Nick Dowlatshahi asked:
The most important aspect to bear in mind when taking on a renovation project is financial planning regardless of whether you are buying in France or anywhere else. It is all too easy to get caught up in the ideals of building your dream home but if you’re not careful you could end up with a half finished house and broken dreams.
Unlike in England where it is standard practice to send in a chartered surveyor before you buy a property who can estimate the various costs of building repairs; this is not the case in France. You will need to ask a local builder, architect or a British chartered surveyor in France to check the structural state of the building and estimate what the repair costs will be before you buy. You should then add at least 25% for any hidden extras that the architect/surveyor may have missed. It is also very important that you are realistic about the time frame in which your house will be ready to move into. A job that you might expect to take six months in England will probably take a few months longer in France especially if you don’t speak the language as it will take some time to find builders who come recommended and whose work you approve of.
Once you have bought your quaint but dilapidated farmhouse in the south of France which you have chosen for its laid back atmosphere then don’t be surprised when your tradesmen adopt the same attitude in their work regime. You will have to keep on top of them at all times to ensure that the work is completed on schedule and that everyone is synchronised: if for example the electrician is booked to rewire the house within a certain time frame and he is delayed or does not turn up then other jobs such as plastering that follow will also have to be delayed and rescheduled. Rescheduling may not be viable for a few weeks which could in turn ruin the schedule of other jobs- patience is something you’ll have to learn!
For instance an English couple that relocated to the Rhone-Alps region in the south of France found that their project actually took two years rather than one year as predicted and spent the first few months cooking with camping gas and portable cooker while the kitchen was being built- so be prepared to rough it a little during your adventure! Not that it’s a bad thing: It can be incredibly fulfilling cooking and eating outdoors watching your hose slowly take shape after a hard day’s work. This particular couple actually spent the first few weeks living with their neighbours rather than staying in a hotel while the house was unlivable. The two of them simply went over to say hello and in a great gesture which you would find hard to come across in any part of the world, they were invited to stay for as long as they needed even though just moments before they were complete strangers!
The project was finally completed two years after they first bought the house and regardless of all the headache and hard work they put in if you ask them now they would say they really wouldn’t have done it any differently. The stone farmhouse has become a haven of tranquility and something that they can both be very proud of as every evening when they drink local wine and eat Provencal food in their scented, colourful courtyard they can look up at their house and truly say “We did that”.
Hotel in Nice France
The most important aspect to bear in mind when taking on a renovation project is financial planning regardless of whether you are buying in France or anywhere else. It is all too easy to get caught up in the ideals of building your dream home but if you’re not careful you could end up with a half finished house and broken dreams.
Unlike in England where it is standard practice to send in a chartered surveyor before you buy a property who can estimate the various costs of building repairs; this is not the case in France. You will need to ask a local builder, architect or a British chartered surveyor in France to check the structural state of the building and estimate what the repair costs will be before you buy. You should then add at least 25% for any hidden extras that the architect/surveyor may have missed. It is also very important that you are realistic about the time frame in which your house will be ready to move into. A job that you might expect to take six months in England will probably take a few months longer in France especially if you don’t speak the language as it will take some time to find builders who come recommended and whose work you approve of.
Once you have bought your quaint but dilapidated farmhouse in the south of France which you have chosen for its laid back atmosphere then don’t be surprised when your tradesmen adopt the same attitude in their work regime. You will have to keep on top of them at all times to ensure that the work is completed on schedule and that everyone is synchronised: if for example the electrician is booked to rewire the house within a certain time frame and he is delayed or does not turn up then other jobs such as plastering that follow will also have to be delayed and rescheduled. Rescheduling may not be viable for a few weeks which could in turn ruin the schedule of other jobs- patience is something you’ll have to learn!
For instance an English couple that relocated to the Rhone-Alps region in the south of France found that their project actually took two years rather than one year as predicted and spent the first few months cooking with camping gas and portable cooker while the kitchen was being built- so be prepared to rough it a little during your adventure! Not that it’s a bad thing: It can be incredibly fulfilling cooking and eating outdoors watching your hose slowly take shape after a hard day’s work. This particular couple actually spent the first few weeks living with their neighbours rather than staying in a hotel while the house was unlivable. The two of them simply went over to say hello and in a great gesture which you would find hard to come across in any part of the world, they were invited to stay for as long as they needed even though just moments before they were complete strangers!
The project was finally completed two years after they first bought the house and regardless of all the headache and hard work they put in if you ask them now they would say they really wouldn’t have done it any differently. The stone farmhouse has become a haven of tranquility and something that they can both be very proud of as every evening when they drink local wine and eat Provencal food in their scented, colourful courtyard they can look up at their house and truly say “We did that”.
Hotel in Nice France
