To be my own general contractor or not?

clayg

0
Jun 10, 2013
5
I received a quote for a pretty nice pool from a pretty well known company. But I seem to be drawn to the idea of being my own GC, and saving some money on the features and size relative to the pool. I am interested in adding a spa, but not interested in paying 11k extra for it. Anyway, I'm looking for success or horror stories. I scanned the first few pages of topics, but I haven't been able to find any besides one quick mention of a guy being his own GC. Advice? Opinions? I'm mechanically inclined, and I'm pretty handy with plumbing/pvc.
 
We "kind of" GC'd our own.
We hired a guy to design, engineer, and permit for us and he gave us itemized quotes for each step. He also gave us over all advice. We also got a friend of a friend to spec out our equipment for us as a favor and have it quoted from his supply house at his cost. We went through the equipment list and cherry picked big ticket items we could get cheaper buying on-line from discounters.

We ended up using the layout/dig/steel quote from the designer as well as his gunite guy. We hired a friend to do our coping/tile/pavers and used other references to find subs for plumbing, electric, screen and plaster. We already had guys for general masonry (screen footer) and landscape. We got the guy who built our waterfall as a reference from the yard that sold us the stone.

Over all we ended up about 10% below the best turnkey quote and had more features than the most expensive turnkey proposal. Our build was not fast, but it got done. We had two issues that caused a bit of stress and where I found myself wondering if having a PB would have been better. First... the automation setup was more difficult than I expected and for a while I was thinking it was not going to work - eventually I figured it out. And.... the pool had a leak :( that took me quite a while to locate - but once I found it the fix was easy.

The bidding, scheduling, and coordination was a job that my wife spent a lot of effort doing. For sure a key for us was personally knowing a few people in construction and one specifically in pool renovation to give us references. All our subs were wonderful except for one who ended up being difficult and probably more expensive then he should have been (electrician).

We'd do it again - full story and pics here

new-build-in-lake-nona-fl-t54611.html
 
I think it depends on your knowledge and skills as well as if you actually have a job. I have a Job, no chance I would take this on myself. I would much rather pay someone that does it for a living. My biggest concerns would be the Subs you hire, they will cut as many corners as they can especially if you go with the lowest bids. To me the Reward does not out-weigh the Risk. I do not see many PB's driving around in Porsches and such, this tells me they earn every penny they make, I am one that has no issue paying more for quality work. I am just starting my research, the second PB comes over Thursday.

Good luck if you do take it on, at least you have this forum to help guide you.
 
I will tell you that being your own GC can work, but you need to have the flexibility to be at home while much of the work is being done. You also need to have an understanding of how to accomplish what you want done in order to explain to subs. Yes, it can save you $$ but it can be very demanding of your time and energy. My experience is one remodeled house, one custom home, and a 125', 12' high retaing wall, pool and extensive yard redo. Also, be prepared to pay up when you make a mistake. There is no one else you can put that on. :)
 
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