilled worker, you need one or two "helpers" to make the job efficient. the one doing the plastering works in your wall must not be the same person mixing up the cement or getting water to put on the mix. the helpers make the work so much more efficient and FAST! Even carpenters need helpers. Only painters can have no helpers.
Construction workers doing meaningful work without supervision are a rare breed and can be likened to someone winning the BINGO game with 10,000 people. You need proper supervision.
When you have competent supervision, you can now pay the workers on a daily basis.
Are you building now and going nowhere and losing money on inefficient work? Its time to get help before its too late.
Emil M.
emilmendoza2003@yahoo.com
An example of this is the house construction just at the back of the house. Here is what's happening:
1. The house is not yet complete after about 10 months. (Very long for a small bungalow house)
2. There are only 4 workers doing the construction. (Too little if you want to have an efficient and effective crew).
3. They seem to take their time. Doing small work here, then doing short work there.. all over the place. (The construction has no direction!)
4. No one familiar with the construction business is supervising the work.
5. The owner seem to have hired the workers on a daily wage. (This can only be ok if there is someone to supervise). This is probably the reason why the workers are moving soooo slow - the slower the work, the more money they get. And they get to be paid even if they are doing wasteful work.
6. Probably no milestones, no deadlines.
Add the fact that they wake me up every Saturday morning with their power tools noise at 8am. I still need to catch up on sleep but no can do.. Frustrating!!!
Did the owner really think the construction can take that long? Is he not getting good advice from someone besides the builder?
10 months is very long for a small house. A brand new one can only take 7 month to build (just make sure you have the cash to finance your building project). A full year is only good for mansions with intricate architectural details.
Only 3 or 4 workers doing the work? This is a disaster on efficient work especially in construction. They will only slack (tatamarin) doing small work here and there. There is no motivation. There is no accountability. for every skilled worker, you need one or two "helpers" to make the job efficient. the one doing the plastering works in your wall must not be the same person mixing up the cement or getting water to put on the mix. the helpers make the work so much more efficient and FAST! Even carpenters need helpers. Only painters can have no helpers.
Construction workers doing meaningful work without supervision are a rare breed and can be likened to someone winning the BINGO game with 10,000 people. You need proper supervision.
When you have competent supervision, you can now pay the workers on a daily basis.
Are you building now and going nowhere and losing money on inefficient work? Its time to get help before its too late.
Emil M.
emilmendoza2003@yahoo.com
Monday, May 2, 2011
Zen & Modern Houses. Granite Walls!
Hello Dreamers,
Dreaming of that new house yet? Have you been browsing the web or magazines for the perfect look of your dream house?
The past weeks, I am trying to inspire myself with beautiful pictures from the Web on modern houses. Having a modern or Zen type looking house is not just "Modelo" or "Hip" these past years, but it is also practical and possibly even more affordable than the "Italian" or "Mediterranean" themed homes.
But don’t be deceived by the beautiful photos.
The stone-looking materials in the walls and toilets could be solid granite! On average, its about 2,000 pesos per square meter. Pretty expensive but if you can afford it, it’s worth the price for a wall that would never fade and will never be replaced ever. (well.. not forever but a long, long time).
Don’t buy the cheap ones – they are just that – cheap stones that will easily crack and will not look as good.
I stumbled upon Busyboo Design blog and Hometta (see pictures below from their websites). They have great concepts and architectural pictures.
http://www.busyboo.com/
http://www.hometta.com/
What I envy from the houses abroad is the wide spaces and great surroundings. You can only get that here in the Philippines if the development is made by the top developers. Think about Nuvali or Anvaya Cove. They have almost picture perfect lots and great views. The open spaces are wide and so many activities that can be done there.
Back to the Zen or Modern designed houses. Did you see the interplay of materials? Great architecture! Go see the websites now and go back reading this blog..
Done?
I know you saw it. Wood, Glass, Concrete, Stones, Steel.
Usually we have wooden floors, but wood clad walls are just as nice.
The big picture windows with top to bottom glass are very elegant and classy.
Steel structures are poised for the minimalist approach.
The Hometta designed house is more practical for us here in the Philippines. They practice the design of smaller houses (medium size for us Pinoys).
Be inspired. Don’t let that dream die down.
Emil M.
Photo Credits: Busyboo and Hometta Websites
N.B. I am not affiliated with any of the above mentioned Design Firms
Dreaming of that new house yet? Have you been browsing the web or magazines for the perfect look of your dream house?
The past weeks, I am trying to inspire myself with beautiful pictures from the Web on modern houses. Having a modern or Zen type looking house is not just "Modelo" or "Hip" these past years, but it is also practical and possibly even more affordable than the "Italian" or "Mediterranean" themed homes.
But don’t be deceived by the beautiful photos.
The stone-looking materials in the walls and toilets could be solid granite! On average, its about 2,000 pesos per square meter. Pretty expensive but if you can afford it, it’s worth the price for a wall that would never fade and will never be replaced ever. (well.. not forever but a long, long time).
Don’t buy the cheap ones – they are just that – cheap stones that will easily crack and will not look as good.
I stumbled upon Busyboo Design blog and Hometta (see pictures below from their websites). They have great concepts and architectural pictures.
http://www.busyboo.com/
http://www.hometta.com/
What I envy from the houses abroad is the wide spaces and great surroundings. You can only get that here in the Philippines if the development is made by the top developers. Think about Nuvali or Anvaya Cove. They have almost picture perfect lots and great views. The open spaces are wide and so many activities that can be done there.
Back to the Zen or Modern designed houses. Did you see the interplay of materials? Great architecture! Go see the websites now and go back reading this blog..
Done?
I know you saw it. Wood, Glass, Concrete, Stones, Steel.
Usually we have wooden floors, but wood clad walls are just as nice.
The big picture windows with top to bottom glass are very elegant and classy.
Steel structures are poised for the minimalist approach.
The Hometta designed house is more practical for us here in the Philippines. They practice the design of smaller houses (medium size for us Pinoys).
Be inspired. Don’t let that dream die down.
Emil M.
Photo Credits: Busyboo and Hometta Websites
N.B. I am not affiliated with any of the above mentioned Design Firms
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Easter Time Deck Flowers and Garden Tips
Happy Easter!
The flowers are almost in full bloom this time of the year. Did you see the Deck Decoration Concepts page of the blog? I took pictures of the same deck plant decors and most the blooming white buganvillas are in full bloom.
The flowers are almost in full bloom this time of the year. Did you see the Deck Decoration Concepts page of the blog? I took pictures of the same deck plant decors and most the blooming white buganvillas are in full bloom.
Some of the Yellow Bells are also starting to bloom if you noticed. The flowers just love the sunshine.
You can decorate the exterior of your house with different stones or paint colors but nothing beats the low maintenance flowering plants! You cannot really have them all at once. They need time to grow and adapt to the surroundings. Ask your local gardener which ones are best in the shade and out in the sunshine.
Grass
For example, carabao grass will not grow in the shade.. like most of the local grasses available. I like the carabao grass better than the Bermuda. For one, its cheaper to buy and another is that it will not grow tall. It will crawl and thicken.
Not all planting methodologies are the same. Some plants need good soil and some just grow anywhere.
For those who have the budget to have their grass the perfect way, you need about 6 inches of sand underneath (this will help drain the water) and not cause "Ponding" of water in one spot of the lawn or garden. Then you have the grass in mats (that's the square patches of grass when you buy them form the Plants supplier) and you sprinkle sand on top just enough so that the grass will not be muddy when you water them daily. this will also help retain the soil because it will not be easily washed away.
Happy Easter again to all!
Emil M.
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Old houses and foreclosed property
I got a chance to visit 2 old houses that were built more than 30 years ago in one of the first villages in Metro Manila. I got to inspect the roof and the inside of the houses.
For the first house, the older of the two, it was mainly built on concrete for the ground floor and almost purely wood on the 2nd floor. Of course except the Toilet and Baths that has concrete walls and tiled floors and walls.
What was amazing about the house were two things. First, the roof sheet is virtually intact. No holes and only a few rusting part if I were the owner, to preserve the life of the roof, I would apply rust removers (or just scrape the rust using steel brush) on the rusting parts and apply roofing paint at once.
The roofing sheets of the older houses are really thick and don’t easily rust. Imaging this roof sustaining all the typhoons the past 30 years! What quality this material has! You won’t get that from what we have in the market today.
Another preventive maintenance on the roof is applying epoxy with fiber mesh at all roof nails. These are the nails with big heads the size of a coin and is the one holding the roof sheet to the trusses. These are the ones you can see when you look at the roof.
Another amazing aspect is that it does not have indications that termites are eating the wood! (Indications only because me and my companions did not do a full inspection of all the nooks and spaces). The old wood are the real wood! Not the wood of today where builders install the wood that are not dried up yet. This is a no-no because termites love soft wood and wood not fully dried! remember that when you are deciding on cheap wood (from the trees that are cut before they mature and not dried properly) or the real mature or dried wood.
For the second house, it is a foreclose property which was selling very cheap. Look at the specs below!:
Lot Area: 350 sq.m.
Floor area: 320 sq.m.
Bank List price: Php 4.9M (Wow!)
Remember my older posts last April? I list their the prices of new real estate developments. Here they are again:
Imagine this sample brand new house for sale recently:
Floor Area: 40 sq. m. (430 sq. ft.)
Lot Area: 153 sq. m. (1,646 sq. ft.)
Location: Taguig City, Metro Manila
Price starts at Php 5.5M ($ 122,000.00)
Its PhP 137,500.00 ($3,050.00) per square meter of livable area! Oh my! And to think the size of the house is targeted to those just starting their families. Too expensive!
Or this brand new condominium for sale:
Floor Area: 80 sq.m.
Price: PhP 4M ($88,900.00)
That is PhP 50,000.00 ($1,110.00) per sq.m. (Oh my!)
If you did not notice the very big price difference. And computing the price per floor area, clearly the foreclosed property is much better. Although it needs some repair, not to make it brand new but livable, one needs about 1 million pesos to do that. Still, this is a better bargain with a little more (about 20% more) added to your budget.
Which house whould you rather live in, in a 150 sq.m. or 320 sq.m house? I would not mind living in a house where I can do the repairs little by little!
This would be my next recommendation to building your own house, LOOK FOR FORECLOSED PROPERTIES to consider as you dream home. I know they will not look brand new and need repairs, but it will be much more worth the price since you get a bigger house and a bigger lot!
Now start looking for the diamonds in the rough of foreclosed properties!
Check out also the wood furniture in the other pages of the blog. Beautiful furniture only real dried and mature wood can give!!!
Check out also the wood furniture in the other pages of the blog. Beautiful furniture only real dried and mature wood can give!!!
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Home Building Coaching Program - Its for you Dreamers!
Are you building your dream home now without the proper techniques that can possibly save you millions of pesos?
Its not too late!
For an overview on what you can get from this program, read my posts in this blog. Very helpful and powerful stuff..
Click the Coaching Program page at the right and learn more.
Its all possible!
Emil M.
Its not too late!
For an overview on what you can get from this program, read my posts in this blog. Very helpful and powerful stuff..
Click the Coaching Program page at the right and learn more.
Its all possible!
Emil M.
Saturday, April 9, 2011
Floor tiles practical tip
Here are Floor tiles practical tips!
There is one very easy and practical test if the floor tiles are installed properly. The test is to "knock" the tiles with a coin and if the sound is solid. It means the grout at the back of the ties are evenly placed.
The one-peso coin will be hard to handle so you can use either a 5-peso or 10-peso coin.
For large tiles, knock on them not just at the center but also in the edges since you have a lot of tiles to test, knock on the middle of the edges (that's 4 knocks already) then knock on the middle. It will not take you 2 seconds to test each tile. You can even teach your kids to help you! Its that easy!
How about the levelness of the floor tiles?
Just glide or skid your feet (with shoes..) across the tiles and if there is a a very noticable difference in the level or height of the edges, the tiles are not ok. determine which one of the tiles are either set too high or too low with respect to the other tiles. Remember my previous post on not rushing the installation of floor tiles? You cannot expect good results if you are the one rushing things.
I can help you with other tests like large slabs of granite or marble.. contact me anytime for any help i can give.
Dream house, here we come!
Emil M.
emilmendoza2003@yahoo.com
There is one very easy and practical test if the floor tiles are installed properly. The test is to "knock" the tiles with a coin and if the sound is solid. It means the grout at the back of the ties are evenly placed.
The one-peso coin will be hard to handle so you can use either a 5-peso or 10-peso coin.
For large tiles, knock on them not just at the center but also in the edges since you have a lot of tiles to test, knock on the middle of the edges (that's 4 knocks already) then knock on the middle. It will not take you 2 seconds to test each tile. You can even teach your kids to help you! Its that easy!
How about the levelness of the floor tiles?
Just glide or skid your feet (with shoes..) across the tiles and if there is a a very noticable difference in the level or height of the edges, the tiles are not ok. determine which one of the tiles are either set too high or too low with respect to the other tiles. Remember my previous post on not rushing the installation of floor tiles? You cannot expect good results if you are the one rushing things.
I can help you with other tests like large slabs of granite or marble.. contact me anytime for any help i can give.
Dream house, here we come!
Emil M.
emilmendoza2003@yahoo.com
Friday, April 1, 2011
How long do you want to Build your Dream House in the Philippines?
Hi Dreamers!
If I were to tell you that the answer to the question will be posted next week, are you willing to wait that long?
Of course Not!
We live in a world where everyone (well, almost everyone) want the benefits now. We want the results now!
Here in the Philippines, can’t wait to see the movie in the theaters? Some people just buy the pirated DVD! Not a good choice.. Want to earn more money? People join pyramid marketing scams. They know they are scams but they join anyway just to get the benefits of making more money. Again, not a good choice.
In building your Dream Home, there is a mindset I need to promote for all you Dreamers.. We have to be patient. Anything done in undue haste will almost always yield bad results.
Here are some practical tips:
How to install floor tiles? Never rush the installation of the floor tiles.. This is one big mistake when building your own house. You have to start and finish this almost perfectly. If you put tired and installers who have not slept for 2 days because of the construction rush, most likely the edges will not be straight and the level of the tile surfaces will not be the same. And since you build your own house, you pay the price for redoing the work. There is no guarantee that you can re-use the installed tiles. If you have a contractor doing the installation, they may not produce the desired results.
The painting of the top coat (the actual color of the paint) can be rushed a bit but you cannot rush the curing (drying) of the concrete plaster of the wall. If you paint at once a cement plastered wall just to rush things, most likely you will have a bad paint job that will peel, and have uneven color.
On a general note, I advocate patience. There are works that can be rushed but not in undue haste.
I will give you an advance warning Dreamers - You will be itching to rush things.. You will want to finish everything the next day.. You will want to have the house done in 2 weeks. Not possible.
Another note, anything done faster will be more expensive whether you award it to a contractor or you are hiring workers paid by the day. You need to pay for over-time work, like all of us employed citizens.
You need to get good advice from knowledgeable people on the timing and which work can be done faster in the right way.
Patience.
And more Patience.
Make decisions with a Cool head.
Let’s build the right way.
Emil M.
If I were to tell you that the answer to the question will be posted next week, are you willing to wait that long?
Of course Not!
We live in a world where everyone (well, almost everyone) want the benefits now. We want the results now!
Here in the Philippines, can’t wait to see the movie in the theaters? Some people just buy the pirated DVD! Not a good choice.. Want to earn more money? People join pyramid marketing scams. They know they are scams but they join anyway just to get the benefits of making more money. Again, not a good choice.
In building your Dream Home, there is a mindset I need to promote for all you Dreamers.. We have to be patient. Anything done in undue haste will almost always yield bad results.
Here are some practical tips:
How to install floor tiles? Never rush the installation of the floor tiles.. This is one big mistake when building your own house. You have to start and finish this almost perfectly. If you put tired and installers who have not slept for 2 days because of the construction rush, most likely the edges will not be straight and the level of the tile surfaces will not be the same. And since you build your own house, you pay the price for redoing the work. There is no guarantee that you can re-use the installed tiles. If you have a contractor doing the installation, they may not produce the desired results.
The painting of the top coat (the actual color of the paint) can be rushed a bit but you cannot rush the curing (drying) of the concrete plaster of the wall. If you paint at once a cement plastered wall just to rush things, most likely you will have a bad paint job that will peel, and have uneven color.
On a general note, I advocate patience. There are works that can be rushed but not in undue haste.
I will give you an advance warning Dreamers - You will be itching to rush things.. You will want to finish everything the next day.. You will want to have the house done in 2 weeks. Not possible.
Another note, anything done faster will be more expensive whether you award it to a contractor or you are hiring workers paid by the day. You need to pay for over-time work, like all of us employed citizens.
You need to get good advice from knowledgeable people on the timing and which work can be done faster in the right way.
Patience.
And more Patience.
Make decisions with a Cool head.
Let’s build the right way.
Emil M.
Monday, March 28, 2011
You Decide ...
You Decide! Yes, you decide.
What a great feeling when you decide on what to do. You have the capacity to decide on things on your life. What better way to exercise this right than to decide...
Where to live..
Who will be my neighbors..
How big is my room..
To have just the right size of kitchen.. Or to have a grand kitchen..
To have a master's bedroom that has a view of the sunrise.. or the sunset..
..you decide
Now for all these to happen, here is the question:
Do I go to an architect or go straight to a builder?
My suggestion is go to an architect you know or one recommended by a very close relative or friend who has worked with one.
Of course, there are a lot of advantages when you know the person. One is that he or she will look after your best interest (well..hopefully. Nobody wants a bad review.. ) and two, he can be a good source of advise in the full course building your dream home..
It will be hard to ask questions you do not know you should ask.
This only comes from years of experince.
There is another option. You can go to someone you know who works in the construction industry. You might know someone who works for a contractor and is familiar with building condominiums and houses. they can give good advice if they are not the one building your home. We need unbiased minds here.
You can even get advise, as mentioned earlier, from someone who already built their own home.
Ask them what did they do right and what they did wrong.. If given the chance to do it again, what would they do differently. What were the issues between them and the builder.
Start with the right information. The right path will be easier, much easier if someone can guide you along the way.
Emil M.
What a great feeling when you decide on what to do. You have the capacity to decide on things on your life. What better way to exercise this right than to decide...
Where to live..
Who will be my neighbors..
How big is my room..
To have just the right size of kitchen.. Or to have a grand kitchen..
To have a master's bedroom that has a view of the sunrise.. or the sunset..
..you decide
Now for all these to happen, here is the question:
Do I go to an architect or go straight to a builder?
My suggestion is go to an architect you know or one recommended by a very close relative or friend who has worked with one.
Of course, there are a lot of advantages when you know the person. One is that he or she will look after your best interest (well..hopefully. Nobody wants a bad review.. ) and two, he can be a good source of advise in the full course building your dream home..
It will be hard to ask questions you do not know you should ask.
This only comes from years of experince.
There is another option. You can go to someone you know who works in the construction industry. You might know someone who works for a contractor and is familiar with building condominiums and houses. they can give good advice if they are not the one building your home. We need unbiased minds here.
You can even get advise, as mentioned earlier, from someone who already built their own home.
Ask them what did they do right and what they did wrong.. If given the chance to do it again, what would they do differently. What were the issues between them and the builder.
Start with the right information. The right path will be easier, much easier if someone can guide you along the way.
Emil M.
Saturday, March 26, 2011
Mindset of a home builder - Get the Details & How to Approach Changes
Welcome again Dreamers!
Lets look closely at the mind of the home builder - thats going to be you when you start to build your home..
If I will have a single tip for you right now, it will be : Know what you want and get as much detail on the architectural plans before having it bid out to contractors.
The more details the plans have, the closer the cost of the contractor/s to your actual building budget.
There is no really perfect plan. But it does not mean you will leave the details as the construction is already going-on. And it does not mean you will not make changes as everything is happening. You have all the right to make the changes. But make it early. How early? The earlier the better.
Here are a few examples:
If you want to get a feel on the layout of the house with respect to the total lot area, have your contractor lay it out in the ground before you dig any foundations. At least you get a feel on how big or small the whole house is going to be. You can even layout the individual rooms in the ground floor or the upper floors. Just do it one floor at a time.
Any major or minor changes, let your architect or builder know about it and see if you can still make the changes.
Some changes will or will not cost you anything. but just make sure the changes are made in writing.
If you want to make a room bigger, decide on it before the walls are starting to come up.
If you want more electrical outlets, decide on it before they start plastering the walls and making it smooth.
The simple concept is - if its already there and it needs to be removed and installed again due to changes, it will cost you.. it will take additional labor and additional materials which you have to pay.
But you have to ask yourself, do i really need it or do i just want it to impress.. Can I afford it? Am i already tight on my budget?
If the digging already started and you wan to push the whole house back so you want to have a larger frontage, you will have to pay for the wasted work done. if you can afford it - do it. its your house anyway.
Tip: Some subdivisions or villages have a minimum set back for the front, sides and back. like 2 meters at the sides and back and 4 meters at the front (Check you local government and village requirements. you can even have it inspected just to be sure you will not start work that does not comply with the requirements).
Let a competent construction manager or architect guide you..
Lets look closely at the mind of the home builder - thats going to be you when you start to build your home..
If I will have a single tip for you right now, it will be : Know what you want and get as much detail on the architectural plans before having it bid out to contractors.
The more details the plans have, the closer the cost of the contractor/s to your actual building budget.
There is no really perfect plan. But it does not mean you will leave the details as the construction is already going-on. And it does not mean you will not make changes as everything is happening. You have all the right to make the changes. But make it early. How early? The earlier the better.
Here are a few examples:
If you want to get a feel on the layout of the house with respect to the total lot area, have your contractor lay it out in the ground before you dig any foundations. At least you get a feel on how big or small the whole house is going to be. You can even layout the individual rooms in the ground floor or the upper floors. Just do it one floor at a time.
Any major or minor changes, let your architect or builder know about it and see if you can still make the changes.
Some changes will or will not cost you anything. but just make sure the changes are made in writing.
If you want to make a room bigger, decide on it before the walls are starting to come up.
If you want more electrical outlets, decide on it before they start plastering the walls and making it smooth.
The simple concept is - if its already there and it needs to be removed and installed again due to changes, it will cost you.. it will take additional labor and additional materials which you have to pay.
But you have to ask yourself, do i really need it or do i just want it to impress.. Can I afford it? Am i already tight on my budget?
If the digging already started and you wan to push the whole house back so you want to have a larger frontage, you will have to pay for the wasted work done. if you can afford it - do it. its your house anyway.
Tip: Some subdivisions or villages have a minimum set back for the front, sides and back. like 2 meters at the sides and back and 4 meters at the front (Check you local government and village requirements. you can even have it inspected just to be sure you will not start work that does not comply with the requirements).
Let a competent construction manager or architect guide you..
Friday, March 25, 2011
Questions to ask for Your Home, Your Dream
One night, I was thinking what were my lessons learned in the course of helping people build their dream home.. The list below is not comprehensive. I just made a quick draft on the important questions and questions people did not know they should ask!
Builders generally want you to build a bigger home. The bigger, the more profits they can potentially get.
Add up all the livable spaces inside your walls including the hallways, staris in square meters and multiply them by 20,000 pesos ($445).
Comment on this Blog! Ask me questions! I will try my best to answer them.
Start Dreaming Now!
Emil Mendoza
emilmendoza2003@yahoo.com
1. What do I want? (Minor fixes, House extensions, Complete renovations [retaining the basic structure], Complete house from the ground-up?
2. What is my budget? (Very, very important!!)
3. Do I need an architect or do I go to Contractor right away? (Clue, go to an architect or civil engineer who knows construction or construction management but not the one who will be your contractor)
4. How long do I want to finish the project? (by Christmas, Anniversary, 6 months, 1 month, etc.)
5. Should I consider the seasons (Summer, Rainy) when deciding when to start and finish?
6. Should I ask any building restrictions in my area? (Subdivision, Barangay, City limitations like property set-back, roof height, architectural style, building layout or maximum usable area)
7. Can I build rooms or structures that I can have rented-out.
8. Do I have to pay for a construction Bond (to the subdivision or Barangay or City hall)
9. Where is the best place to familiarize myself with the different finishes inside my house?
10. Is building the house on my own better than having a contractor do it for me? Is there any other way?
11. When can I add another bathroom?
12. Should I already know the furniture layout at the design stage?
13. Does it matter where I put my aircon?
14. Should I be worried about termites for my new house. Is it for old houses only?
15. Can I build a fishpond or swimming pool anywhere I want in my property?
16. Can I put a generator anywhere in the house?
17. Can I build my fence as high as I want?
18. How do I plan my house so I can easily extend or build another floor in the future?
19. Should I hire a project manager or can my architect also do it?
And a hundred more questions to ask.
Lets start with question number 1 and 2.
What do I want? What is my budget?
Lets assume you will build your new home. Wait.. Your Dream Home!
Everything starts with an idea. With a perception. Flip through some architectural magazines, go around nice villages, talk to your spouse about their ideas, talk to your kids even! understand what do you want. Don't live another's dream. have your own dream! Don't just accept the fads and fast recommendations of architects. it must have a deep connection with what you want and what you can afford. More on this in future articles..
Next, Do a quick estimate.
Do you already have a lot to build into? This is the easy part. if you already have one, you will need less money to build your dream home. No land yet? At least the prices are fairly straight forward and can vary depending on location.
Next, The house..
You may want to ask for a help of friend who is an architect or one knowledgable in construction managment. Know your needs and your wants for the size of the house. Needs are essentials, wants are just wish lists thay you can live without for now.
How big is the Lot? Is there a restriction (usually in villages) on how much of the land you can build on?
How many bedrooms? - what are their sizes?
How many Toilet and Baths?
How big is the dining room and living room?
How many cars do you want to park, or do you even need a car garage?
Any other rooms? how big?
Hint: do not go to a builder or contractor. Why? you need an independent mind to help you put you ideas on paper but not necessarily urging you to start the project at once.. Don't go to an architect you do not know.. you need free (friendly) services first. opening all options.
Builders generally want you to build a bigger home. The bigger, the more profits they can potentially get.
Architects who charge per square meter of the house being designed want you to build a bigger home. The bigger, the more design fees they can potentially get.
Add up all the livable spaces inside your walls including the hallways, staris in square meters and multiply them by 20,000 pesos ($445).
For example:
200 square meters multipy by 20,000 pesos = PhP 4,000,000 ($88,900) for a 200 Sq.m. house.
The 20,000 pesos is just my average and quick estimate. You can have it higher or lower depending on the market values of construction materials.
Now you can start Dreaming!!
Comment on this Blog! Ask me questions! I will try my best to answer them.
Start Dreaming Now!
Emil Mendoza
emilmendoza2003@yahoo.com
Your Home, Your Dream - Welcome Dreamers!
Welcome to Your Home, Your Dream!
I'm so excited to share important concepts and advice in building your own home. its giving advice to make your dreams come true!
I am an advocate of advising people to build your own home instead of buying from the multitude of new houses from developers all over the country. Believe me, its much cheaper! But i have this to say - you have to have enough capital to start with this direction of building your own home. More on that in the next articles.
Here is the first idea. The developers build houses or condominiums and they are so tiny or are expensive for such a small space!
Imagine this sample brand new house for sale recently:
Floor Area: 40 sq. m. (430 sq. ft.)
Lot Area: 153 sq. m. (1,646 sq. ft.)
Location: Taguig City, Metro Manila
Price starts at Php 5.5M ($ 122,000.00)
Its PhP 137,500.00 ($3,050.00) per square meter of livable area! Oh my! And to think the size of the house is targeted to those just starting their families. Too expensive!
Or this brand new condominium for sale:
Floor Area: 80 sq.m.
Price: PhP 4M ($88,900.00)
That is PhP 50,000.00 ($1,110.00) per sq.m. (Oh my!)
A few years ago, I helped a friend of mine build their family's home. Although its not completely, totally, glowing paint and all finished new like what we see in the developer's model units, they prioritized building the actual structure and finishing the inside and making it livable. They are taking time to save up and slowly but surely finish their Dream Home! Take a look at the specs and close estimate on how much they spent for a huge house!
Lot Area: 200 sq. m.
Ground Floor area: 160 sq.m.
2nd Floor area: 194 sq.m.
3rd floor rooms: 63 sq.m.
3rd floor roof deck: 130 sq.m.
When they started to move in, they spent about PhP 6M ($133,300) to get the house about 90 percent complete! They saved a LOT..
This is 420 sq.m. of livable area PLUS a 130sq.m. roof deck!
My best estimate is they can finish the house with a total of 7M.
Excluding the roof deck - this is PhP 16,700.00 per square meter!!!
The whole property is divided into three - Her family, Her Parents, Her Siblings, and two rooms for Rent (Wow, what a game plan! passive income included..)
Now its your turn.
Build Your Home, Your Dream!
I'm so excited to share important concepts and advice in building your own home. its giving advice to make your dreams come true!
I am an advocate of advising people to build your own home instead of buying from the multitude of new houses from developers all over the country. Believe me, its much cheaper! But i have this to say - you have to have enough capital to start with this direction of building your own home. More on that in the next articles.
Here is the first idea. The developers build houses or condominiums and they are so tiny or are expensive for such a small space!
Imagine this sample brand new house for sale recently:
Floor Area: 40 sq. m. (430 sq. ft.)
Lot Area: 153 sq. m. (1,646 sq. ft.)
Location: Taguig City, Metro Manila
Price starts at Php 5.5M ($ 122,000.00)
Its PhP 137,500.00 ($3,050.00) per square meter of livable area! Oh my! And to think the size of the house is targeted to those just starting their families. Too expensive!
Or this brand new condominium for sale:
Floor Area: 80 sq.m.
Price: PhP 4M ($88,900.00)
That is PhP 50,000.00 ($1,110.00) per sq.m. (Oh my!)
A few years ago, I helped a friend of mine build their family's home. Although its not completely, totally, glowing paint and all finished new like what we see in the developer's model units, they prioritized building the actual structure and finishing the inside and making it livable. They are taking time to save up and slowly but surely finish their Dream Home! Take a look at the specs and close estimate on how much they spent for a huge house!
Lot Area: 200 sq. m.
Ground Floor area: 160 sq.m.
2nd Floor area: 194 sq.m.
3rd floor rooms: 63 sq.m.
3rd floor roof deck: 130 sq.m.
When they started to move in, they spent about PhP 6M ($133,300) to get the house about 90 percent complete! They saved a LOT..
This is 420 sq.m. of livable area PLUS a 130sq.m. roof deck!
My best estimate is they can finish the house with a total of 7M.
Excluding the roof deck - this is PhP 16,700.00 per square meter!!!
The whole property is divided into three - Her family, Her Parents, Her Siblings, and two rooms for Rent (Wow, what a game plan! passive income included..)
Now its your turn.
Build Your Home, Your Dream!
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