Thursday, December 15, 2011

Permits and other factors

I've been getting a lot of email recently. People really do read my posts. I'm not surprised that people are talking about building again and I'm happy that they are taking a look at alternatives like cargo containers. Every body that writes to me already sees the value, sustainability and low cost as being what people need right now. There are a lot of questions about how to approach the building department. As you've read in previous posts it's not the technical part that's difficult getting a permit, it's the cost. It seems like costly system development fees and long drawn out design reviews put a lot of people off. There is a way around that.

In most neighborhoods in cities built early in the last century there are houses which didn't get regular maintenance. Even before the current fore-closer mess houses sat vacant. If there not tuned up periodically nature takes them back. Sills rot and roofs leak causing all sort of damage. Usually their small and it didn't make sense to redevelop back in the boom. If you want to build a container house this is the thing you want to buy. The way the rules work in most municipalities if you save part of one wall of an existing structure than your doing an extensive remodel, you are not doing not doing new construction. The water pipes to the meter are still there and the sewer is already hooked up. This saves vast amounts of money on permits. Picking the right place could save you the cost of a small container home. Fee's in Portland, Oregon for new raw land construction run about $34,000. I built my last house here for about $32.000.